A few months after an unauthorized dredge project was carried out in Katama Bay, the Edgartown selectmen Monday agreed to a plan to reconfigure the town’s dredge advisory committee.

The new committee will consist of one member of the marine advisory committee, one member of the conservation commission, one member of the shellfish committee and two members at large. The harbor master, shellfish constable and conservation agent will have advisory rolls but will not vote.

Current dredge advisory committee chairman David Nash was critical of some of the changes, saying that he and other committee members were not always involved in discussions, and that he was concerned about meeting attendance. “We need people who are dedicated, willing to show up,” he said.

The current committee, which consists of seven members appointed by the selectmen, will stay in place until May 14, and selectmen said they would be advertising for the new appointments in the coming weeks.

“I don’t think the dredge committee should feel disenfranchised,” town administrator Pam Dolby said.

Selectman Margaret Serpa said that previously, “I don’t know how much we were always kept as up to date as we should have been.”

In other business, the board canceled the annual all-alcohol liquor license for Il Tesoro, the South Summer street restaurant that has not reopened after a planned one-month closure.