The debate about the future of the high school's playing fields has been going on for about 8 years.
Ray Ewing

School Committee Scraps Turf Field Plan as MSBA Project Looms

The regional high school committee Monday voted to withdraw its applications for the project with the Martha's Vineyard Commission and give its building committee a blank slate as officials consider a overhaul for the entire campus.

Despite winning its two-year legal fight over a proposed artificial turf field at Martha’s Vineyard Regional High School, the school committee this week agreed to abandon the controversial project — but not the potential use of turf itself.

In the first of three actions on the matter Monday night, committee members voted 7-1 to give the 24-member school building committee a blank slate for the entire campus, in order to plan a complete overhaul of the school.

The high school committee also voted 5-3 to withdraw its applications for the now-scrapped turf field project, including the demolition permit recently filed with the town of Oak Bluffs and the application for modification that was approved by the Martha’s Vineyard Commission in June, 2021.

The 24-member building committee represents all six Island towns in the process of developing a new or fully renovated high school in partnership with the Massachusetts School Building Authority, which has accepted the school into its highly competitive reimbursement program.

The building committee could eventually decide to keep a turf field, but the withdrawal means the approvals process would have to start over.

“We are taking off all limitations for the MSBA project to move forward in any way that it possibly could work … It’s all on the table,” committee chair Kathryn Schertzer said. 

“I’m thrilled at [this] vote,” high school principal Sara Dingledy told the committee. “It opens up the possibility for us to truly go forward transparently.”

The idea of a turf field at the high school has been contentious for years and became the subject of a lawsuit between the school and the Oak Bluffs planning board. The board denied the school committee’s application for a field in 2022, but the rejection was annulled by a state Land Court judge late last year. 

Committee member Louis Paciello, who cast the one dissent in the MSBA vote, said the decision to now drop the approved project now would discourage and even anger many Islanders who support school athletics.

“You’re wearing out the community and the people who were willing to reach in their pockets and … donate money to these projects,” Mr. Paciello said.

“They’re sick of talk,” he said. “They want to see results.”

Athletic fields are not included in the state building authority’s reimbursement program, which is expected to provide about 38 per cent of the cost to rebuild or extensively renovate the high school.

Committee members Kris O’Brien, Mr. Paciello and Ms. Schertzer voted against the Martha’s Vineyard Commission application withdrawal motion, which was largely symbolic as the applications would have expired without action

After agreeing to give the building committee oversight for the entire campus, the school committee voted 6-2 to withdraw its Jan. 8 decision to ask town select boards for a non-binding referendum on artificial turf versus natural grass fields. Roxanne Ackerman and Jeffrey (Skipper) Manter voted in the minority.

Ms. O’Brien, who had opposed the Jan. 8 motion, said the request fell outside the school committee’s responsibilities.

“We have been living [with] the reactions and the consequences of boards overstepping their authorities,” Ms. O’Brien said. 

“It is not the authority of the school committee to make non-binding referendum requests of the select boards,” she said.

All three motions were proposed by Michael Watts, who has consistently backed the turf field plan in the past.

In an interview with the Gazette, Mr. Watts said he believes it’s time for a fresh start, now that the building committee is about to embark on a $2.1 million feasibility study approved by Island voters last year.

“To take an existing committee and constrain the canvas they were going to work with, I didn’t think was a good idea anymore,” Mr. Watts said Tuesday.

Mr. Watts said he also was inspired by project manager Michael Owen of CHA consulting, the company picked to lead the school reconstruction, who spoke at Monday's meeting urging the school committee to consider the entire campus. 

“Mike was saying, 'You have a blank canvas. Let's use it,'” Mr. Watts said, adding that he considers athletic facilities an integral part of the high school experience.

“It's time to look at the whole thing,” he said.

Mr. Watts acknowledged that the turf field debate has evoked strong feelings on both sides of the question. 

“The process itself was very difficult and fraught with a lot of opinion and emotion ... My hope of hopes is that the difficult, challenging feelings start to subside, all the way around,” Mr. Watts said.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 02/06/2024 - 13:06

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Enough Already Oak Bluffs

Great news! Now the community can focus on what's important to ALL students, a decent learning environment. Let's build something the community can be proud of for decades to come.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 02/06/2024 - 13:07

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George Sanders OB

Thank you for finally doing not just what is right, but what is sensible. Our school is deteriorating before our eyes and the effort and capital resources need to go there and not some overblown athletic complex that only serves a small portion of the student body, all while poisoning the aquifer in perpetuity. Fix this aging school and then figure out an accompanying athletic complex that uses natural grass so that our children and water aren’t exposed to toxic cancer causing chemicals.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 02/06/2024 - 13:46

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Gary Player Oak Bluffs

So in which future decade will our kids get safe fields to play on?

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 02/06/2024 - 13:48

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Charlie Callahan So Boston edgartown

Can't these egotistical fools let it go.Most people want a dirt field,take a few prozac,call your shrinks,have some wine and give the kids a nice grass field.Im surprised the gazette still wastes time writing about this thing.Imagine if the dysfunctionals had something really important to address,like homelessness,or addictions or hunger!!!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 02/06/2024 - 16:51

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Islander Mv

Thank you ! We don’t want a plastic field
Never did . Never will. Time to repair our planet for the future of our children and grandchildren . Let’s go for the gold star ⭐️ a Eco - green school and a regenerative and sustainable athletic fields.

James Oak Bluffs

using your logic what should the school use for a track? tennis courts? and what kind of surface should they build for the field hockey? or did you just not like the "plastic field"

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 02/07/2024 - 14:19

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Annie Cook

After all of the obsessive focus on artificial turf, I hope the MVRHS will prioritize more urgent matters such as ensuring air conditioning throughout classrooms now that the fall and spring semesters are being impacted by rising, dangerous heat due to climate change. Kids and teachers should not have to swelter in rooms that feel like ovens while admin offices are cooled. It's appalling for island youth to end up at the nurse's office due to heat sickness from a lack of A/C in outdated classroom facilities. This is perhaps THE civil-rights issue of our time: children's right to a habitable community, and planet. It starts with institutions being led by adults who are not in denial about the drastic and quickly-escalating effects of climate change and understand the urgency of making the necessary adjustments so children are as safe as possible under environmental and society that are already highly stressful.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 02/07/2024 - 14:44

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Carlos Degotta Vineyard Haven

Are you kidding? So our sports program which is important no matter what people who were always picked last say, will have to suffer for years and our teams maybe dropped by leagues that demand safe surfaces for student athletes. I am sad for our students at the high school for possibly the next ten years, those on the school committee have abandoned their charge which is in the furtherance of the islands children which includes a robust sports program.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 02/07/2024 - 18:25

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Annie Cook

Humans can surely invent a substitute product to this: https://www.mychemicalfreehouse.net/2021/11/non-toxic-artificial-grass-…
Why the artificial turf industry wasn't starting to develop a more feasible version of its go-to material speaks to a common issue in terms of corporate agility: a lack of foresight based on unfolding facts on not just the ground, but in the air. We can do better. Everyone can get the result they want - the perks of turf with an investment in environmentally responsible strategic design. This is a nationwide high-school engineering and bio-science project waiting for visionary investors.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 02/09/2024 - 09:10

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Steve Auerbach Oak Bluffs

The need for a new High School has been obvious for a very long time. The wish to have the state pay for part of the cost has been a focus as well, including the need to have all our ducks in a row.
The fight over the field has wasted a lot of time, energy and money. Why did it take until now for the "smart" people in the Administration to realize that they would jeopardize the entire project, particularly the state helpm by insisting on first getting their way on the composition of the athletic field?

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 02/09/2024 - 20:27

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Frederick Rundlet Tisbury

We need a Junior High School on the same campus to maximize the students educational potential. This should be included in the study as agreed at our Town Meeting in Spring of 23!

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