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Wednesday, February 28, 2018

Posted By on Wed, Feb 28, 2018 at 7:55 PM

click to enlarge In Memo, Vermont Ed Secretary Discourages Student Walkouts
File: Jeb Wallace-Brodeur
Education Secretary Rebecca Holcombe
In a letter to Vermont school administrators last week, Secretary of Education Rebecca Holcombe praised student activism but sought to dissuade participation in upcoming school protests.

Students and teachers across the country are planning a 17-minute walkout on March 14 to honor the 17 victims of a school shooting in Parkland, Fla., and to call for new gun laws.

Holcombe opened her memo by declaring support for students’ right to free speech, but she went on to caution that it "does not extend to disrupting classes (which prevents others from learning), nor to leaving school without permission (which potentially creates a safety threat)."

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Posted By on Wed, Feb 28, 2018 at 6:56 PM

click to enlarge Vermont Senate Unanimously Passes 'Extreme Risk' Gun Bill
Jeb Wallace-brodeur
Sen. Dick Sears (D-Bennington)
Vermont’s Senate unanimously approved a bill Wednesday that would allow police to take guns away from people deemed by a court to be an “extreme risk” to themselves or others.

Just before the vote on S.221, its sponsor, Senate Judiciary chair Dick Sears (D-Bennington) said that he hadn't initially expected the proposal to make it to the floor. A narrowly avoided school shooting in Fair Haven, he said, brought a sense of urgency to the Senate’s work.

“The one thing I’m sure of is, Vermont’s not immune [to gun violence],” Sears said. “And I think we knew that before Fair Haven, but I think Fair Haven jolted us all.”

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Posted By on Wed, Feb 28, 2018 at 5:57 PM

click to enlarge Walters: Vermont House Moves Toward Approval of Saliva Testing Bill
File: Jeb Wallace-Brodeur
Rep. Chip Conquest
The Vermont House is scheduled to vote Thursday on legislation that would allow police to use a roadside saliva test on drivers suspected of impaired driving. The bill, H.237, appears to be on track for quick approval despite the objections of some lawmakers and the Vermont chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union.

Rep. Barbara Rachelson (D-Burlington) believes the bill infringes on Constitutional rights. "If we're going to do that, we'd better have darn good evidence that it's justified," she said. "I'm having a hard time getting why most of my colleagues don't see that."

The saliva test would detect the presence of various drugs in a person's system, but would not establish whether a driver is impaired and could not be used as evidence in court. Still, supporters see H.237 as another means to improve traffic safety.

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Posted By on Wed, Feb 28, 2018 at 5:18 PM

click to enlarge Vermont Senate Passes Ban on Corporate Campaign Donations
File: Jeb Wallace-Brodeur
Sen. Chris Pearson (P/D-Chittenden)
It took years, but the Vermont Senate finally approved a ban on corporate campaign donations Wednesday.

The bill states that only individuals, parties and political action committees can contribute money to state candidates.

After giving preliminary approval to similar legislation in 2013, the Senate did an about-face. Wednesday's debate was less eventful, but still included complaints from lawmakers worried about losing some of their funding streams.

Sen. Ann Cummings (D-Washington) expressed concern that the bill would discourage contributions from "my very warm, friendly, voting elderly constituents who frequently have their money in a revocable trust."

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Posted By on Wed, Feb 28, 2018 at 5:09 PM

click to enlarge Burlington YMCA Makes a Final Fundraising Push for New Building
Courtesy
A rendering of the proposed new YMCA facility at 298 College Street
Leaders of the Greater Burlington YMCA called on the public Wednesday to help them raise the final $500,000 of a $15 million campaign for a new building.

Laura and David Stiller, son of Green Mountain Coffee Roasters founder Robert Stiller, are offering to help kickstart the renewed effort. They've pledged a dollar-to-dollar match for the first $100,000 in new gifts to the campaign, which YMCA officials hope to wrap up this summer.

The Y needs everyone's help to get to the final goal, the organization's president and CEO, Kyle Dodson, said at a press conference Wednesday in one of the preschool classrooms of the current building at 266 College Street.

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Tuesday, February 27, 2018

Posted By on Tue, Feb 27, 2018 at 8:56 PM

click to enlarge Race to the Finish: Burlington Mayoral Candidates Make Final Pitches
File: Matthew Thorsen
Mayor Miro Weinberger, Infinite Culcleasure and Carina Driscoll at the Seven Days mayoral forum in February
Burlington's mayoral candidates are making their final appeals to voters during the final sprint before Town Meeting Day.

The flurry of last-minute campaigning includes debates for Democratic incumbent Miro Weinberger and his independent challengers, Carina Driscoll and Infinite Culcleasure.

Seven Days checked in to see how the Queen City mayoral hopefuls are spending their final seven days as candidates.

Weinberger found himself leaps and bounds ahead of his competitors in fundraising after Sunday's campaign finance filing deadline; he had raised $107,000, compared to $47, 000 for Driscoll and $10,500 for Culcleasure. But the six-year incumbent said he's not taking any chances.

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Posted By on Tue, Feb 27, 2018 at 3:26 PM

Media Note: David Moats Out at Herald, Times Argus
File
David Moats
The Rutland Herald and Barre-Montpelier Times Argus have eliminated the position of editorial page editor and laid off its longtime occupant: Pulitzer Prize-winner David Moats.

Moats had worked for the papers since 1982 and helmed their editorial pages since 1992. He won the Pulitzer in 2001 for a series of editorials about the debate over civil unions, during which Vermont came to grips with a state Supreme Court decision mandating official recognition of same-sex relationships. He remains the only Vermonter to win a Pulitzer for journalism, according to Sean Murphy, digital content manager for the Pulitzer Prizes organization.

"This is a business decision that has more to do with the future of the organization than the present," the papers' general manager, Rob Mitchell, wrote in an internal email obtained by Seven Days. "As we constantly re-evaluate legacy positions, we must make decisions on which ones to keep over the next several years as we transition to a new model for local newspapers."

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Posted By on Tue, Feb 27, 2018 at 1:25 PM

click to enlarge F-35 Burlington Ballot Question Spurs Debate, Influx of Ad Spending
File: Katie Jickling
Ben Cohen speaking out against the F-35s
Activists for and against the basing of F-35 fighter jets at Burlington International Airport are gearing up — and opening their wallets — ahead of election day.

Members of Save Our Skies gathered 3,000 signatures on a petition to get a measure about the jets on the ballot and have since spent an estimated $15,000 advocating for a "yes" vote, according to lead organizer Jimmy Leas.

The question asks whether voters will "advise the City Council to: 1) request the cancellation of the planned basing of the F-35 at Burlington International Airport, and 2) request instead low-noise-level equipment with a proven high safety record appropriate for a densely populated area."

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Posted By on Tue, Feb 27, 2018 at 4:30 AM

click to enlarge Vermont Officials Witnessed Pennsylvania Guard Threatening Inmates
Thomas James
Last November, Vermont corrections officials watched a Pennsylvania prison guard berate and threaten Vermont inmates housed at Camp Hill prison. Despite a report documenting the incident at the time, Vermont officials said publicly that they didn’t have detailed accounts of threats against inmates.

The report says Vermont corrections staff were there on November 14 when a corrections officer called the Vermont inmates “fucking pussies” as he ordered them into their cells. Vermont staff then watched the guard “pacing along the upper tier taunting inmates to come out of their cells and settle any issues with him.”

While the report didn’t document any physical abuse, it caught the attention of Vermont corrections officials. The guard has been removed from the unit housing Vermonters and placed under investigation in Pennsylvania, according to documents sent to Seven Days.

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Monday, February 26, 2018

Posted By on Mon, Feb 26, 2018 at 8:45 PM

click to enlarge Burlington School Board Issues Call for Stricter Gun Laws
File: Matthew Thorsen
A Burlington High School hallway
The Burlington School Board urged Vermont lawmakers Monday to pass stricter gun laws in a resolution that says students have the right to attend school "free from fear" of gun violence.

Their vote was the latest call for new restrictions in the wake of the February 14 school shooting that killed 17 people in Florida and the recent arrest of a Vermont teen after an alleged foiled school shooting plot in Fair Haven.

The resolution urges legislators to "swiftly act to keep our children alive" and ban the manufacture, sale and possession of military-style assault weapons.

Most of the board members voted by phone in the special session, which fell during a school vacation week. Only two board members were present for the short session at the Ira Allen central office building on Colchester Avenue, as was superintendent of schools Yaw Obeng.

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