woman teaches young girl crafts

It’s All Positive for Campers Who Find They Are Not Alone

Warm temperatures may have shaken some Vineyarders out of their winter slump last week, but for Islanders who came across the kids enjoying Safe Haven camp, the surest sign of vitality was the joy on their faces.

zack weisner listens in on town meeting

Chilmark Allows Peaked Hill Tower

Despite the small size of the crowd, the debate among Chilmark voters at their annual town meeting this week was passionate and at times heated.

On Monday night voters gathered at the Chilmark Community Center to take up a 27-article warrant. Moderator Everett H. Poole presided.

A total of 113 voters attended, well over the quorum requirement of 25.

It was a meeting which saw a rare moment when Mr. Poole laid aside his gavel for the third time in his 31-year career to speak from the floor.

Caught in Money Bind, Sheriff Supports a Takeover by State

Faced with a near-certain fiscal crisis due to pressure from state officials and political maneuverings on Beacon Hill, Dukes County Sheriff Michael McCormack has quietly agreed to trade his independence for a state takeover of his department.

Two weeks ago, Sheriff McCormack joined with the sheriffs of Barnstable, Norfolk and Plymouth counties to back an amendment to Gov. Deval Patrick’s proposed 2009 budget that would place the four sheriffs and their employees under control of the commonwealth.

charter school director bob moore

Turning Twelve, Charter School Grows Up Well

It’s been a long day for Bob Moore, the 53-year-old director of the Martha’s Vineyard Public Charter School, and sprawled in his office chair at the front of the school, he’s having trouble recalling the school’s six pillars of education.

With H2B Visa Gap, Vineyard Employers Scramble for Help

For 10 years, Mark Luce, innkeeper at the Dockside Inn and Oak House, has employed the same seven-member Jamaican extended family to help run his business. But this year, they won’t be coming.

Darren Morris hires the drivers for the Martha’s Vineyard Transit Authority. Every year he hires 15 or 20 Bulgarian workers to drive buses. But this year, none.

Advance Bookings Seen as Promising

The struggling U.S. economy and a strong euro are pushing summer rental bookings ahead of a strong 2007 season.

While home rentals are even or slightly ahead of last year, hotels report increases of up to 15 or 20 per cent more than last year.

Soaring domestic fuel prices and airfares, along with a favorable foreign currency exchange rate, are making Island vacations desirable to Americans within a one-day drive of the Island and to Europeans buoyed by the exchange rate on their currency, Vineyard hoteliers and rental agencies report.

Tisbury Town Clerk Takes All Newfound Notoriety in Stride

Marion Mudge typed her own name into Google on Wednesday. In a fraction of a second, the search engine came up with 370,000 references.

The self-effacing Tisbury town clerk has become a big name in the news. Media in Detroit, Seattle, Tampa Bay, Eugene, Oregon, not to mention some specialty publications including a wine magazine, from all over the country, have featured her.

Voters Pass Three Overrides

At their annual town election Wednesday Chilmark voters easily approved three Proposition 2 1/2 overrides and reeelected selectman Warren Doty to a fourth term.

The overrides included $78,000 in education spending and two funding requests that will allow the town to help pay for the county health care access and pest control programs.

A total of 211 voters, or 26 per cent of the 805 registered, turned out for the election on a sunny, cool April day.

Oak Bluffs Selectmen Review Planned Street Improvements

Oak Bluffs selectmen Tuesday elected a new chairman, hosted a public hearing on a state plan to resurface several downtown streets and heard updated plans to repair the crumbling waterfront and dredge Sengekontacket Pond.

Homesite Board Asks: Do We Exist?

When the Oak Bluffs resident home site committee was established by a nearly unanimous vote at a special town meeting in September of 1987, it was widely heralded as an innovative and proactive measure to combat the dearth of affordable housing on the Island by creating low-cost lots for qualified, year-round town residents.

Since that time, the committee has seen its share of highs and lows.

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