<p>On a quick swing through the Vineyard Saturday, Lieut. Gov. Karyn Polito visited the Tashmoo boat landing where a state-funded overhaul is slated to begin this fall.</p>
On a quick swing through the Vineyard Saturday, Lieut. Gov. Karyn Polito visited the Tashmoo boat landing where a state-funded overhaul is slated to begin this fall.
Earlier this year the town won a $680,000 grant from the Seaport Economic Council, the state agency that helps Massachusetts communities to restore infrastructure critical to the maritime economy. The lieutenant governor chairs the council.
“We feel this investment coupled with local dollars . . . will create a better, safer, more accessible landing,” the lieutenant governor said as a boat was launched from the ramp at the foot of Lake street on a humid, overcast day. Tisbury selectman Larry Gomez and Melinda Loberg and harbor master John Crocker were all on hand for the tour.
The town will contribute $170,000 to the project from its waterways fund. Mr. Crocker prepared the grant application last October. In February the town learned that it would receive the money.
The overhaul will include replacing the public pier, the launch ramp and the bulkhead.
Work is scheduled to begin in October, after the striped bass and bluefish derby, with completion planned by January. Lieutenant Governor Polito said she will return to Lake Tashmoo then.
“I will be able to see it before and after,” she said.

Comments
The current public pier
BradThe current public pier cannot be more than five years old. Why was it built so low and so close to the enitre landing being redone?
Can we please include new and
Kayaker VHCan we please include new and additional racks for kayaks? Current racking is falling apart and not enough for this popular spot.
I hope they fix the landing
Bob EdgartownI hope they fix the landing in Katama as well as that one is worse.
after 'hurricane bob' in 1991
BG Edgafter 'hurricane bob' in 1991 destroyed the existing ramp, there was zero local effort to do anything. The state 'board of access' provided the temporary ramp that is there now. I believe the comment from the bureaucrat was 'find me a piece of land and i'll build the town a ramp- but I will not commit to any expenditure there due to the shallow water and chance of the atlantic ocean coming over the dunes etc'. That was back then. If someone made the effort to work with the state, the board of access would be committed to doing something. Perhaps we should ask our current board of selectmen to make the request to the state to get something done.
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