To counter littering Edgartown discussed a proposed nip bottle ban.
Ray Ewing

Edgartown Considers Nip Bottle Ban

The miniature liquor bottles have come under scrutiny across Massachusetts and across the Island as lawmakers argue they pose a littering problem.

Edgartown considered a proposed ban on 50mL bottles, popularly known as nips, at its select board meeting on Monday.

The miniature liquor bottles have come under scrutiny across Massachusetts and across the Island as lawmakers argue they pose a littering problem. Oak Bluffs recently discussed the issue in a select board meeting earlier this month. Just across the water, the town of Falmouth voted to ban nips in October 2021, and Nantucket followed with a ban in 2022.

Brion McGroarty, owner of MV Wine & Spirits, entreated the select board to explore other options to discourage littering on the Island.

The state’s bottle redemption program, which has been in effect since the “bottle bill” of 1983, currently offers $0.05 for every bottle returned to a redemption center to be recycled. Of the 12 states that have implemented bottle redemption programs, Mr. McGroarty said, Massachusetts has one of the lowest participation rates. He went on to cite a report from the Container Recycling Institute, which found that just 38 per cent of bottles eligible for redemption were redeemed last year, down from 50 per cent in 2019.

“A nickel used to be worth something,” Mr. McGroarty said. “There’s no value to the stuff that people are throwing on the street.”

Nips do not currently fall under the redemption category but last February state lawmakers filed a “better bottle bill” proposing to increase the return rate from $0.05 to $0.10 and expand the types of beverage containers eligible for redemption. If passed, nips, along with water bottles, vitamin drinks and other non-carbonated beverage bottles would become eligible for redemption.

Mr. McGroarty said he sees initiatives like these as integral to the mission to reduce littering and encouraged the select board to share their support.

“I want to support the ban on nips, but I’d like to ask if you could at least consider or debate to ask the state legislators to come to grips with the 40-year-old bottle bill that has fallen by the wayside,” Mr. McGroarty said. “Then people would be redeeming them and not throwing them on the side of the road.”

Select board member Arthur Smadbeck agreed and said that the board would write to lawmakers requesting an increase. The town has not yet made a decision on the proposed 50mL bottle ban.

In other trash-related business, the select board reviewed a letter sent by resident Jim Oakes complaining of increased litter and traffic from the VTA bus that stops near his home on Oakdale Drive. Mr. Smadbeck said he had called the VTA for more information and found that while there is no official bus stop on that street, many riders still request stops in that area.

“Because it’s a de facto bus stop, [we should] think about putting a trash barrel over there,” Mr. Smadbeck said, noting that the board would need to check the regulations on a state-owned road. “It’s a problem and this citizen has been kind enough to be picking up the trash to this point.”

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 01/31/2023 - 09:40

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Recovered Edgartown

The ban should be on 100ml or less. If 50ml or less are the ones banned folks will buy the double sized nips. I did plenty of those in my day. The town shouldn't wait for an incredibly slow (as in anything takes years to get done) state legislature to modify the bottle deposit law. Ban nips ASAP.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 01/31/2023 - 12:04

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Anonymous

Ban the nips. They often get tossed overboard. Boaters love them. Just buy a bigger bottle and share.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 01/31/2023 - 15:42

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Charlie Callahan So Boston/Edgartown

There should be an island wide ban. The only people who buy nips are those who drink them while they are driving and then throw them out the window,so if a cop stops them they wont have a 1/2 pint or a pint bottle on the seat. Alcoholics are about the only people who buy nips. They are everywher on the streets and the roads. They need help ,not easily discarded nips.

JT MV

Came to post the same. The vast majority of nips are purchased and consumed by people driving, and then they are ALL thrown out the car window because who wants to leave evidence of their drinking and driving in the car they are drinking and driving in? In 2023 nips are nothing more than alcoholism-enablers, and should be eliminated if 90% of them end up tossed out of a moving car(which they are).

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 01/31/2023 - 15:47

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Carol formerly Chilmark

Ban those nip bottles. I pick them up from the roadside as I walk my dog (in our beautiful, rural Cape neighborhood) - they are a menace.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 01/31/2023 - 18:05

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Angera West Tisbury

Nips are more than a litter problem, they are a drinking problem especially with motor vehicle drivers and some boaters. Drivers don't want to risk getting caught with an open container, so the nips are easy to drink and drive then just toss the evidence. Banning nips makes sense on multiple levels.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 02/01/2023 - 07:14

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Jim Edgartown

Yes, Ben the nips.. nothing but litter all over the Island.. I d0 like the idea of a deposit, if we can’t ban them..
Also let’s ban all plastic bottles of any kind… recycling plastic bottles has never worked..

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 02/01/2023 - 13:21

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Happily Recovered Connecticut

It simply amazes me that it going to take a littering problem to finally curtail a drinking and driving problem. But then again, it took tax evasion to put Al Capone away.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 02/01/2023 - 17:34

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Chris Edgartown/Yarmouth Port

Please ban these nips. They are strewn about in parking lots all over the Cape and Island. Think about it, someone who can’t wait to start boozing, starts in the parking lot, throws it out the window and now is behind the wheel. It won’t prevent the rampant drunk driving and littering out here, but it’s a start.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 02/01/2023 - 18:33

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Benjamin Garndner Menemsha

This stuff ain't gonna help me in August. The summer kings come down here in June! You haven't got one thing on here I ordered. Not a beach umbrella, not a sun lounger, no beach balls...

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 02/02/2023 - 12:37

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Kate Edgartown

I found bringing bottles to a redemption center almost impossible on the island. Redemption centers won’t take the bottle if they didn’t sell it, and over 1/2 the time the machines at cronigs haven’t worked for me :(

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 02/02/2023 - 15:49

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Charlie Callahan So Boston/Edgartown

Make it a $500 fine when caught throwing nips or any other containers on the road.That'll make them perk up a little and then maybe join AA,cause if they need a nip they shouldn't be drinking

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 02/03/2023 - 08:24

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N Vh

Ban all single use plastic. Only about 10% of eligible plastics actually get recycled, and there are limited used for that material.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 02/04/2023 - 13:33

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David Munk off island

No deposit amount will ever stop a person from littering. Ban the nips if they are being thrown out the window.

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