This is not the language we would expect to hear from the Island planning body charged with protecting our land and water and leading the Vineyard climate action efforts:
This is not the language we would expect to hear from the Island planning body charged with protecting our land and water and leading the Vineyard climate action efforts:
“I remain concerned about the climate change and environmental impacts, and I have to work my way through that.”
“I don’t think it is inconsistent to be against single use plastics but to be for something like this.”
Last week’s Martha’s Vineyard Commission land use planning committee meetings demonstrated the disconnect between the environmental rhetoric of the MVC and its decision-making criteria. All but one commissioner participating in Tuesday’s meeting made it clear they intend to approve this proposal with minimal conditions, likely next week. There was little indication that any of the letters and testimony from 20 local environmental organizations or countless other concerned citizens — or our years of field work — affected their decision-making.
Commissioners did not discuss the myriad climate and environmental impacts associated with a 2.5-acre plastic field. Nor did they explore how it will conflict with the MVC’s climate work, Island Plan and goal to reduce fossil fuel use to zero per cent by 2040. They didn’t mention that the town of Oak Bluffs is constrained in its official oversight due to yet another zoning-exempt project and that this project would sit within a zone 2 wellhead protection area, adding four acres of impermeable surfaces, or the lack of master planning for the high school campus. They also didn’t seem concerned by the discovery of bioaccumulative, toxic PFAS in the plastic field materials. Chatham, Wellesley, Natick, and Wayland’s contaminated drinking water should be a cautionary tale.
Instead they focused on the false choice of voting for kids or the environment. An all-grass campus is best for kids. It prioritizes their health and that of the world they will inherit. There has been ample testimony from parents and athletes who do not want to play on a plastic field.
When concerns were raised about anonymous funding, it was shocking to hear commissioners dismiss them and urge the LUPC to take it on “faith” that the donors will provide all the funding ($500,000-$1 million-plus) for every system replacement in perpetuity.
Commissioners also batted down draft language for an all-grass condition, saying it would amount to an application denial. Wasn’t the primary goal of this project to replace a failing track, provide new, properly engineered fields, and ADA-compliant walkways and facilities? Have the nonexistent anonymous donors somehow communicated that they would only fund the project if it includes plastic?
The hearing chairman stated: “You could take the plastic that we all use in one week and it’s more than this field will ever be.” No. To approve a plastic field is a vote for 30-plus tons of plastic and foam trash every time it needs replacing. Sending our trash to “youth facilities” in Pennsylvania as the MVC chairman suggested is not repurposing, it’s dumping in a less privileged community.
This is where the rubber meets the road. Where in this review is all the environmental advocacy and stewardship that we see from the MVC? This application begs for a thorough review. Please join us in demanding that it gets one.
Mollie Doyle, Dardy Slavin and Rebekah Thomson
Chilmark
The writers are founders of the Field Fund.

Comments
Unfortunately this sounds
Islander TooUnfortunately this sounds like a case of "regulatory capture," right here on Martha's Vineyard.
There are so many misleading
Islander61 OBThere are so many misleading comments in this letter it is astounding. The authors of this letter, i.e. The Field Fund, had an opportunity to replace the fields 4 years ago but took their money and ran, thus losing the opportunity to get what they wanted, grass fields. Now they just are getting in the way and force the school to do what they couldn't do, costing the tax payer hundreds of thousands of dollars in the mean time. I have sat in on all of the MVC meetings and it seems to me that the opposition of the project didn't provide any factual data supporting their claims that this field is dangerous. The studies done by the MVC were complete and thorough, and expensive to tax payers, all because this is what The Field Fund wanted. The data didn't support their claims of PFAS in the products being used, yet they still claim they are there, with no evidence. One of the independent peer reviewers actually said "he would have no problem living next to this field" and then went on to say "he tested the effluent from his own home and found increased levels of PFAS, when he consciously tries to eliminate them from his home". The funding: I still find that this still being a topic is again, astounding. The high school, like all other non-profits who fund raise for capital projects, need an approved plan before actively fund raising. This is how it is done, period. The commissioners have listened and read all the data provided in this thorough review, as they should, and will follow the evidence and not speculation. Speculation and lack of data is all The Field Fund and its supporters have provided to create fear so they can get what they want. The chair of the LUPC actually stated that through this whole process not one person from the opposition has offered to help, and all but one of the commissioners, who is clearly a supporter of the Field Fund, commended the high school project team for thoroughly creating a project that was well thought out and showed they listened to the concerns of public, even providing extra measures to insure the safety of the field. And yet again, the Field Fund wants you to believe the field won't be recycled when there are letters and testimony by manufactures that it will be 100% recycled. Again, another fear The Field Fund wants you to believe. Lastly, The Field Fund wants you to put grass in when yet another independent consultant, the gentleman from Weston, clearly stated that grass needs nitrogen, fact pure and simple, and stated that in order to establish a new field and then keep it maintained in this climate you need to apply between 4-7 pounds of nitrogen/100,000, so The Field Fund wants you to put more nitrogen into the watershed. Nitrogen that is killing our ponds. I don't think that is responsible. These are the facts the MVC Commissioners are weighing. There are thousands of people on the island that support this project, lets get it done.
The Field Fund has worked
Katherine Scott TisburyThe Field Fund has worked miracles already on grass playing fields on Martha's Vineyard. Sports staff have stated that kids "love to roll on the grass."
They obviously have the chops to construct and manage high-quality fields.
Per Islander61, whoever that is--maybe even a turf salesman---"thousands" of people on MV support plastic fields? Really? Let's see their names.
Plastic turf supporters look to me like a relatively small group who managed to use up most of the oxygen.
Actually, I believe far *more* thousands, including MVRHS students and students-to-be support grass fields, and many of them and their representatives (e.g., env. orgs.) have submitted substantive testimony to the MVC.
Islander61's anonymous comment is replete with disinformation verging on slander whose veracity he or she will never have to defend.
No one who is familiar with the myriad facts and figures provided to the MVC concerning the benefits and detriments of plastic turf vs. natural grass can possibly take this comment seriously.
This is a political statement, not a science-based one.
Thank you for highlighting
Rebekah Thomson West TisburyThank you for highlighting some of the common misconceptions around this debate.
If anyone doubts The Field Fund’s commitment to helping the MVRHS upgrade its athletic campus, please check out our letter to the MVC about it (it also includes a link to every letter we sent to the school committee as the negotiations were underway) — https://www.mvcommission.org/sites/default/files/docs/Explanation%20for…
If you attended the hearings, then you heard industry representatives admit to the Commissioners that NO plastic fields from the US have ever been recycled despite a decade of assurances to the contrary. If you missed it, here’s a video — https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCkDrng3zlpMkQZeOyKXxWAw.
As for nitrogen, when properly applied, nitrogen is fully absorbed in the root zone and does NOT cause runoff. The organic golf course on MV as well as countless studies have already proven this. As agronomist Jack Higgins wrote to the MVC, “plant roots and the microbiological system that lives among plant roots filter, stabilize, and utilize nitrogen."
Please provide research from
Really? TisburyPlease provide research from a qualified agency that directly links contaminated wells to anything. Literally anything. Extensive reading on this topic reveals they are contaminated. No, I repeat no conclusions of the source have been identified. Please stop this phony misdirection campaign. I am starting to be embarrassed for you.
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