Several residents recently wrote in complaining about the potential of more pickleball courts in town.
Tim Johnson

Chilmark Eyes Pickleball Court Construction Ban

The planning board voted Tuesday to initiate the public hearing process on the prohibition of court construction. The board was previously considering a moratorium after complaints about the potential proliferation of the sport. 

Officials in Chilmark are pursuing a new bylaw that would ban the construction of new pickleball courts in town. 

The planning board voted Tuesday to initiate the public hearing process on the prohibition of court construction. The board was previously considering a moratorium after complaints about the potential proliferation of the sport. 

The new course works as a “de facto moratorium” on new courts though, said planning board member Peter Cook, giving the board time to hear community input before deciding on permanent regulations. 

“We can either come up with something that’s pretty clear, or something that kicks the can down the road,” said Mr. Cook, at the meeting this week. 

The board did not have a draft bylaw in hand this week. Any bylaw that emerges from the process would have to be approved at town meeting. 

A sport similar to tennis but played on a smaller court with paddles, pickleball has become popular across the country. Recently, Chilmark residents have raised concerns about the noise level of the game, and the impact a court could have on neighbors.

In a memo sent to the board, Mr. Cook explained that the strategy of pursuing a public hearing was based on advice from town legal counsel, who pointed out that a moratorium would not go into effect until it was voted on at town meeting. 

“Town counsel suggested that…the quickest way would be to announce a public hearing on a ban on pickleball courts,” Mr. Cook wrote. “The hearing itself would have the effect of a moratorium in that any construction of a [pickleball] court during the deliberation would be disallowed if/when a bylaw change banning such courts were passed.”

Some board members at the meeting Tuesday expressed concerns about enacting the bylaw.

“How broad is this ban going to be?” asked board member Catherine Thompson. “If you have a pickleball paddle in their car, are you subject to search and seizure?”

Board chair Richard Osnoss clarified that the ban would only apply to the construction of pickleball courts, but Mr. Osnoss had his own concerns. 

“If we pursue a ban,” he said, “there may be some disturbed people.”

Mr. Cook argued that an outpouring of pro-pickleball participants in public hearings could be a benefit, since the board has only had anti-pickleball correspondence thus far. He also raised concerns about a “flood of applications” which might come in if they allowed new pickleball courts between now and the next town meeting.

The board ultimately voted to initiate the public hearing process on banning new courts.

That proposal will now require approval from the town select board at its next meeting.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 10/12/2023 - 12:06

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Mary Chilmark

This island get less fun every day. We can build more and more houses and deplete our resources but you can have a pickleball court. We should be more worried as an island about our resources- water, sewer, electricity, trash etc.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 10/12/2023 - 14:10

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R Scott Patterson Edgartown

Seems super silly to me, why single out a specific game? If noise is the issue make some noise regulations and enforce them.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 10/12/2023 - 14:27

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Ruby Chilmark

The problem with pickle bar courts is the high decibel noise emitted by the ball and paddles used during play. This noise pollution has the potential to disturb neighbors and is impossible to fully eliminate from an outside court. The peace and well being of the town’s inhabitants, including animals is behind the push to ban the courts.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 10/12/2023 - 14:51

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Bill Wolf Aquinnah

So now Chilmark is proposing a ban because it "could" impact on neighbors? ANYTHING "could" impact on neighbors. Tennis already does, giant houses already do. Shameful.Live and let live.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 10/12/2023 - 20:28

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Amy S.

Everyone who wants to play with little rubber balls can go back to the city and play hand ball! To come allllll the way to MV just to play pickle ball, get a life!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 10/13/2023 - 06:17

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Leslie Zemsky Aquinnah and Buffalo, NY

A ban on new pickleball courts is ridiculous. It’s a fun and healthy game for all ages and abilities. Playing pickleball has become a fun part of our time in Aquinnah. We have met new people and even revised the games to include more players. In Buffalo we built 2 courts 12 years ago to be open to the public to enjoy. They sit next to an apartment and office building and we have never heard a complaint by anyone over the past 12 years. Towns should be encouraging sports and activities that get People moving. If the Chilmark Community Center were to convert a tennis court to dual play Pickle and Tennis would that be banned? Let’s encourage healthy play for all ages!

Islander Too Tisbury

The constant irritating noise of paddling hard little balls is probably inaudible in Buffalo.

Presumably you come to the Vineyard for peace and quiet, yet you think nothing of driving neighbors nuts with the maddening pop-pop-pop sound.

I was at Lambert's Cove Beach a couple of years ago when people were playing this game on the beach. Not only did the noise of the balls drive me nuts but the players were running around more or less commandeering the section of the beach where they were playing. Totally clueless as to the inappropriateness of their noisy game at LC Beach and the lack of consideration they showed.

Do something QUIET on MV Island. OR go to a sports center to play pickleball that has soundproof walls.

The noise pollution problem on MV is getting truly out of hand. Everyone just wants to do their own noisy thing, and the rest of the public be damned.

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