As elected officials up-Island balk at the prospect of offshore sand mining, Oak Bluffs is voicing support for the venture. At a selectmen’s meeting early this week, town administrator Robert L. Whritenour said town beaches stand to benefit from new information laid out recently in the draft state Ocean Management Plan.</p>
As elected officials and residents up-Island balk at the prospect of offshore sand mining, the town of Oak Bluffs is voicing support for the venture.
At a selectmen’s meeting early this week, town administrator Robert L. Whritenour said Oak Bluffs beaches stand to benefit from new information laid out in the draft state Ocean Management Plan, under review this fall.
Oak Bluffs is one of many towns statewide with public beaches that are slowly disappearing due to erosion and major storm damage. Some are looking for sand to replenish their beaches, according to the ocean plan, which seeks to identify suitable spots for dredging offshore sand deposits.
Oak Bluffs beaches were replenished with dredge spoils from the Tisbury drawbridge project last spring, but the quality of the sand came under strong criticism from townspeople who complained that the sediment contained pieces of metal and carried a strong odor.
Town officials have since been looking for alternative sources of sand.
“There is little sand left in our coastal system to naturally nourish our beaches,” Mr. Whritenour wrote in a letter to the state office of Coastal Zone Management. “Inland sand resources are limited and expensive.”
The draft state ocean plan maps a handful of possible dredging locations, including a large area off the north shore of Martha’s Vineyard. The sites would host up to three pilot projects for public benefit in the next five years.
But at least one town on the north shore is wary of projects that might disturb seabed habitat or disrupt the fishery.
During a meeting with Coastal Zone Management officials last week to discuss the draft ocean plan, Chilmark selectman Warren Doty and others expressed strong concerns about sand mining.
“The health of the ocean demands that you don’t do sand mining,” Mr. Doty told CZM leaders. “We are not improving the health of the ocean by digging up the benthic environment.”
The practice is already allowed under state law, though extensive permitting is required.
At the Oak Bluffs selectmen’s meeting Tuesday, Mr. Whritenour called the issue “complicated,” acknowledging that some people consider the practice of sand mining to be a threat to ocean habitat. But he said the town would support dredging with an environmentally friendly approach.
“I feel in no way would we contemplate beach nourishment in a way that is haphazard or threatens habitat,” he said.
In an email sent last week, Mr. Whritenour requested the support of other Island towns for the inclusion of sand mining in the ocean plan, and reiterated the need for the Island to present a united front on the issue.
“Even to achieve Islandwide consen
sus alone this needs more discussion,” he said.
At their meeting this week, the Tisbury selectmen declined to write a letter in support of Oak Bluffs, citing the need for more information. “We just don’t know enough; there’s not enough research yet,” Tisbury selectman Melinda Loberg told the Gazette later.
In Oak Bluffs on Tuesday, selectman Kathy Burton expressed enthusiasm for the prospect of beach nourishment. “I think it’s very exciting,” she said. “I think it is the way of the future.”
A forum on offshore sand mining is scheduled for 5:30 p.m. on Nov. 13 at the Martha’s Vineyard Commission office on New York avenue in Oak Bluffs.

Comments
We would welcome sand from
Herb Roskind East ChopWe would welcome sand from the drawbridge project. Our beach is nearby and can use sand replenishment which has been moving west toward the drawbridge. We would be getting our own sand back.
And you probably would not
Ted OBAnd you probably would not call anyone names, question their ethics or their motives, or accuse them of racism, would you? I'm guessing that you would simply say "Thank you".
On September 24, 2014, EEA
Ewell Hopkins Oak BluffsOn September 24, 2014, EEA released the first formal amendment of the 2009 ocean plan for public review and comment. See the Draft Massachusetts Ocean Management Plan, September 2014 web page for copies of this document, along with instructions for submitting comments by 5:00 p.m. on Tuesday, November 25, 2014.
http://oakbluffsma.gov/index.cfm/cdid/17235/pid/10486
Oak Bluffs does not have to
Road Rider VHOak Bluffs does not have to look as far as the North Shore for sand. A visual inspection from the parking area on Beach Road between Oak Bluffs & Edgartown will show where previously placed dredge materials have gone, and it is not far off shore. You can clearly see the buildup of clean sand which has built up not far away at all from the beach, which would mean a cheap fast and plentiful source of sand. Of Course, I would be remiss in not saying I think attempting to fight mother nature in this way is akin to peeing into the wind. Also, how about digging out the small bridge channel where it is now so filled in NO water exchange between the ocean and pond is happening at that location? How about the pile left near the culvert at Farm Pond near the seawall? THAT looks clean and could have been put on Inkwell before summer instead of all the black goo that was placed. I hereby find Oak Bluffs guilty of not seeing what is in front of your face in your own town which is readily available. Stop the madness of wasting $$$$$$ on study after study etc. just open your eyes and have at it.
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