Turf Dissonance

From the point of view of student and community health and basic equity, the artificial turf project elicits extreme cognitive dissonance.

From the point of view of student and community health, environmental health, financial impacts, and basic equity, the artificial turf project at the MVRHS elicits extreme cognitive dissonance.

Why cognitivie dissonance? Because the project’s premises and projected outcomes fly in the face of myriad widely acknowledged goods in these categories.

Why equity? Because the campaign prioritizes the desires of a restricted group of participants over all of the above acknowledged goods, to the detriment of all, including this restricted group (but most of them are teenagers and therefore cannot be expected to take a long view).

When viewed through an equity lens the project is obviously massively unfair, and hence indefensible.

In the context of the school and its specific mission, a narrowly defined athletic “need,” which itself is questionable, is privileged by the turf advocates over more significant needs of all of the other students and staff: for desperately needed building repairs, possible future expansion, and, not least, other educational and support programs.

In a wider context, turf advocates ignore or trivialize the negative impacts to the surrounding community, the region, and the earth. They even ignore potential harm to student athletes themselves and the burden this will place on families and medical facilities.

Student athletes and their sponsors cannot be allowed to be the de facto arbiters of how this community deploys its limited funds, nor to set de facto current and future limits on how successfully the Island can ensure a local healthy environment and improve the regional and worldwide environment.

One further point: If this project is approved, the Vineyard (and the MVC, by the way) will take a big hit as a voice and beacon for environmental restraint and self-discipline.

The campaign for artificial turf at the MVRHS is an exercise in selfishness and delusion that has already wasted significant resources.

Katherine Scott

Vineyard Haven 

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 01/26/2021 - 11:23

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Ana de Sousa Oak Bluffs

I'm not sure where I come out yet on all of the debate. The end-of-life "plan" which the promoters of turf claim is viable, is simply not supported by the very companies they purport to be able to remove and recycle the turf once it begins to degrade. That company, as I recall from news report, in Pennsylvania is not yet able to confirm it even can recycle this organically infused product which I'm told will significantly degrade the life of the turf in and of itself. These factors seem to be the Achilles heal to this "plan." Yes, I agree with Katherine in one sense that athletic field funding must be viewed in the overall capital needs of the school system. A $125million budget estimate to repair the MVRHS aalone, not including new Superintendent offices (another $40 mil?), as well as other youth facilities needs community wide MUST be balanced with the athletics fileds needs. Yet, the Superintendent and the MVRHS School Committee have had to make VERY tough choices on deferring athletic field appropriate management costs in order to meet other state and federal requirements to address the other educational needs. Then COVID hit and all of the school buildings and staff needed PPE and filtration systems and well as testing expenses. An agreement must be reached on field-by-field annual upgrades of natural turf to spread the costs, and the MVRHS repair project must be segmented so that sections of the building can be upgraded piecemeal so that our island community can accept less painful budgetary bites. An olive branch to the turf supporters on natural turf accelerated upgrades might yet still lead to their beneficent proposal to pay for the turf be transferred to helping to fund what is a needed fields upgrade.

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