Principal at West Tisbury School Is Called to Active Duty in Iraq

West Tisbury School principal Michael A. Halt, a lieutenant colonel
in the United States Marine Corps Reserves, was called back to active
duty this week and will leave for training in just over a week to
prepare for a tour of duty in Iraq.

Mr. Halt received the official letter on Wednesday and has known
with near certainty that he would be leaving for a little more than two
weeks. He must report for duty by Jan. 15.

Traffic Flat on Boatline Ferries; Commuter Book Rules to Ease

In an attempt to lift passenger numbers, the Steamship Authority is
expected to ease restrictions on the use of ten-ticket discount books
when governors meet on Tuesday.

Car and passenger traffic on the Vineyard run was flat in 2006.
Statistics for the year to Dec. 21 show a rise in overall passenger
traffic of just 0.2 per cent, with a sharp decline in the summer
numbers, which were down for June, July and August by 5.8, 1.3 and 0.1
per cent respectively.

Property Tax Bills Are Out on Island: Edgartown Drops; Other Towns Rise

Property Tax Bills Are Out on Island: Edgartown Drops; Other Towns
Rise

By IAN FEIN

Driven by ever-increasing municipal spending, average property tax
bills in five of six Island towns rose yet again this year.

Median Home Prices Fall on Vineyard as Real Estate Market Begins to Stall

The price of the typical home on Martha's Vineyard fell for
the first time in six years in 2006, as buyers left the market and sales
figures dropped by nearly 30 per cent.

The median price for properties was down to around $690,000 in the
third quarter of 2006, a fall of almost six per cent compared with a
year earlier when the median price was around $732,000.

Year 2006 Comes to End with Sanguine Outlook for Island of the Future

Fed up with petty internal politics, Dukes County voters this fall decided to take another look at the structure of their regional government. Hoping to prevent another divisive land use dispute, town and tribal leaders in Aquinnah spent months negotiating a potential peace accord. And with a solid financial footing, Martha's Vineyard Hospital trustees closed the year by securing approval for a new state of the art facility.

Harbor View and Kelley House Conclude Sale at $45.1 Million

A Nantucket-based investment group closed on a deal last week to buy the Harbor View Hotel and Kelley House properties in Edgartown; total sale price was $45.1 million. The sale provided a tidy windfall for the Martha's Vineyard Land Bank, netting the agency just over $900,000 in fees. The sale closed Dec. 20 with four separate transactions. Scout Real Estate Capital LLC purchased the turn-of-the-century Harbor View Hotel for $32.5 million and the Kelley House pub and inn complex for $12.6 million.

Law Aims to Save Atlantic Fish Stocks

Law Aims to Save Atlantic Fish Stocks

By MARK ALAN LOVEWELL

In the final hours of Congress early this month, legislators agreed
to vote in a new federal fishery management for the years ahead.

The Magnuson Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act
oversees the way scientists, fishery managers and fishermen harvest one
of the nation's most valued resources.

The new legislation, a cornerstone for the way stocks are managed,
was passed by the Senate and voted by the House a few days later.

Committee Plans Refurbishment at Old Pay Beach in Oak Bluffs

As a familiar stretch of Oak Bluffs waterfront continues its winter
hibernation, the sand unblemished by human footprints or
children's sand castles, plans are underway to breathe new life
into what was once one of the busiest beaches on the Island.

Committee Plans Refurbishment at Old Pay Beach in Oak Bluffs

As a familiar stretch of Oak Bluffs waterfront continues its winter hibernation, the sand unblemished by human footprints or
children's sand castles, plans are underway to breathe new life
into what was once one of the busiest beaches on the Island.

Black Dog Will Pay Fine on Sweatshirts

The Black Dog Tavern Company, Inc. will pay a $50,000 civil penalty
for not reporting continued sales of children's hooded sweatshirts
after they were recalled for a strangulation hazard last February, the
U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission announced this past Friday.

Commission investigators visited two Black Dog stores this past
August and saw that the recalled sweatshirts with drawstrings were still
for sale. The investigators purchased three of them.

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