Need weekend plans?
The best things to do around the city, delivered to your inbox.
By Kristi Palma
The Steamship Authority announced operational changes on Monday due to concerns over “large numbers of no-shows” creating last-minute open but unused vehicle space on its Martha’s Vineyard route.
“We are developing a better visual representation in our booking system of open vehicle space to help our reservation and terminal staff, and we’re reviewing the space allocations daily and adjusting as needed,” officials posted on social media.
The changes are in addition to a revamp of the ferry’s resident-only standby line, also called the blue line, which were announced in June.
The blue line once allowed a maximum of 15 cars per day on both sides of the Vineyard route before the Authority changed the policy on June 28 to allow a rolling 12 vehicles at any time so that more cars could be accommodated daily. The new policy applies on reservation-only sailing days.
The number of cars on the ferry’s Vineyard route hit historic highs in recent years, according to the Vineyard Gazette, with more than half a million cars carried between Martha’s Vineyard and Woods Hole in both 2021 and 2022.
This year, the ferry carried 48,751 more passengers on its Vineyard route between January and May than it did in 2022 — a 7.3% increase, the paper noted.
Kristi Palma is the travel writer for Boston.com, focusing on the six New England states. She covers airlines, hotels, and things to do across Boston and New England. She is the author of the award-winning Scenic Six, a weekly travel newsletter.
The best things to do around the city, delivered to your inbox.
Stay up to date with everything Boston. Receive the latest news and breaking updates, straight from our newsroom to your inbox.
To comment, please create a screen name in your profile
To comment, please verify your email address
Conversation
This discussion has ended. Please join elsewhere on Boston.com