Posted
By
Alicia Freese
on Fri, Sep 30, 2016 at 3:57 PM
click to enlarge
Mark Davis
Burlington Ward One polling place at Mater Christi School
Consternation is brewing among some Queen City residents ahead of the November election. Early voting is underway, even though the Burlington ballot remains a work in progress.
Just Thursday night, the city council added a controversial question about a significant downtown zoning change. That’s led the civic-minded to worry that those voting by mail won’t get a chance to weigh in on city affairs.
Not so, says city attorney Eileen Blackwood.
Burlington
has already mailed out the state ballot, which includes candidates for president, statewide office and statehouse seats, because state law requires that those ballots be sent out no later than 45 days before the November 8 election.
The deadline for local-issue ballots isn’t until October 19 — so they’ll be sent out separately. Even if the council weren’t deliberating into late September, Blackwood said the city wouldn’t be able to get its ballots out much earlier than the deadline because it would reduce the time available for petitioners trying to get questions on the ballot.
Tags:
Burlington city council
,
early voting
,
Eileen Blackwood
,
election 2016
,
Image
,
Web Only
Posted
By
Alicia Freese
on Thu, Sep 29, 2016 at 10:37 PM
Courtesy
Rendering of proposed redevelopment from Cherry Street side, if the proposed zoning change passes.
The Burlington City Council approved a zoning change that will allow taller buildings in one section of downtown. The vote Thursday night was 8 to 3.
But the council will also let voters have the final say, as they decided to put the question on the November ballot — a move backed by Mayor Miro Weinberger.
The decision appeared to be preemptive. Opponents of the project were planning to collect signatures for a petition that would spur a citywide vote.
In the new district, the maximum building height would increase from 105 feet to 160 feet. New developments would also be subject to higher environmental and architectural standards.
Tags:
Burlington City Council
,
Miro Weinberger
,
Burlington Town Center
,
Don Sinex
,
Image
,
Web Only
Posted
By
Terri Hallenbeck
on Thu, Sep 29, 2016 at 12:42 PM
click to enlarge
Jeb Wallace-brodeur
Jeb Spaulding
Vermont State Colleges’ board of trustees voted unanimously on Thursday to go ahead with a plan to unify the Johnson and Lyndon state colleges.
A combination of fewer college-age students and rising costs drove Vermont State Colleges Chancellor Jeb Spaulding to propose it.
Tags:
Johnson State College
,
Lyndon State College
,
Vermont State Colleges
,
Jeb Spaulding
,
Image
,
Web Only
Posted
By
Paul Heintz
on Thu, Sep 29, 2016 at 12:19 PM
click to enlarge
Courtesy: Bill Stenger
Left to right: Congressman Peter Welch, Bill Stenger, Sen. Patrick Leahy, Sen. Bernie Sanders, Gov. Peter Shumlin, Ariel Quiros and William Kelly in Newport in September 2012.
Vermont's typically unified congressional delegation split Wednesday on a key vote to fund the government through December 9.
Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) joined 25 of his peers in opposing the stopgap spending bill, which nevertheless passed the Senate with 72 votes in favor. The veteran Democrat pledged last week to vote against the so-called continuing resolution if it did not include reforms to the EB-5 immigrant investor visa program. Instead, the legislation simply extended it, as written, until December.
According to Leahy spokesman David Carle, his "nay" vote was "a direct result" of his reservations on EB-5.
Tags:
Senator
,
EB-5
,
Patrick Leahy
,
Bernie Sanders
,
Peter Welch
,
Image
,
Web Only
Posted
By
Terri Hallenbeck
on Thu, Sep 29, 2016 at 10:13 AM
click to enlarge
Terri Hallenbeck
Lt. Gov. Phil Scott (left) announces Saturday that he would sell his share of DuBois Construction if he’s elected governor.
Last Saturday, when Lt. Gov. Phil Scott announced he would sell his share of the excavation business he co-owns if he is elected governor in November, the Democratic Party was clear.
The Republican candidate’s decision fulfilled one of the two options that would resolve any perceived conflict of interest over state contracts DuBois Construction bids on, said Christina Amestoy, the party’s spokeswoman.
Democratic gubernatorial candidate Sue Minter seemed to agree. “I’m awfully glad he’s finally recognized there is a conflict of interest,” she said Monday at an unrelated press conference.
Since then, however, Minter has moved the goal posts, urging more stringent standards for what counts as conflict of interest.
Tags:
Phil Scott
,
Sue Minter
,
election 2016
,
governor
,
Image
,
Web Only
Posted
By
Paul Heintz
on Wed, Sep 28, 2016 at 11:58 PM
click to enlarge
File: JAMES BUCK AND MOLLY WALSH
Sue Minter and Phil Scott
Throughout her campaign for governor, Democratic nominee Sue Minter has said that, if elected, she would fix the state's struggling health insurance exchange. But at a debate Wednesday night in Rutland, the former transportation secretary suggested that she was willing to abandon Vermont Health Connect and move to the federal exchange.
"If I learn from the independent assessment that the legislature funded that there is a way to move, I will move," Minter said, referring to a $250,000 study due to lawmakers in December. "If I learn that there's a way to complete and make the system functional, I will do that."
Tags:
Sue Minter
,
Phil Scott
,
Rutland
,
debate
,
Vermont Health Connect
,
Syrian refugees
,
civil unions
,
Image
,
Web Only
Posted
By
Paul Heintz
on Wed, Sep 28, 2016 at 8:59 PM
File: Jeb Wallace-Brodeur
State aeronautics administrator Guy Rouelle with Vermont's Cessna 182
Since moving to southern Vermont last month, Gov. Peter Shumlin has been catching more rides in a state-owned airplane.
Shumlin rode the Cessna 182 to or from public events three times in September, according to spokeswoman Sue Allen. He was scheduled to take a fourth trip last Friday,
as WCAX-TV first reported, but it was canceled due to inclement weather.
The governor,
who moved in August from East Montpelier back to his hometown of Putney, used the plane just four times in the year prior to his relocation.
At an unrelated press conference Wednesday, Shumlin defended his frequent flier status. He said that taking the plane from Hartness State Airport in nearby Springfield saves his Vermont State Police detail from having to make the 220-mile roundtrip from Montpelier to Putney to pick him up and drop him off. But he conceded that the plane has its limitations.
"It can only fly when it's blue sky," the governor said. "It can't fly at night."
Tags:
Peter Shumlin
,
state plane
,
Image
,
Web Only
Posted
By
Alicia Freese
on Wed, Sep 28, 2016 at 8:57 PM
click to enlarge
Alicia Freese
From left: Burlington Mayor Weinberger, John St.Hilaire of Vermont Gas, Corix chief operating officer and vice president Eric van Roon, Dawn LeBaron of UVM Medical Center, Don Sinex, BED director Neale Lunderville and Jan Schultz announce plans to pursue district heating on Wednesday.
Updated September 29, 2016 at 8:50 a.m. to include corrected information from Burlington Electric about greenhouse gas emissions.
Several major Burlington institutions are backing a plan to create a district heat system that would harness waste heat from the Joseph C. McNeil Generating Station.
A group of residents has been trying for decades to convince city leaders to implement this type of system, which works like an electric grid — but for heat. The idea has been formally studied at least six times, with the most recent report concluding that it didn't make financial sense.
Tags:
Mayor Miro Weinberger
,
Burlington Electric
,
district heat
,
burlington town center
,
Image
,
Web Only
Posted
By
Terri Hallenbeck
on Wed, Sep 28, 2016 at 7:49 PM
click to enlarge
Terri Hallenbeck
Gov. Peter Shumlin (right) and Green Mountain Care Board chair Al Gobeille discussing an all-payer waiver system for reimbursing health care providers.
Vermont has won long-sought approval from the federal government for an “all-payer waiver” that is intended to change the way health care providers are reimbursed by government and private insurers, Gov. Peter Shumlin announced Wednesday.
Doctors, hospitals and consumers have three weeks to weigh in on the plan before the state’s Green Mountain Care Board signs off on it.
“It’s complicated,” Shumlin acknowledged of the plan, after his staff handed out piles of paperwork detailing the draft five-year agreement that’s been in the works for two years. Nonetheless, Green Mountain Care Board chair Al Gobeille said health care providers should be able to readily determine what they think about the plan.
Tags:
All-payer waiver
,
Peter Shumlin
,
Al Gobeille
,
Green Mountain Care Board
,
Image
,
Web Only
Posted
By
Molly Walsh
on Wed, Sep 28, 2016 at 7:33 PM
click to enlarge
Courtesy
Rendering of proposed mall from the Cherry Street side
Burlington Mayor Miro Weinberger wants city voters to have a say on a controversial zoning change that would increase allowable building heights downtown.
He will ask the city council Thursday to approve the change, and to also put the zoning question on the November 8 ballot for voters to decide.
Weinberger is a staunch supporter of the height increase, which would allow
buildings up to 14 stories tall at the site of the proposed $250 million Burlington Town Center redevelopment. The current height limit is about ten stories.
Tags:
Burlington
,
mall
,
Burlington Town Center
,
Burlington height restrictions
,
Image
,
Web Only