A citizen petition seeks to allow marijuana stores in downtown Oak Bluffs, including Circuit avenue.
Ray Ewing

Planning Board Hears Oak Bluffs Marijuana Petition

The Oak Bluffs planning board is weighing its recommendation on a recently filed citizen petition that would allow marijuana stores downtown. 

The Oak Bluffs planning board is weighing its recommendation on a recently filed citizen petition that would allow marijuana stores downtown. 

Geoff Rose, an Oak Bluffs resident and owner of Island Time Dispensary in Vineyard Haven, filed the petition and requested changes to two zoning bylaws that would allow stores on streets such as Circuit avenue and Dukes County avenue, as well as in residential buildings. 

During a virtual planning board meeting Thursday, Mr. Rose’s proposed changes, which would also allow stores to be open from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily, received both positive and negative feedback from attendees. 

Geoff Rose is seeking to change the zoning in Oak Bluffs.
Ray Ewing
Geoff Rose is seeking to change the zoning in Oak Bluffs.
Ray Ewing

Resident Chris Seidel argued that a cannabis dispensary would disrupt the family-friendliness of downtown Oak Bluffs. 

“It sends a message to young people to have these establishments downtown,” said Ms. Seidel. “Even though they can’t purchase from them legally, just having them in the presence of them I think just sends a message of acceptance. I don’t think that’s the right message.”

Mr. Rose stressed that no cannabis products would be visible from the street and that customers would be required to use utmost discretion when shopping at the dispensary.

“A customer would come up to the building, ring the doorbell and be buzzed into a waiting room,” he said. “Customers would enter the dispensary in groups of no more than two… and every customer would present a valid ID that gets scanned for verification. All of this would not be visible from the street.”

Oak Bluffs Association executive director Billie Jean Sullivan spoke in favor of the changes, citing Mr. Rose’s experience and success running Island Time Dispensary. 

“We at the OBA do believe that this is a good business plan,” she said. “He has worked hard on it… and we just think that this is the type of business that should be allowed in our commercial district.”

There are currently no dispensaries in Oak Bluffs and town regulations allow them only in an overlay district farther from downtown. 

The planning board will vote on its recommendation, which would be presented to voters at the spring town meeting, at its next meeting.

“We will notify the public when we plan to deliberate this further and vote as a board,” said planning board chair Ewell Hopkins. “We will keep the record open until the next meeting so that people can continue to ask questions and reach out to us about this issue.”

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 10/28/2023 - 12:54

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Jamie West Tisbury

I don't see how these dispensaries on island are making any money. How many islanders are actually patrons of these shops. With the legal ability to grow at home, there is lots of great cannabis around, that costs so much less to grow your own than paying ridiculous prices at a dispensary for a little bit of cannabis. I could maybe see during the summer season with tourists, but honestly I never see any cars other than employees at Fine Fettle. Seems like a huge loss of money.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 10/31/2023 - 04:00

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Julian Wise Chilmark

Geoff has demonstrated outstanding diligence and professionalism in his business operations in other towns. There is no reason to think it would be any different in Oak Bluffs.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 10/31/2023 - 06:40

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Leslie Kingsow Mclean, Va

How short sighted is this? Enough with the normalization of more drugs.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 10/31/2023 - 09:34

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Jeff MV

Bad idea. There in’t enough parking today. Walking further to the current location, if it existed, would not be a problem and parking is available. The loss of the charm far exceeds the need to buy dope in downtown OB.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 10/31/2023 - 10:24

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Mr. B Chilmark

Mr. Rose is doing this to make money. He is not running a non-profit--at least not intentionally. The island has several dispensaries to meet the year-round population's interests. No more money to be gleaned there--the market is saturated. So, to make more money, he needs a new market. Sensibly, he wants to go where the greatest untapped, 21+ foot traffic is: Oak Bluffs in the summer season. Right in there with the arcades, ice cream, t-shirts and fudge. And packed harbor. And liquor. And late-night crowds. And music. And Back Door Donuts. Chances of his shop remaining open after the Island Queen, Hy-Line, Seastreak, and SSA move out are nil. The town is so dead after mid-October that it couldn't even support a pharmacy. But there might be parking on Circuit Avenue!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 10/31/2023 - 15:25

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Robert VH

This type of business is approved in Massachusetts. All of the island towns voted (2016) in favor of legalizing marijuana (I checked.) Geoff, or any other entrepreneur, gets to decide if the investment is worth the effort and expense. Additionally, there are many businesses that are seasonal. I get that one may not want "dope' to be sold here on MV but the voters have spoken. It is now law.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 11/02/2023 - 10:35

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Alan Wilson Formerly Edgartown

I considerate this to be a gateway drug and we DO NOT want it. It attracts drug addicts and ruins neighborhoods.

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