Plastic Free MV students applaud the decision.
Mark Alan Lovewell

Student Plastic Bottle Ban Goes On Tisbury Warrant

Tisbury selectmen reversed an earlier decision and will put a student-written bylaw banning the sale of single-use plastic bottles on the town meeting warrant.

After a public outcry that the Tisbury annual town meeting warrant would not include a student-written bylaw banning the sale of single-use plastic bottles, Tisbury’s board of selectmen has agreed to let voters decide on the question.

It took less than 15 minutes at a meeting Friday afternoon for selectmen Melinda Loberg and Jeff Kristal to reverse the board’s decision, announced Monday, and decide to put the proposed bylaw from Plastic Free MV on the warrant. On Monday, selectmen had agreed on a different warrant article that called for the town to develop an action plan and a bylaw to manage plastic reduction in Tisbury.

About 30 people attended the Friday afternoon meeting at the Tisbury Emergency Services Facility on Spring street, including schoolchildren in matching Plastic Free MV sweatshirts.

Selectmen Melinda Loberg and Jeff Kristal reversed their earlier decision.
Mark Alan Lovewell
Selectmen Melinda Loberg and Jeff Kristal reversed their earlier decision.
Mark Alan Lovewell

Ms. Loberg noted that the Plastic Free MV group has attended a series of public meetings in different down-Island towns during their campaign for the bylaw, which passed in Aquinnah, Chilmark and West Tisbury last year.

“What I’m seeing is incredible interest and persistence in seeing this project through, and I give you a lot of credit for mobilizing the Island and getting people to pay attention to this issue,” she said.

“We all agree on the problem of plastics in our environment and the damage they do, and I appreciate the fact that we are being led to solutions by the upcoming generation of leaders,” Ms. Loberg added.

Because the town meeting warrant was already overdue at the printers, Ms. Loberg and Mr. Kristal kept their remarks brief and moved speedily to vote unanimously in favor of restoring the bylaw, article 14, on the special town meeting warrant for March 31. Selectmen James Rogers was absent.

“I would like to thank you for reconsidering,” student organizer Finn Robinson, 12, told the selectmen as spectators applauded the vote.

The Plastic Free MV bylaw prohibits the sale of water and soft drinks in plastic bottles holding less than 34 ounces, with fines of up to $100 per violation.

The warrant article includes a suspension clause in case the board of health, which is charged with enforcing the bylaw, finds it to be unreasonably costly.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 03/07/2020 - 10:45

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Margot lane Menemsha

You go, kids!! So proud of all of you. Can’t wait to walk on a beach one day and see...just beach.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 03/08/2020 - 10:15

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Cindy West Tisbury

Congratulations kids!! AOC will be passing out Trophys for all of them.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 03/08/2020 - 11:59

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KayZha Vineyard Haven

What are the convenience stores, Liquor stores, and even grocery stores supposed to do when selling single-serve drinks is their lively hood? Especially with all the workers grabbing lunch? I'm sure if they wanted a half-gallon of soda or milk with their snack they would buy it, it is much cheaper. I think we should be advocating for REAL actual recycling and not sending it all to Malaysia instead.

M Edgartown

This is a false argument - there are no stores that depend on the narrow category of single-use plastic bottles addressed in this warrant. I can think of lots of other options for workers at lunchtime.
Eventually, I hope, we're all going to return to wrapping our sandwiches in napkins and carrying thermoses of drinks. Worked just fine before the advent of these awful plastic containers.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 03/08/2020 - 16:08

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T Bone Oak Bluffs

If Tisbury can't give kids a school at least they can give kids a voice. Nice flip flop.

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