The MVC's legal budget caused some heads to turn in Edgartown Monday.
Tim Johnson

MVC Budget Raises Eyebrows in Edgartown

The Martha's Vineyard Commission's expanding legal budget was broached at the Edgartown select board meeting Monday, as town officials weighed the financial impacts of the commission's recent flurry of legal challenges.

The Martha’s Vineyard Commission’s expanding legal budget was broached at the Edgartown select board meeting Monday, as town officials weighed the financial impacts of the commission’s recent flurry of legal challenges, as well as new staff hires.

In a letter sent to towns last month, commission executive director Adam Turner warned that the unique regional planning agency would have to increase its budget line item due to ongoing litigation, although he did not specify the amount. Four project applicants have filed suit against the commission in the past four months, appealing decisions that involved the denial of historic home teardowns and stringent conditions in its decisions, among other things.

The commission has also spent about $400,000 defending its decision to deny the Meeting House Place subdivision, planned for an area off Meshacket Road in Edgartown.

According to its statute, the commission prepares and adopts its budget in November and December every year. While some of its funding comes from grants and contracts, the bulk of the budget is paid by Island towns through annual assessments.

Edgartown’s former representative on the commission, James Joyce, brought the budgeting issue before the select board Monday.

Mr. Joyce lamented the lack of town oversight in MVC hiring, saying that the commission has made two new hires without town input. Although one new hire was to replace a former employee, another will only partially be funded by a two-year grant, with the rest of the employee’s salary falling on the towns, he said.

Select board member Arthur Smadbeck agreed that the commission’s use of grant funds merited further discussion.

“You have to have some discipline,” selectman Arthur Smadbeck said. “The body receiving the grant has to have some discipline about what they’re going to do before they get that grant…that’s one of those discussions that never seems to happen.”

Edgartown pays about 40 per cent of the commission’s nearly $500,000 budget, town administrator James Hagerty said. As the town prepares to finalize its FY2024 budget, he added that the number could near $1 million in the coming years.

“The only way to not pay is a home rule petition that pulls you out, which [Edgartown] once did,” Mr. Hagerty said.

But on Monday, Mr. Smadbeck was balanced in his analysis of the commission’s current budget issues, noting that the line of communication between the commission and the town has always been strong in his eyes.

“Adam Turner has been very, very responsive to the town and he’s very sensitive to running up those bills,” he said. “When they make a decision that gets legal action they don’t have much choice than to visit it…it would be better if we didn’t have so many of these cases…but the selectmen traditionally haven’t tried to micromanage.”

Selectman Mike Donaroma remembered his own experience with the commission.

“When I worked at the commission, they didn’t really have to get permission from the town because they thought they knew better,” he said.

The town agreed to revisit the issue at the FY24 budget meeting in January.

“Eventually this will come to a tipping point,” Mr. Hagerty said. “Whether it comes from the citizens or comes from the town we need to have that discussion.”

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 11/29/2022 - 10:58

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Bob Edgartown

It should be noted that the commissions budget is more like $2 million a year with $1,260,000 of that paid by the island taxpayers. And that Edgartown’s share is $518,000 a year which is only Edgartown’s share. Reading the article I was concerned, other readers might not understand the actual cost of the MVC. Several years ago the cost to Edgartown was $336,000 a year and we all know these costs only go one way.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 11/29/2022 - 18:23

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just a thought edg

As an Edgartown taxpayer, I'd like to request that we pull out of the commission. It's outlived the usefulness of the original charter, and simply allows the long time members to 'flex their muscle'. We have appropriate boards made up of local residents who know whats best for Edgartown.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 11/30/2022 - 09:23

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Sisyphus Oak Bluffs

And what do we get for $2,000,000 that could not be handled by local boards in each town??? Think about it.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 11/30/2022 - 12:03

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Mark Edgartown

The MVC is good at turning down building. If they had approved the development on Meetinghouse. Then
Edgartown would have more tax dollars to pay the increase. But they do not understand that. Time for the towns to just say NO like they do....

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