MVC signs off on Hob Knob denial - The Martha s Vineyard Times mvtimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from mvtimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
With a hospitality college ranked seventh nationally and academic and sporting programs that bring 75,000 visitors annually to the city, Florida State University is moving forward with plans to add an “academic” hotel to its campus inventory.
The university’s Board of Trustees voted by consent last week to approve a request to include a hotel site in FSU’s master plan, which was delayed last year due to COVID planning and could take 12 months to finalize.
Approval by trustees was needed because it involves an amendment to the master plan, which serves as a blueprint for campus properties and future development.
Officials break ground on Cedar Shoals in Porterdale covnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from covnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
BREWSTER A nonprofit group that includes former employees and alumni of the iconic Cape Cod Sea Camps is hoping to raise enough interest and money to buy the 125-acre property and continue to run it as a summer camp.
“Pretty much every member’s life was touched by the camp,” said Jim Fay, president of the Brewster Flats Foundation, which formed in December in response to the announced sale in November.
Fay and his wife, both teachers at a private school in Deerfield, have owned a home in Brewster for 10 years. They met at Cape Cod Sea Camps in 2004, when both were camp counselors, and worked there every summer since.
The Martha s Vineyard Times
Toxicology tests offer âmore questions than answersâ
Synthetic field tests show negligible amounts of heavy metals and semi volatile compounds; emergent nature of PFAS adds to uncertainty.
The Marthaâs Vineyard Commission hears from toxicologists and environmental consultants during the third public hearing on the MVRHS proposed athletic field project. Brian Massa of Horsley Witten is shown in the picture.
The Marthaâs Vineyard Commission Thursday night heard from various experts on the toxicology reports compiled by two environmental consulting firms â Tetra Tech and Horsley Witten.Â
At the third development of regional impact (DRI) public hearing for the proposed Marthaâs Vineyard Regional High School athletic field project, independent consultants from Tetra Tech and Horsley Witten went over the testing process, and dove into how the results were analyzed.