To the Editor:
What unfolded at Marion’s Select Board meeting on March 31, 2026, appeared routine: three agenda items, swift approvals, and a Town Meeting warrant closed in just over twenty minutes. But beneath that efficiency lies a more consequential story, one defined not by what was debated, but by what was avoided.
The meeting began with perfunctory actions: appointing an Election Warden and approving 53G Fund regulations for the Department of Public Works. Both passed without discussion. The central task followed: closing the Town Meeting Warrant, comprising 47 articles that will shape decisions before Marion residents.
What followed was striking. Articles 1 through 31 were approved in rapid succession, motion, second, unanimous vote, no discussion. Governance reduced to cadence.
That rhythm broke briefly at Article 31.
Vice Chair John Hoagland paused: “Let’s talk about this one.” The article proposed transferring land at Island Wharf from the Marine Resources Commission (MRC) back to the Select Board. Originally conveyed to the MRC in 2009, the parcel was described as underutilized. Member Norm Hills suggested that returning it might allow eventual placement under a proposed Parks Department.
It was a question of land use, stewardship, and long-term intent, one worthy of public airing.
The discussion was cut short.
Chair Randy Parker immediately rejected the idea: “I don’t support that.” Within moments, he moved to remove the article entirely from the warrant. The motion passed, with only Mr. Hills dissenting. The matter did not proceed to Town Meeting. It did not reach the public. It vanished from consideration.
Removing an article from the warrant does more than delay a conversation; it prevents one. Residents are denied the opportunity to debate or vote on land that is, by law and legacy, theirs.
Island Wharf’s green space is not incidental property. The 1901 deed is explicit: the land is to be used “for public purposes only and not for commercial purposes.” For generations, it has functioned as a public park, open, passive, communal, and is recognized as such in the town’s Open Space and Recreation Plan.
Yet its character has shifted incrementally. A bandstand was installed. Pavement added. Parking expanded. Individually modest, collectively transformative.
Today, the change is unmistakable. Vehicles: cars, trailers, commercial trucks, and heavy equipment regularly encroach onto the green space. Soil is compacted. Grass recedes. The function of the land shifts from parkland to staging ground.
A public park cannot coexist indefinitely with industrial use without ceasing to be a park.
Meanwhile, related discussions continue elsewhere. At a subsequent Marine Resources Commission meeting, Island Wharf was explicitly addressed. Proposals included seasonal permits for commercial vehicles, coordination through the harbormaster, and even reimagining the space as managed parking infrastructure. One remark captured the shift: “the idea that you can never put stuff on the grass is just not a reality.”
That framing moves the question from whether the land should be protected to how its use can be accommodated.
This is why the removal of Article 31 matters.
While discussions about Island Wharf’s future are clearly underway, in recommendations, commission meetings, and planning documents, the public forum where those issues might be openly contested has been narrowed. The opportunity for residents to weigh in was not postponed. It was precluded.
What remains is a pattern worth examining: a warrant advanced with unusual speed; a single article paused, then eliminated; a land-use question halted before public review; parallel planning conversations proceeding elsewhere.
Individually, each action may be defensible. Together, they suggest a process shaped as much by omission as by open debate.
Island Wharf is more than a parcel. It is a test of how Marion interprets its obligations, balances pressure against principle, and includes the public in decisions that shape shared space.
The deed is clear. The designation is clear. The condition of the land is increasingly clear.
What remains uncertain, and urgent, is whether the public will be fully included in deciding what comes next.
Eileen J. Marum, Marion
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