Efforts to rebuild the aging Martha’s Vineyard Regional High School are at a standstill again, with five towns willing to proceed but a sixth digging in its heels.
Efforts to rebuild the aging Martha’s Vineyard Regional High School are at a standstill again, with five towns willing to proceed but a sixth digging in its heels.
Reigniting a longstanding dispute over how high school costs are divided among Island towns, the Oak Bluffs select board declined Tuesday to sign a joint letter to the Massachusetts School Building Authority (MSBA) promising a “good faith effort to support a building project.”
The state has not removed the high school from its list of 58 contenders for the highly selective program, which admits fewer than 20 school construction projects a year and pays up to 38 per cent of the cost.
But a regional school district that cannot agree on its own cost-sharing formula is not a strong prospect for state support, MSBA executive director Jack McCarthy told the Gazette Thursday afternoon.
“Our statute only allows us to approve so many projects [and] it’s a dollar amount. We’re capped,” Mr. McCarthy said.
“We can’t keep up with all of the requests. That’s one of the reasons we take preparedness seriously,” he said.
Island school officials’ hopes for a 2022 acceptance had soared in recent weeks after a conference with town representatives and MSBA officials, held at Mr. McCarthy’s request to gauge local support.
“As part of our due diligence, we always try to find out, if we invited a district in, would they be ready to proceed?” Mr. McCarthy said.
“We took note that in 2019 [the district] tried to do a feasibility study . . . and we noted Oak Bluffs was the only town [against it],” he said.
“I specifically asked the question, ‘Tell me what’s different than [in] 2019?’ There was a representative from Oak Bluffs on the call [who] indicated in his opinion that things had changed,” Mr. McCarthy said.
“It doesn’t seem like that’s occurring,” he added.
Arguing that they do back the effort to build a new high school, Oak Bluffs select board members said Tuesday they would draft their own letter to the MSBA, calling for a conversation on the school formula.
“Unfortunately I can’t sign a letter that says I’m going to work in good faith when I know that [the] funding [formula] doesn’t work,” select board member Jason Balboni said.
Town leaders have maintained that the funding formula, which is based on enrollment, is unfair and disproportionately burdens Oak Bluffs taxpayers.
But Mr. McCarthy indicated that his agency, which is funded from a portion of the state sales tax, prefers not to be pulled into local disputes.
“We don’t like to see projects used as leverage,” he said. “The only consideration should be what’s the best thing for the kids and how does that make sense for the funding.”
Acceptance to the state building program is critical to a successful high school project, Island schools superintendent Dr. Matthew D’Andrea said Thursday.
“They bring the expertise, they bring resources [and] they bring the money,” he said.
“They know exactly how to do the process, and how to do it the most effective, efficient way possible, so you don’t run into problems down the road,” Mr. D’Andrea said. “To partner with them is very, very beneficial, apart from the money.”
The grant program provides about 37.9 per cent of construction costs up to $360 per square foot, MSBA director of operations Matt Donovan said.
The Tisbury School was accepted into the program in 2018, but was forced to drop out when a slender majority of voters defeated a ballot measure.
“We lost out on $14 million, and now we have a project that is going to cost the town $25 million more than it would have cost because of delays and, I would argue, not a clear understanding of what state support means,” said Amy Houghton, who chairs both the Tisbury and regional high school committees.
Without the prospect of state funding, Ms. Houghton said the high school district will need to begin piecemeal work at its own expense to keep the buildings functioning.
“There are multiple capital projects within the high school that can’t wait any longer,” she said. “Now the HVAC system has to be replaced . . . Projects we [thought] would be included in a comprehensive plan will now have to be done one by one.”
But Ms. Houghton also said she understands why Oak Bluffs wants to change the funding formula, which is spelled out in the regional district agreement, first written in 1954 and later amended several times. The funding formula for both the high school operating budget and also capital projects remains based almost entirely on town-by-town student enrollment.
As spelled out in the terms of the agreement, the high school committee or any member town can propose an amendment, but any amendment would need to be approved by all district towns.
Ms. Houghton said she believes more discussion is in order.
“I think that there’s a valid argument for saying, this is a community facility . . . and not just for those students who happen to be there on a given day,” Ms. Houghton said, adding that enrollments at some Island town schools have been fluctuating in recent years.
“The swing in enrollment is very real, and the impact in assessment to each town is very real,” she said.
Mr. McCarthy said the MSBA is also looking for change.
“This discussion on Martha’s Vineyard been going on for a long time,” he said. “They need to fix it.”
Aidan Pollard contributed reporting.

Comments
Oak Bluffs is not standing in
BS Oak BluffsOak Bluffs is not standing in the way of this funding, the other five towns not sitting down to rectify the archaic funding system are to blame.
How about a new school for
Tony B EdgartownHow about a new school for the 5 willing town that is smaller - and OB can do as they please with the current school?
The auditorium is great. We
Ken Edg.The auditorium is great. We should build around it and it wont cost what they are estimating. Keeping cost down are necessary since we do have the Charter school that receives funding also.
Not clear why OB thinks the
DavidNot clear why OB thinks the current funding plan is unfair. What would make more sense than basing it off the number of students enrolled per town?
It does sound unfair for OB
K EdgartownIt does sound unfair for OB to take more of the financial responsibility. It sounds like the model is town A and B will get a new high school. Town A is lower income apartments; so it has more kids. Town B is vacation homes; so it has less kids. Town A provides all the blue collar workers for for town B, cleaning homes, delivering fuel, plowing the roads.
I agree with OB all towns should pay equal. Everyone should take care of our next generation.
The kids always lose out. No
David IslandersThe kids always lose out. No athletic fields and a decrepit high school is quite the legacy the "adults" are leaving for them. What a screwed up island.
I'm a little confused. If Oak
Sara Oak BluffsI'm a little confused. If Oak Bluffs enrolls more students than any other town, why does it think that the assessment is unequal? Enough to hold up construction of a new school? That building is falling apart and our kids should not be in a physically deteriorating building.
Because when building a new
Islander61 OBBecause when building a new building, all students, even the students from up island will benefit from using the whole school, not just a portion of it. You can't say that OK OB your give the most for the school so your kids can use 66% of the school and Aquinnah, you pay only 10% so your kids only can us 10% of the school. In addition, the school is a hub for the entire island, youth sports, adult education, rentals of the PAC for plays and events, etc. The rebuilding of the school should be taken on by dividing the cost 6 ways, not use a funding formula that was created in the 50s when Chilmark didn't even have phone service, and made by taking a snap shot in the school population that currently is at the school. In 10 years that snap shot could look completely different. The high school should be the pride of the island and each town should pay their share to build the new school. Why should one town pay a big chunk when all towns will have the same access to the building for their kids.
I understand the frustration
Incompatible Phil a holeI understand the frustration of feeling like you're paying more than your fair share, but this proposal to simply divide the total cost by 6 truly doesn't make a bit of sense. Does California pay more in taxes to the federal government than Vermont does? Does Boston pay more than Provincetown to Mass? (Ignore for a moment that this whole conversation is technically using the wrong language, since the taxes aren't being paid by places at all, but by the people who live in them.) Of course more tax money will come from larger places. The whole argument is over how to portion out the burden fairly. Some will emphasize sharing the wealth (richer towns pay more per student), some will emphasize responsibility for the costs (everyone pays equally based on enrollment). Maybe there's some sort of compromise possible between those ideals.
Just another example why this
Bob EdgartownJust another example why this island will never be unified. A middle school was a great idea and would’ve solved many monetary problems over the years for Edgartown Oak Bluffs and Tisbury but that could never be agreed on. Oak Bluffs is on a roll they have destroyed circuit Avenue and just wait until the boats empty out and someone’s trying to parallel park. Now they’re going after the schools. Please just keep your phony letter trying to pretend you care.
Get it done. If the other
Sarah ChilmarkGet it done. If the other towns have to chip in more to support oak bluffs, so be it. If you live here or moved here, you are part of the community whether you have children in school or not. Bad schools do not benefit anyone and do a disservice to children and the staff that works there.
Does OB not realize that if
John edgDoes OB not realize that if we miss out on the 40million from the state, that they will be paying much more regardless of the funding formula?
Simple math and the good of the kids should prevail here.
Schools don't teach.
Chris EdgartownSchools don't teach.
Better to spend the money on good teachers!
I believe the yearly
Pamela Dolby EdgartownI believe the yearly assessments for MVRHS are based on the state formula which takes into account many factors but, according to the agreement, any capital projects are based on the per pupil formula. Wouldn’t a reasonable solution be to apply the state formula to everything, including capital projects? I don’t know just throwing that out there. It seems a real shame to lose millions of dollars in state aid and the high school desperately needs to be replaced.
The slogan “Proud to be from
HJB Oak BluffsThe slogan “Proud to be from OB “ just washed into the inadequate waste water system. What does OB have in common with the national political system? Just a simple trivia question.
Way to many kids should not
Charlotte Oak BluffsWay to many kids should not even be in that school, never mind in our country!
I say, not with my hard earned tax dollars!
Does anyone take
D Hodsdon VHDoes anyone take responsibility for not maintaining nor scheduling maintenance on this or any other property overseen by the school committed, select boards, maintainance facility's and others? Why is it once it is noticed the facility is crumbling to almost no return, the hand goes out to the state and towns for millions when regular and preventative maintainence could have helped keep things in check.
The Tisbury school is a prime example of neglected maintainence with no accountability of such predecessors and those in control these past years. It is now the responsibility of the taxpayers and not the renters to hoof the bllis. How fair is any of this to the tax payer when the boards they have elected haven't stepped up....? Those four fingers are still pointing back at..?
How to raise a conservative
TisKid MVHow to raise a conservative teenager on MV (Exhibit A): Point out to your young teen the reason they will have to go to a crumbling school with borderline unusable athletic fields is that the wealthiest town on the island (Chilmark) as well as several others, who are all among the wealthiest in the state, whose tax dollars are largely derived from seasonal residents, voted in high numbers for Bernie, but won't make helpful tweaks to the regional school funding formula. Because they believe in redistributing everybody's wealth but their own. Even when it would help them get state funding for kids that live in their own region, and a school their own kids and themselves would use.
The allocation should be
Doug Best West Tisbury & Vineyard HavenThe allocation should be based on each town's gross revenues, which is more reflective of their ability to pay. The number of homes and students coming from each town may vary based upon many factors, but obviously the more homes and year round residents in a town, the more students.
People here say they're an
Melissa Oak BluffsPeople here say they're an Islander. But when the rubber meets the road this island is really 6 fiefdoms, each struggling for their own self town interests.
There are 2 towns "digging in
MJ/OBThere are 2 towns "digging in": the aforementioned Oak Bluffs AND Edgartown, one of whose selectmen and woman once said at an early-on meeting in the high school's dining room: "That is never going to happen" after a discussion about the idea of 2 ways to look at funding: operational and capital. That was neither the first nor the last time that opinion was expressed.
History shows that MV school
gina Menemsha / NYCHistory shows that MV school buildings are not well maintained the mind set has always been build new b/c of the tax revenues available from the seasonal owners not using them.. The Island population has shifted a lot in the past 10 yrs. Yes many more properties to tax but also much more use So is brand new always the answer ?? Why not ear mark some of these funds for renovation ?? & borrow less ?? .
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