Ferry fares are going up and some Islanders are unhappy about it.
Timothy Johnson

Online Petition Opposing SSA Rate Hikes Gathers Steam

<p>Islanders are speaking out against a set of rate hikes which take effect this week at the Steamship Authority. An online petition had collected almost 2,400 signatures by Thursday morning.</p>

Some Islanders are speaking out against a set of rate hikes which take effect this week at the Steamship Authority.

An online petition to repeal the rate increases had collected almost 2,400 signatures by Thursday morning. The rate changes took effect Tuesday.

The fare increases were approved in October to close a budget shortfall, but with falling fuel prices, supporters of the petition say the hikes are no longer justifiable. “The fuel and oil markets have declined by roughly 50 per cent since summer,” the petition reads in part. “This is now creating a multi-million dollar surplus and thus should be reason enough to suspend and or repeal the current rate increase.”

The increases affect excursion passenger fares, excursion rates for cars and parking.

Round-trip fares in the automobile excursion program are going up from $61 to $63 in the off-season and from $92 to $94 in summer.

The adult passenger fare also went up 50 cents, bringing that fee to $8.50 for a one-way trip, including embarkation fees.

Daily parking fees in the Falmouth lots will go up from $13 to $15 in the high season and from $10 to $13 a day in the off-season.

Now, just as the increases go into effect, Islanders and others are speaking out through social media. The author of the petition, Todd Rebello, says in light of the plummeting cost of fuel, rate increases should be repealed or at least stalled. “There was no justification for the rate increase,” Mr. Rebello said by telephone this week. “The line item at the time showed there was a large potential surplus that was being built in the fuel line.”

But SSA general manager Wayne Lamson said he would not recommend a repeal or suspension of the rate hikes. Since the 2015 budget was approved, he said three costly boat and terminal maintenance projects have been moved from the fiscal 2014 to the 2015 budget. Any savings in fuel will be offset by costs associated with these projects, Mr. Lamson said.

“These contracts have already been awarded,” he said. “Without any change orders or anything else, we already know the minimum amount that these contracts are going to cost.”

Further, he said the boat line always operates under a net surplus, which allows them to pay off debt and replace equipment. There are several big projects in the pipeline, including major reconstruction work at the Woods Hole terminal and the purchase of a new ferry.

“It’s all to provide better, more reliable service in the future,” Mr. Lamson said.

He said the rate hikes were announced in September, and reviewed at meetings of the port council and the board of governors, the two public bodies that govern the boat line. He said at the time, no one could have anticipated that fuel prices would drop this much and this quickly.

Reserved for year-round Islanders, low-cost excursion fares have seen a steady increase since 1990, the first year the boat line has records for the rate. The last rate increase was two years ago, when excursion rates went up by $2. More than 13,000 customer accounts on the Vineyard and Nantucket are eligible for excursion rates. Passenger fares also went up on the Vineyard route in 2011.

The petition, which has circulated primarily through social media, attracted 750 signatures on the first day, Jan. 1. This came as a surprise to Mr. Rebello, who set up the petition on moveon.org, a website for grassroots movements, with low expectations. “There was no big campaign here, this was no big plan,” he said. “It was out there and it struck a nerve.”

Mr. Rebello, a former Oak Bluffs selectman and retail store owner, said the SSA has poor public relations. “We are the stakeholders,” he said. “We need to be heard before decisions of this magnitude are made.”

In addition to signing their name and declaring their residence, many participants also left comments.

Many said they were already struggling to afford the costs of ferry transportation. Some complained about the already high cost of living on the Island, which they or their relatives call home.

Others called for change in leadership at the Steamship Authority.

That’s not Mr. Rebello’s goal, he said. He said Marc Hanover, who has been the Vineyard governor for more than 11 years, has his support. Still, he pointed to a disconnect between public opinion and Mr. Hanover’s actions on their behalf.

“It’s about public process,” Mr. Rebello said. “It’s about giving our representative more direction. He needs to hear the people on the Island.”

Mr. Hanover could not be reached for the story.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 01/06/2015 - 11:56

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Ken Esq Edgartown

It would be nice if there was a way to contact the Steamship Authority representative through email. Also, the Steamship Authority's website is a mess with slow response, outages and broken links on their contact us section. Many of these issues have gone on for months.
The schedule also should be adjusted so that parents of school-age children would have the opportunity to drop their children off at school, get to the ferry so they could have a few hours (3) off-island to tend to appointments/shopping, etc. and get back before pickup. Right now that's almost impossible.

thomas hodgson wt

The SSA doesn't seem to like email or online communication very much. Ever try sending in an online suggestion? (assuming the link works, which it doesn't always) As a way of telling you how important your suggestion is to the SSA, their reply to a suggestion comes to you from the email address "[email protected]". Do not reply? OK. We get it, you don't really want to hear from us. It's time for the SSA to start listening.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 01/06/2015 - 12:01

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George Stein Edgartown

Organizations that use a fairly fixed amount of fuel on a daily basis set up deliveries and costs months in advance. To grand stand at this time is exhibiting a lack of knowledge on the way business is done. There are apartment complexes all over the nation stuck in the same crunch. Bus companies whether for municipalities or schools are biting this bullet too. Responsible management practices don't have the opportunity to get daily spot pricing for better or worse. The reality of the situation is the people who already know who our next president is decided they had to reign in Putin over in Russia. Helping out the working masses has nothing to do with the petroleum spike for if it were it would have happened quite awhile ago. Find a battle you can win folks.

thomas hodgson wt

On the other side of the coin, this is an opportunity for the SSA to actually lock in some better rates on fuel. This will be a topic of discussion at the SSA Port Council Meeting this week, so the idea has entered someone's consciousness. That's good. Do they do this at all? We don't know, since the SSA seems to prefer to function with as little public input as possible.
Was your sentence: "The reality of the situation is the people who already know who our next president is decided they had to reign in Putin over in Russia." supposed to go in some other comment? It's hard to figure out what you mean by that statement.

Dan Ob

The Steamship Authority is a quasi-public agency, created by the Massachusetts legislature, that competes with other private ferries but also oversees and licenses their operations.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 01/06/2015 - 12:17

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Jessica Burnham

we all know wheels are already turning and contracts have been signed. If nothing else comes of this I hope the SSA will realize MV and Nantucket need more of a voice that represents us. I hope they will give us an ear and listen.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 01/06/2015 - 13:43

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Dave D. Vineayrd Haven

“It’s all to provide better, more reliable service in the future,” Well said Mr. Lamson but you and George Stein may be missing the point. I sure if you queried many of the petitioners you'd find this is not really about a two dollar rate hike. It's a ground-swell of discontent with the Steamship Authority itself. And although Mr. Stein's condescension clearly underestimate grass roots hostility; this may be a tipping point. There are some competent, kind and caring people woking for the boat line, but also some that would be unemployable anywhere else. There are things the boat line does really well. (Like medical status if you have a sick family member or the day-to-day running of a fairly complex organization.) The discontent is about being denied a specific boat reservation for months, going stand-by on that boat and finding only six cars. It's about the occasional but extraordinarily abusive parking lot attendant or boat-loader. It's about bathrooms that make a late 70's CBGB's look clean. It's about some 1950's notion that the women work inside and the men outside. It's not that these things can't change. It's that they don't. People are fed up. They want to be heard.

George Stein Edgartown

I have the same issues with SSA everyone does. Venting accomplishes little more than self gratification. Making governmental agencies more accountable requires more strategy than just posting here. Trying working for them , I did.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 01/06/2015 - 14:15

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Ruth west tisbury

what will come of "this", in the least, will be the knowledge that "we the people" have finally found a vehicle for our voices to be
Heard. The Internet gives us the opportunity to organize and respond in real time. We all know that we have not been heard,
And since it is our dollars, we will be. I'm not sure I have heard any specifics on the new terminal in Woods Hole that the SSA
Plans To build? If it isn't already signed and delivered, it's a good time for some input, wouldn't it?
Mr. Stein, we are not all Titans of business, but it wouldn't be the first time in history the "masses" changed history.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 01/06/2015 - 23:45

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Brian Smith Oak Bluffs

This would be a good time for the Gazette to re-publish an article published years ago about the bondholders of the SSA. I don't think many islanders realize it has owners who reap the profits each year but the SSA enabling legislation prevents public disclosure of these bondholders.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 01/07/2015 - 02:12

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Red, Vineyard haven

I would have signed the petition BUT the only forms I saw were from MOVEON.ORG and I quickly said "Forgetaboutit"!!!

tom hodgson wt

Sounds like you might not like "Move On". Remember first that politics makes for strange bedfellows, but more important, remember that for this petition, Move On is but a conduit. You are in no way endorsing Move On by participating. Go ahead and sign.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 01/07/2015 - 13:40

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Jack A West Tisbury

Dave D. starts to address the craziness of Steamship Authority. It is a jobs program. The inefficiencies on the boat, on the ramp, in the parking lots and in the terminals are rampant and completely out of control. I don't feel like going into details again unless asked. Let's start a petition to reduce the unnecessary headcount of steamship employees! How about hiring an efficiency consultant (McKinsey like) that reports to the public how to improve the steamship authority. Let's create a dialogue and mechanism about prioritizing Steamship expenditures/investments. My bet, spending 40 million for a freighter wouldn't be on the list!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 01/07/2015 - 21:06

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thomas hodgson west tisbury

The cost of the Woods Hole Terminal project, without the Administration move, and I assume not the move of the maintenance department either, is up to $61,749,985…..almost sixty-two million dollars. It's time to pull the plug on that fiasco, and either make do with what we've got or come up with a simpler, less grandiose plan.

Patricia French B

I agree 100%. The SSA makes decisions to spend whatever they wish on whatever project, and just expects the Vineyard to pay the bill. Take a look at the covered waiting area at the VH terminal. All the shingles have been falling off for years. It would make too much sense to reshingle it. Lets just wait for it to rot out so we have to pay to replace the whole thing, and the Vineyard people can pay for it, as we always do.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 01/08/2015 - 07:16

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DP Oak Blufss

New Bedford is starting to sound better and better. Scrap Falmouth and move operations to New Bedford for lower costs.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 01/08/2015 - 09:30

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Jack A. West Tisbury

Any thoughts on replacing Marc Hanover? I don't see any significant or other changes actually happening without our representative who "owns" the current steamship authority situation (by being a governor for 11 years) being replaced.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 01/08/2015 - 23:04

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Whatever

Mr. Lamson states that the rate hikes are for a better more efficient Steamship Authority. Whatever. This is not the case with putting up a new building for their egos at 61 plus million dollars, nor is it the case with the new vessel under contract. The Island home is not and has not been very reliable. This is why it is called the "Broken Home" by islanders. The Islander, by contrast, could navigate in the worst weather and we could depend on it. The Steamship Authority is in it for maximizing tourism. That is not their mission. Repeal the rate hike, and get someone in there who can represent the islanders, not rubber stamp every dumb idea the SSA has and foists upon us. And for God's sake, get rid of the building plan that is going to stick us with increased costs at no increase in service. Nothing has changed in improving service to islanders - except to make it worse by having a vessel designed with so much capacity that it increases traffic jams dramatically, and has so much windage that it has to sit out storms and has had so many breakdowns for other reasons. To the SSA response, our response is - "whatever".

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 01/12/2015 - 00:05

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Wanna sign Vineyard Haven

Is there any other petition we can sign other than the one moveon.org has out there. There are several of us who would love to sign but wont have anything to do with that group!!!

tom hodgson wt

Move on is simply a conduit. Using the site to sign the petition is like using the postal service to send a letter. Nobody will blackball you for speaking your mind, you won't compromise your principles by signing a petition that you agree with. Nor will you catch "libtard cooties". It's OK, really!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 01/12/2015 - 08:12

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thomas hodgson wt

This week, the petition will be printed out. The printout is soon to be delivered to Selectmen and others in places of "Authority". Let's hope they will take the time to read the comments included with some of the signatures, as they address far more than just the recent raise in ferry fares.
Here is some current news on the price of oil, which was given as justification for the rate rise. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/energy/11339595/Oil-hit…

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