• Home
  • Art & Culture
  • Business
  • Food
  • Tourism
  • Contact Us
Friday, May 9, 2025
No Result
View All Result
NEWSLETTER
The Martha's Vineyard Guide
  • Home
  • News Agencies
    • The MV Times
    • The MV Gazette
  • Tourist Agencies
    • MVOL
    • MV Chamber
  • Food Agencies
    • Edible Vineyard
    • Farm Field Sea
  • Galleries
    • Cousen Rose
    • The Field Gallery
    • Old Sculpin Gallery
    • Eisenhauer Gallery
    • North Water Gallery
    • The Granary Gallery
    • Louisa Gould Gallery
    • The A Gallery
  • Contact Us
  • Home
  • News Agencies
    • The MV Times
    • The MV Gazette
  • Tourist Agencies
    • MVOL
    • MV Chamber
  • Food Agencies
    • Edible Vineyard
    • Farm Field Sea
  • Galleries
    • Cousen Rose
    • The Field Gallery
    • Old Sculpin Gallery
    • Eisenhauer Gallery
    • North Water Gallery
    • The Granary Gallery
    • Louisa Gould Gallery
    • The A Gallery
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
The Martha's Vineyard Guide
No Result
View All Result
Home News

The Vineyard Gazette – Martha’s Vineyard News

by mvguide
January 8, 2023
in News, Tourism
0
The Vineyard Gazette – Martha’s Vineyard News
0
SHARES
22
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Nearly a year after its referral to the Martha’s Vineyard Commission as a development of regional impact (DRI), Safe Harbor Marinas’ plan to expand its Vineyard Haven facility on Lagoon Pond received commission approval in a 9-3 vote Thursday.

Chair Joan Malkin, Trip Barnes, Kathy Newman, Kate Putnam, Doug Sederholm, Ernest Thomas, Fred Hancock, Brian Smith and R. Peter Wharton voted in the majority, with Ben Robinson, Jay Grossman and Jeff Agnoli of Edgartown opposed.

The vote came well after 10 p.m., following video-conferenced deliberations that grew testy as the night wore on and drew repeated requests for decorum from Ms. Malkin.

“Organize yourselves and stop yelling at each other,” she said at one point, as Mr. Robinson and Mr. Hancock raised their voices in argument.

Ms. Malkin had to step in again minutes later as the two men clashed once more, after Mr. Robinson argued for a finding that the marina is not appropriate for its location.

Vineyard Haven facility is located on Lagoon Pond.

— Mark Alan Lovewell

“I’m cautioning this body to not slough off the tremendous amount of testimony that we heard, not just from abutters that live on the lagoon but water quality experts, that this has an impact on water quality,” Mr. Robinson said.

“Well, thank you for thinking we’re all sloughing off the concerns of the rest of the Island,” Mr. Hancock replied, as Ms. Malkin’s calls for order went unheard.

Ms. Malkin intervened again, saying to Mr. Robinson: “We are dealing with a pre-existing use. Is the further development of that use appropriate and/or essential at this location? That is the question.”

According to data, the marina — first established as a boatyard just after World War II by Vineyard boat builder Erford Burt — hasn’t shown itself to be a notable polluter, Mr. Sederholm added.

“There is no evidence in the record that they are contributing any more nitrogen to the water than any of the abutters, given their size,” Mr. Sederholm continued, adding that the marina also is not on record as adding to the pond’s bacteria count.

Thursday’s approval came with a list of conditions for Safe Harbor that include installing solar power within two years, providing housing for employees, studying the feasibility of restoring the adjacent marsh and using only copper-free hull paint on boats owned by year-round customers.

Among other stipulations, the marina will conduct a water testing program in the pond, contribute $5,000 to Tisbury’s shellfish seeding program and provide a 10-foot easement along the property edge for the town to create a shared-use path linking Lagoon Pond Road with Beach Road.

MVC approval clears the way for Safe Harbor Marinas, a privately-held company that has acquired more than 130 U.S. marinas — including one in Edgartown — and targets an upscale boating market, to remove old buildings and expand boat storage.

The firm has pledged to give away the marina’s current office building, a relocated church that became Mr. Burt’s boatshop and presently stands on high pilings, if someone can remove and reuse it.

During deliberations Thursday, some commissioners sought to restrict the size of the boats Safe Harbor can store on its expanded racks, pressing for a hull length limit of 35 feet in order to reduce the number of larger vessels using the pond.

“I think it’s important that we set some sort of upper limit,” said Mr. Robinson, adding that 40-foot boats can carry as many as five outboard engines.

“This is a fragile part of the lagoon [and] boats cause pollution,” he said.

Mr. Agnoli supported a 35-foot limit as well, citing public testimony from last year’s hearings and correspondence.

“We heard a lot of negative comments about this expansion, and this is one way I believe we can acknowledge that,” he said.

But the marina already stores and services boats up to 40 feet in length, Safe Harbor representative Charles Guard told commissioners.

“If you limit us to 35 [feet], you would be taking away what we already have as far as storage capacity in our racks,” Mr. Guard said.

“Being restricted to 35 feet… will likely make this financially not feasible,” he said, adding that Safe Harbor does not envision serving boats longer than 40 feet.

Weight, not hull length, determines what vessels can be racked, Mr. Guard added.

A subsequent motion for a 40-foot length limit failed to pass due to a 6-6 tie, with Ms. Malkin, Mr. Agnoli, Mr. Robinson, Mr. Barnes, Mr. Sederholm and Mr. Grossman voting for the motion.

When the expansion is completed, the marina’s rack storage capacity will go from 78 boats to 118. The stored vessels, shrink-wrapped with white plastic in the winter, sparked further disagreement as commissioners discussed the project’s impact on scenic values.

Safe Harbor’s racks are widely visible from neighboring roads such as Skiff avenue, noted Ms. Putnam.

“That’s got to be a detriment,” Mr. Robinson said, but other commissioners disagreed.

“A lot of people like to look at a working waterfront,” Mr. Barnes said. “This is an Island with boats.”

Mr. Smith echoed the sentiment: “That’s who we are, where we are,” he said.




Source link

mvguide

mvguide

Related Posts

Influenza Vaccination Clinics Scheduled in Centerville

Spring Season Opens May 10th | Heritage Museum & Gardens

by mvguide
May 9, 2025
0

Latest Headlines Spring Season Opens May 10th | Heritage Museum & Gardens Spring Season Opens May 10th | Heritage...

Influenza Vaccination Clinics Scheduled in Centerville

🎙️ Cape Conversations | Anne Scott-Putney | What’s New at Heritage Museums…

by mvguide
May 8, 2025
0

Latest Headlines 🎙️ Cape Conversations | Anne Scott-Putney | What’s New at Heritage Museums & Gardens… 🎙️ Cape Conversations...

Influenza Vaccination Clinics Scheduled in Centerville

Standoff situation in Truro comes to peaceful end

by mvguide
May 7, 2025
0

Latest Headlines Standoff situation in Truro comes to peaceful end TRURO – A tense situation unfolded in Truro Tuesday...

Influenza Vaccination Clinics Scheduled in Centerville

TEENAGE BOY STRUCK BY PICKUP TRUCK IN HYANNIS… SUFFERED SEVERE LEG FRACTURE [HN…

by mvguide
May 6, 2025
0

Posted by Cape Cod Daily News via Hyannis News Monday May 05, 2025 (2 hours, 32 minutes ago)  ...

Influenza Vaccination Clinics Scheduled in Centerville

Medical condition may have led to traffic crash on Harwich/Chatham town line

by mvguide
May 5, 2025
0

Latest Headlines Medical condition may have led to traffic crash on Harwich/Chatham town line HARWICH – A medical condition...

Influenza Vaccination Clinics Scheduled in Centerville

Multiple crews called to house fire in Yarmouth

by mvguide
May 4, 2025
0

Latest Headlines Multiple crews called to house fire in Yarmouth YARMOUTH – Multiple fire units were called to a...

Next Post
Explore the wide-ranging body of work by artist Cy Twombly

Explore the wide-ranging body of work by artist Cy Twombly

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Facebook Twitter

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Subscribe and receive updates in your email inbox.
SUBSCRIBE

Category

  • Agriculture & Land
  • Art, Culture & Activities
  • Business
  • Food
  • News
  • Tourism

Advertise With Us

Community PR

Submit a Press Release

Currently Playing

© 2025 The Martha's Vineyard Guide - Site by Sitka Creations® LLC.

No Result
View All Result
  • Betsy Shands
  • Breakwater MV Real Estate
  • Community PR
  • Contact Us
  • Darcie Lee Hannaway
  • Home
  • JMS Rentals
  • Marston Clough
  • MV Center for Living
  • MV Community Greenhouse
  • MV Mediation Program
  • Nelson Mechanical Design, Inc.
  • Seth Williams Plumbing and Heating
  • Submit a Press Release
  • Summer Shades
  • Trademark Services LLC

© 2025 The Martha's Vineyard Guide - Site by Sitka Creations® LLC.