Max Potter, Molly Menton and Willa Welch picking up trash at the Steamship Authority parking lot on Sunday.
Jeanna Shepard

High School Students Put Litter in Its Place

Members of a student-led initiative to eliminate litter on Martha’s Vineyard have spent nearly every Sunday since October combing streets and beaches for trash.

Some high school students spend their Sundays catching up on rest or cramming in some last minute studying before the school week begins. But the dozens of students involved in what they are calling the Island Cleanup Project spend their Sundays picking up trash.

Members of the project, a student-led initiative to eliminate litter on Martha’s Vineyard, have combed the streets and beaches of the Island just about every Sunday since October. Each week they measure their success in weight, running a cumulative total of 480 pounds of garbage collected over the last three months.

Max Potter and Willa Welch, juniors at the Martha’s Vineyard Regional High School, decided to launch the project the weekend after Halloween this year. They said they happened to be on a walk through downtown Vineyard Haven and saw the candy wrapper aftermath still lingering in the street.

“We contacted the Tisbury town hall and they said they didn’t have a plan to take care of it,” Willa said. “So we kind of just decided to take care of it ourselves.”

Student group picks a new place to clean each Sunday.
Jeanna Shepard
Student group picks a new place to clean each Sunday.
Jeanna Shepard

“Forty minutes later our bag was ripping at the seams,” Max said. “When we were done, we thought, why don’t we do this every week?”

Through word of mouth and a social media campaign, the two have been able to recruit about 20 other students at the high school. So far they have led efforts to clean the forest behind the high school, the East and West Chop beaches, Lighthouse Beach in Edgartown and Veterans Memorial Park in Vineyard Haven, to name a few.

This past Sunday, about 15 students involved in the project decided to clean the beach and parking lot around the Steamship Authority Vineyard Haven pier. The group is always looking for recommendations of where to clean next, Willa said. They chose this spot at the request of her mother, who saw a Facebook post of all the trash in the bushes around the loading queue.

Beginning at the gazebo next to the Black Dog, the group sprang into action.

The idea began after Halloween, when Willa Welch and Max Potter noticed the streets still filled with candy wrappers the next day.
Jeanna Shepard
The idea began after Halloween, when Willa Welch and Max Potter noticed the streets still filled with candy wrappers the next day.
Jeanna Shepard

“I see trash already,” said Max’s younger brother Zak as he stepped onto the beach.

Shoulder to shoulder, the group combed the beach from the water line to the dune grass, spilling into the thorny thickets that separate the ferry loading queue from the beach. After a solid sweep, the group crossed the terminal parking lot to a portion of beach behind the bus station.

Whenever one of the students stumbled upon an especially dense pile of trash, they shouted, “Jackpot, baby!”

After just one hour the group had filled three bloated trash bags.

“I say it every time, but it’s always amazing how much you find,” Willa said. “Everything from shoes, dirty diapers and scattered Styrofoam . . . but today it was mostly cigarette butts, plastic bottles and little pieces of wrapping.”

“But, luckily, we actually haven’t seen many plastic bags,” Max said, referencing a recent local initiative to ban single-use plastic bags. “It goes to show that policies people put in place actually make a real difference.”

The students loaded the bags into the back of John Potter’s truck (father of Max and Zak) before heading to the Edgartown transfer station, which allows the group to dispose of the collected waste for free.

“It’s pretty amazing what these guys have done,” said Mr. Potter, who was also involved in the cleanup effort. “We all get to come out every Sunday and make a positive impact on the Island.”

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 01/27/2020 - 20:24

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Diane Edgartown

Thank you. What a wonderful group of young people giving back to the island. We should all join in. Let’s start a island wide campaign against litter.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 01/27/2020 - 21:59

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Max Potter

Hey everyone it's Max and Willa, find us on Facebook and Instagram @mvcleanup to get information about where we are going to be each week. We appreciate everyone that joins us, and encourage everyone who can to come out and clean this beautiful island with us. Thank you so much for the support! Hope to see you soon.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 01/28/2020 - 05:36

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Becky Edgartown

You guys are great - showing that big change starts with small movements. Thank you!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 01/28/2020 - 07:16

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Chuck Edgartown

It goes without saying that this group of young people are setting a great example of civic pride. Hopefully their efforts will inspire those that are littering to change their habits. Perhaps it would be nice if in each area chosen for pick up that those who are legitimately responsible for the maintenance of the area get them selves involved. For example, we could choose the Edgartown municipal parking lot and have the town workers and administrators as well as the employees of Edgartown Pizza join the group for the pick up activity. Or how about choosing Circuit Ave OB and getting each store owner to join in the effort.Hey,here is a wild thought. Instead of hiring summer help to write parking tickets for our visitors,why not establish a litter patrol and have them cruise the downtown area with broom and standup dustpan ala Disney Land style! Picking up the cigarette butts alone would make a world of difference. Thank youMax and Willa and friends

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 01/28/2020 - 14:18

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Toni

I love the Vineyard very much and it makes me sad to see so much trash in the summer. On my daily walks I always try to pick up some trash. Thank you students, and don't forget about Oak Bluffs.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 01/28/2020 - 21:38

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Mike Roslindale/Chilmark/Orleans

Ten thousand thanks and maybe more. Hope you can feel all the good vibes coming your way

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