The Martha's Vineyard Regional School District is asking a judge to overturn the Oak Bluffs planning board denial of a new turf field.
Tim Johnson

High School Seeks Ruling in Turf Field Suit

The Martha’s Vineyard Regional School District filed a motion for a summary judgment with the state Land Court last month, requesting the court make a ruling on the case without having to go to trial.

The Martha’s Vineyard Regional School District is moving ahead with its lawsuit against the Oak Bluffs planning board, asking a judge to overturn the board’s denial of an artificial turf playing field on the high school campus.

The district filed a motion for summary judgment with the state Land Court last month, requesting the court make a ruling on the case without having to go to trial.

In a 26-page memorandum accompanying its motion, the school district claims that the town of Oak Bluffs has no jurisdiction over the fields under the Dover Amendment, a state law that among other things exempts school land used for “educational purposes” from local zoning restrictions. 

Martha's Vineyard Regional High School committee member Kris O’Brien gave a brief update on the case at the committee’s meeting Monday. Oak Bluffs has until mid-February to oppose the committee’s request. It’s not clear when the two sides will make their case to a judge.

“The time frame for that has not yet been determined,” Ms. O’Brien said.

The hotly-debated synthetic field, part of a larger overhaul of the high school’s athletic grounds, has divided Islanders since it was first proposed in 2016 by a nonprofit group of Vineyard parents.

A marathon Martha’s Vineyard Commission hearing in the summer of 2021 drew some 15 hours of testimony for and against the controversial use of man-made materials, before the MVC voted 10-6 to approve it as a development of regional impact.

Public hearings in Oak Bluffs began the following February and lasted until May, with debate growing acrimonious at times.

The special permit application ultimately failed when the planning board voted 2-2, an unbreakable tie because the board’s fifth member, a professional landscaper, recused himself throughout the hearing process.

The planning board deadlock was soon followed by a 5-4 school committee vote to appeal the permit denial, setting the lawsuit in motion.

Among other business Monday, the committee extended universal free admission to high school sporting events through the end of the current academic year, and agreed to begin developing an event-admission policy at next month’s meeting.

Future seasons may see free admission only for students, who recently received scannable identification cards, principal Sara Dingledy said.

Also Monday, the committee heard about the impacts of last weekend’s cold snap and high winds, which toppled an air-handling mechanism on the high school roof and froze pipes inside that then leaked as they defrosted.

“A large number of people were in here cleaning the better part of the day on Sunday, mopping, cleaning,” said facilities subcommittee chair Mike Watts.

Deploying an arsenal of squeegees, vacuums, fans and dehumidifiers, staffers got the school dried out by Monday morning.

The school’s building trades class also recently confronted the unforeseen, but in a good way.

On a recent trip to Cottle’s lumberyard, the classmates found themselves accepting about $15,000 worth of brand-new, boxed power tools, hand tools and protective gear, finance manager Suzanne Cioffi told the committee Monday.

“They had no idea. They just went over there to get supplies for the wood shop,” she said.

Eddie Cottle of Cottle’s and Mark Martino of Milwaukee Tools donated the goods, Ms. Cioffi said

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 02/07/2023 - 14:31

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School's Out Tisbury

Oak Bluffs dragged this out unnecessarily. I'm thrilled the HS is pushing for summary judgement and hope the judge grants it. It's way overdue for the kids to have their fields.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 02/07/2023 - 18:52

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Roger Maxwell. I maried Arenda Randolph whose family are native islanders (Oak Bluffs. Windsor Heights Iowa

Our son David is the high school principal of Valley high school the largest high school in Iowa with over 2200 students. Valley football stadium is comprised of synthetic turf as the field is used for many events including the state's marching band contest. Use turf and you can't go wrong. ..saves on water.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 02/07/2023 - 23:36

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Tom Engley West Tisbury

I really wish that there was the same amount of time, energy and passion put into education as this extracurricular activity.

William Oak Bluffs

It is a shame that sports is viewed with such a narrow lens by some. The vast majority of young people learn incredible life skills through sports (conflict resolution, time management, fairness, teambuilding, equality, discipline, inclusion, perseverance and respect. This doesn't even mention becoming part of something bigger than oneself. In most cases, a traditional curriculum doesn't even begin to teach these skills. So yeah, a great deal of time, energy and passion should be (and has been) put toward this "activity", but let's not make it out as one (academic curriculum) is more important than the other (extracurricular activity).

Rational Person Oak Bluffs

Couldn't the same life skills be taught by having more robust debate teams, math teams, chess teams etc? I played sports in High School and was also a member of the debate team. Trust me the life skills I learned by participating on that team have served me far better in life than anything I learned through sports. Doesn't it make more sense that our educational system should focus more on life long intellectual pursuits than a sport that one plays for a few short years when they are young.

Islander61 OB

I couldn't have said it better and completely agree with you William. Athletics is an opportunity for many students to stay engaged in school and offers lifelong opportunities in the fields of coaching, administration, medicine, advertising, business, and more. Student-athletes are taught that they are students first and athletes second. Bravo William for setting the record straight.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 02/08/2023 - 08:18

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Danny East Chop

Few things in this world are as short sited as using plastic to make playing fields.

Islander61 OB

What is short sighted is that we have a playing field at the high school that has to be protected because it is grass and can't hold up to the usage no matter how much time, money, and effort put into trying to maintain it. The Tennessee Titans are putting in a turf field, replacing their grass field because they can't maintain it. It is causing more injuries than a turf field will. They have the data to back it up and their ownership has a lot more money and resources than the school does and the island climate is harsher than theirs. The high school is a very large facility that is constantly used by the island community, as it should be, except for the stadium field. A turf field is the best use of funds to allow all kinds of groups to use this facility, young and old. I suppose you would also say that the synthetic track, which is also part of this plan, is short sighted too and that they should put in a cinder track. It has been shown that the high school soil already contains PFAS, putting in the turf field would actually be better for the aquifer, as the latest study shows. Let's get this done.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 02/08/2023 - 11:34

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Tom Edgartown

This has been a big waste of time and resources.. Save water and fertilizers… Go Turf

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 02/08/2023 - 21:32

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Molly Glasgow Chilmark

Save water? If you want to save water then perhaps we shouldn’t put plastic on top of the soil that will then leak into our water supply. You people are dumb as a sack of nails.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 02/08/2023 - 21:45

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Tom Engley West Tisbury

Sports are great yes I am a sports fan for sure. In 1965 my brother Roger had his life changed completely on the field which we speak of and it had nothing to do with the field it was a head hit in practice. But how much money is this going to cost and does it make sense at all. Our baseball field is great. Our track needs replacement. I wasn’t allowed to play football because of my brothers awful head injury. Our schools are falling apart campus wise but that’s what happens to wooden buildings it’s a challenge Good luck.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 02/10/2023 - 09:31

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Katama Bill Katama

Almost every school on the mainland has turf nowadays. The fields get so much use from sports that grass never lasts. Spring lacrosse did not exist when I was younger, so the fields never recover after football/soccer seasons.

Rational Person Oak Bluffs

An obvious solution is to have less sports that require playing on turf. Kids need education far more than a sport on whatever type of field. Wouldn't it be great if the island was known for its students scholarship. Odds are slim any kid from the island will ever play in a professional sport but wouldn't it be great if one cured cancer? And we saved our water supply at the same time!!!!

William Oak Bluffs

If I understand you, the only good that comes from sports is if someone ends up playing professionally? Interesting take. So, your opinion is also that education only comes from within the classroom? If you take that sort of myopic thinking 1 step further, you'd argue that learning can only take place within the 6 hours of the day that kids are in school? I suppose that's one way to look at it? As a life-long educator, college and high school administrator, I'd offer that learning takes place in many different environments and not just when kids are sitting at a desk. Further, kids learn so much from participation in sports (I commented earlier on this). Kids learn differently as well and some do not thrive in the classroom, but work through those challenges because they enjoy participating in sports afterwards. Lastly, we do not have to say here that 1 (academic curriculum) is more important than another (sports and extra curricular activities). I'd suggest that both are equally as important for countless reasons, most of which I didn't even touch on. However, the most pragmatic reason is that the "outside funding" that is being suggested for this project is not being offered for another "traditional academic" project. So indeed, no one is taking money for this project that in your opinion should be used elsewhere. Now, I suppose that you might argue that those offering the funding do not have the proper priorities. Well, that's their prerogative, and if you don't like it... perhaps you step up and offer to fund some academic program of your choice.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 02/12/2023 - 19:47

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Beka ElDeiry Mv

Anonymous opinions hold zero credibility.
Like the acid rain , Pfas and plastics are so prolific , they are literally airborne .
If we can’t learn about pollution from history, we have not evolved at all. This land is protected , for good reason. Why would anyone , especially a school ignore this . Plastics make life more convenient, but is it worth the risk?
Do No Harm , is an intellectual philosophy.
If our MVRHS school leaders don’t understand this , hopefully the judge will.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 02/19/2023 - 18:26

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Fred Roven Edgartown

I don't get how with our single source aquifer we are even giving a second thought to using a ground cover that, with constant use, can break down and release PFAS. When I played HS football, green stains were a sign I had actually been in the game. Maybe we can add additional artificial coloring to plastic to leave stains. I thought this might be of interest to some of the naysayers.
https://www.wgbh.org/news/local-news/2022/10/05/wu-blocks-new-artificia…

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