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The Martha's Vineyard Times

The Martha's Vineyard Times is a weekly publication.
January 27 - February 2, 2005 Edition
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Record blizzard drops two feet of snow
January 27, 2005



A patron considered each step carefully leaving the Black Dog Bakery on Water Street in Tisbury. Photos by Ralph Stewart

Jesse Chandler of Edgartown helped her dad Chris shovel snow from in front of the Beach House on Main Street in Vineyard Haven Monday.


Dale McClure of Watercourse Construction hauled Bruce Davies' schooner Estrella into deeper water Tuesday. Estrella broke free of her mooring in Sunday's blow and ended up on the sandbar just south of the Steamship Authority wharf in Vineyard Haven.


Photo by Ezra Blair


Photo by Ralph Stewart


Photo by Amy M. Williams


Photo by Amy M. Williams

Sunday’s powerful blizzard dropped roughly two feet of snow on Martha’s Vineyard, while winds gusting to hurricane force drove at least two large sailboats ashore and toppled trees or at least tree limbs causing electric power interruptions, especially along Lambert’s Cove Road. Temperatures during and after the Sunday blast were in the single digits and teens, and schools were closed the first three days of the week, while social and government meetings were canceled or postponed.

And yesterday, temperatures warmed to freezing as snow began to fall again. Forecasters predicted as much as 10 additional inches by sunrise today.

Islanders expect snow in January, just not this much, not in record amounts that create mountainous drifts, leave driveways impassable and unplowable and produce towering mounds of snow along roads and in parking lots. Finding a place to put the shoveled and plowed snow proved a headache for school leaders and other public officials.

The storm system that caused the blizzard was large and powerful. According to wunderground.com, an online weather service, the barometric pressure plummeted from 30.29 inches to 29.58 inches on Saturday as the system rolled in over the Island. Wind speeds continued to rise throughout the day on Saturday reaching gusts of over 40 miles per hour. As the storm intensified over night and into Sunday, the snow became heavier and wind speeds reached 46 miles per hour, with gusts over 60. By Monday the storm had dropped about two feet of snow on the Vineyard, but the howling winds cause the snow to drift, making it much deeper in some places.

Sunday’s one and only grace note, as the blizzard raged, was the reliable delivery of electricity to most Vineyard NSTAR customers, so most Islanders who wanted to watch the Patriot’s football game could do so. Despite the powerful winds, most of the Island did not experience sustained power outages.

Christian McKenna, spokesman for NSTAR, said that the only significant power outages occurred where trees fell onto power lines in several places. Such outages were reported on Chappaquiddick and in West Tisbury.

Ms. McKenna said most of the Island was back to full power Tuesday morning. One of the last places to regain power was a section of Lambert’s Cove Road in West Tisbury where residents did not have electricity until Tuesday evening.

Ms. McKenna said NSTAR had extra crews working around the clock during the storm, but that unplowed roads made getting to some locations difficult.

“Impassible roads were by far our biggest obstacle on the Island,” she said.

The dangerous road conditions also led to a driving ban during the peak of the storm, although there was some confusion among Island police this week about who implemented the ban.

School shuts down

Students celebrated the unusually heavy snowfall and the three days off that resulted. But the unexpected vacation will exact a price on the backside of the school year when temperatures will be considerably warmer. The school calendar includes just five snow days built in. In the event of no snow cancellations, school ends five days earlier than the scheduled last day. As of yesterday, in light of this week’s cancellations, school will end on Monday, June 27.

Yesterday, the school superintendent’s office was closed. Reached at his home, Ed Jerome, Edgartown School principal, explained the decision to close school for three days. Mr. Jerome said the decision was made in consultation with bus drivers and town highway officials. The top consideration is the safety of school children, he said.

Although main roads have been cleared, many side roads and driveways are still clogged, making it difficult for children to walk to their local bus stop. In addition towering drifts and piles of snow make standing at some bus stops quite risky.

Mr. Jerome said town crews have been working around the clock to clear school lots and bus stops, but the job is daunting. “Everybody is trying their best, but when it comes to the kids, it is safety first,” he said.

Police kept busy

While Island police said the blizzard kept them busy throughout the weekend and into this week, they reported few major incidents or injuries.

Theodore Saulnier, Tisbury police chief, said that as of Tuesday morning his department had received 50 calls for service. “They ranged from everything form elderly people who were snowbound in their homes, to cars stuck in the snow, to car accidents, to medical emergencies,” he said. “I think that a lot of credit should go to the emergency personnel who were out there handling this storm. They did a tremendous job.”

While not directly related to the storm itself, Chief Saulnier said a teenage girl injured her knee and possibly her back while sledding at the Tashmoo overlook on Tuesday. The chief offered a safety reminder. “When you get on any kind of snow sled or tube and start heading down a hill you have to be careful that no people are on the hill, and what’s on the hill surface, and also what’s at bottom. You can reach pretty good speeds, and you have to be careful,” he said.

Other Island towns reported similarly busy days, but also without any major incidents. In Oak Bluffs, where police answered 65 calls for service, town leaders activated the town’s emergency management plan on Saturday, which brought together, police, fire, ambulance, highway, and other town officials into a single command center.

Erik Blake, Oak Bluffs police chief, said that by working together the town departments helped each other get through the most difficult challenges.

“It got to the point during the storm where if we had a call we had to send out a front-end loader, a 4x4 police vehicle with an EMT, and the ambulance all together to get through the snow. It was a real cooperative effort on the part of all the departments,” he said.

Edgartown police Sergeant Tony Bettencourt said, “Things went really smoothly here in Edgartown, considering the weather. We were prepared for it. We had extra people on every shift, but it really wasn’t needed.”

Sergeant Bettencourt said police were kept busy with several false fire alarms and minor motor vehicle incidents. He said hurricane force winds also knocked out power on Chappaquiddick for most of the day on Sunday.

Beth Toomey, West Tisbury police chief, said that long Lambert’s Cove Road power outage, there were many other calls for service. A Tri-Town ambulance responded to a crash on Edgartown–West Tisbury Road, just past the airport. The driver of a small snowplow equipped vehicle rear-ended a large state snowplow. The driver of the smaller truck was transported to the hospital.

Unable to move the pickup truck to the side of the road, Chief Toomey said that a front-end loader was required to push the truck aside so that plows could pass. On Tuesday afternoon, just the roof of the truck was visible from beneath a massive snowdrift on the side of the road.

“It was a very dangerous storm. On Saturday night you couldn’t see a plow truck until you were five feet away from it,” said Chief Toomey.

In addition to the many emergency calls, Island towns were also called upon to transport “essential personnel” including hospital and communications center employees to and from work.

SSA loses a day

The biggest challenge faced by the Steamship Authority (SSA) as a result of Sunday’s massive storm was clearing snow from parking lots and vessels.

The SSA cancelled its last two trips from Woods Hole to the Vineyard Saturday night. SSA service did not resume again until the 8:15 am trip Monday leaving the Vineyard.

Phil Parent, SSA director of human resources, said the standby backlog was cleared up relatively quickly, and operations went smoothly. Mr. Parent said people planning to travel were well aware of the dimensions of the storm, and that appeared to help.

Traffic was light on Monday. The freight boat Sankaty was delayed until some crewmembers, who had difficulty getting to work along snow-clogged roads, arrived and cleared the freight deck of snow.

“We had some very dedicated and hard working employees both at terminals and on the vessels which allowed us to get back to work quickly,” said Mr. Parent.

Airport socked in, lends a hand


The wind and snow, which led to whiteout conditions during the blizzard, forced the Martha’s Vineyard Airport to close Saturday evening. The massive amounts of snow on the runways kept the airport closed until Tuesday morning.

Bill Weibrecht, airport manager, said that snow removal was been the biggest challenge.

“I think it is definitely the worst conditions that the airport has ever experienced, but there was no major damage, just a lot of snow to be moved,” he said.

Mr. Weibrecht said that a massive snow blower that attaches to a front-end loader helped move snow more efficiently. He said that despite being a bit outdated, the giant contraption can move 1,200 tons of snow an hour.

Despite giant snow piles still waiting to be moved, airport officials lent the giant snow blower to state highway officials to help move a snowdrift across part of Edgartown-West Tisbury road. The snow had blown across the airport property and out onto the road, causing drifts as high as 10 feet, and limiting the road to a single lane of traffic.

In about an hour and half, the giant snow blower, with the help of two front-end loaders had eaten its way through the massive snow banks, returning the road to two lanes. Traffic on Edgartown-West Tisbury Road was stopped for extended periods while the work went on.

Edward Panek, state highway department foreman on-Island, oversaw the cleanup on West Tisbury Road. He said he hadn’t seen a storm so severe in his 20 years working for the state.

“This was the worst storm I have ever seen,” he said.

Mr. Panek thanked the airport employees for their help and commended the state contract employees who helped with the snow removal for a job well done.

In a Letter to the Editor on page 13 this morning, Mr. Panek writes, “Words alone will never thank you all for the stamina, commitment and expertise you all showed, and you should be proud of what you have accomplished.”

Red Cross pitches in


The Martha’s Vineyard Chapter of the American Red Cross prepared for the storm by supplying the West Tisbury school with 100 cots, blankets, and food staffed by David Grunden, Barbara Child and Ed Child. Volunteers Tad and Judy Crawford skied to the school to offer assistance.

No one showed up at the shelter Saturday and only five persons accepted the offered emergency hospitality on Sunday: three from Lambert’s Cove, two from Aquinnah.

As the amount of drifting snow made travel more and more hazardous, an Edgartown facility, the Clarion Hotel, was designated as an alternate shelter. One person was taken to the Clarion.

Travel difficulties made it problematic for persons to reach the designated shelters, including teams of persons to relieve the Red Cross personnel at the West Tisbury School, according to Deborah Medders, the Island’s Red Cross executive director,

According to a Red Cross volunteer, the sheltered and shelter staff were able to watch the Patriots vs. Steelers football game and kept warm eating chili and beef stew.

Officials considered evacuating the Chappy population because electric power was out for an extended period, but NSTAR personnel restored power in time too make evacuation unnecessary.

A close call for one boat

Bruce Davies’ robust, 47-foot schooner Estrella went ashore Sunday on the sandbar just south of the steamship wharf in Vineyard Haven. Estrella had been moored in the southern part of the mooring field behind the Vineyard Haven breakwater. She remained partly afloat and partly aground through Monday, her masts and square yard angling out over the water toward the southeast. Tuesday afternoon Dale McClure of Watercourse Construction hauled Estrella off the bar on the high tide. Despite her adventure, Estrella was back at her mooring Wednesday prepared for the next round of nasty weather.

And during the teeth of the gale, Gary Maynard’s Violet, also on a mooring behind the breakwater, dragged over to the Coastwise Packet Company dock, where both ketch and dock were damaged before Violet was returned to calmer water in the mooring field.

Nelson Sigelman and Ezra Blair contributed reporting to this account.

 

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