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Monday, August 31, 2020

Posted By on Mon, Aug 31, 2020 at 3:12 PM

click to enlarge Howard Center to Investigate After Employee Complaints About del Pozo's Board Position
Luke Awtry ©️ Seven Days
Former chief Brandon del Pozo
After complaints from employees, the Howard Center board of trustees has hired an investigator to help determine whether former Burlington police chief Brandon del Pozo should continue serving as a trustee.

Board president Debra Stenner announced the inquiry last Friday morning in a letter to staff. The probe seeks "to better understand the full scope of events" surrounding del Pozo's decision to create an anonymous Twitter account that he used last summer to troll Howard Center employee Charles Winkleman.

The Howard Center provides mental health and substance use services and is one of the biggest employers in the state. Del Pozo has served on the organization's board since 2018. His three-year term ends in 2021.
"We believe Brandon brings unique and valuable insight and have supported him in his decision to stay on the board," Stenner wrote. "However, we recognize that there are strong feelings of harm on both sides and gaining a full, unbiased understanding of all that has happened, or continues to happen, is in the best interest of Howard Center and we believe is an imperative in order to move forward."

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Thursday, August 27, 2020

Posted By on Thu, Aug 27, 2020 at 7:49 PM

click to enlarge Stowe Skiers Must Make Reservations to Hit the Slopes
File: Jeb Wallace-Brodeur ©️ Seven Days
Skiers on a lift at Stowe Mountain Resort, pre-COVID
Skiers at Stowe Mountain Resort this winter must make a reservation before hitting the slopes, one of several new protocols intended to combat the spread of coronavirus.

Vail Resorts, the Stowe slope’s Colorado-based parent company, announced the measure on Thursday, along with other changes to riding the lifts, hanging out in lodges and buying tickets during what will be an unprecedented ski season.

The new rules affect the company’s 34 North American resorts, including Stowe, Okemo and Mount Snow in Vermont.

“I realize not everyone will agree with our approach — [with] some feeling we are being too conservative or aggressive,” Vail Resorts CEO Rob Katz said in a statement. “And I recognize the changes we are implementing will be an inconvenience. But I ask for your understanding and patience.”

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Wednesday, August 26, 2020

Posted By on Wed, Aug 26, 2020 at 9:51 PM

Weeks After the Primary, Vermont's General Election Ballot Is Still Being Tweaked
DREAMSTIME.COM
Two weeks after the August 11 primary, the list of candidates who will be on Vermont's general election ballot is still being finalized.

High-profile office seekers, such as Republican Gov. Phil Scott and his challenger, Lt. Gov. David Zuckerman, a Progressive/Democrat, aren't budging from the lines that they clinched on the ballot.

Candidates are still being added, though, including those who won long-shot write-in campaigns or replaced last-minute dropouts.

click to enlarge Weeks After the Primary, Vermont's General Election Ballot Is Still Being Tweaked
Courtesy Image
Meg Hansen
Republican Meg Hansen is one candidate who will appear on the general election ballot for a race other than the one she originally entered. Hansen came in second for the Republican nomination for lieutenant governor. Soon afterward, the Manchester Center resident said, she was recruited to run for state Senate. 

Republicans in Bennington County didn’t mount a strong primary field, due in part to the dominance of the Democrats in the district, Hansen said. She noted that Sen. Dick Sears (D-Bennington) has represented the district since 1993, and  Sen. Brian Campion (D-Bennington) since 2014.

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Posted By on Wed, Aug 26, 2020 at 5:41 PM

click to enlarge St. Albans Cop Used Demeaning Slur During Arrest at School
Screenshot ©️ Seven Days
Use-of-force report filed by St. Albans School Resource Officer David French
Updated at 7:18 p.m.

A St. Albans police officer told a disabled student that he was "acting retarded" for not obeying the officer's commands during an altercation inside Bellows Free Academy high school last year.

The City of St. Albans and the Maple Run Unified School District agreed this month to pay the student's family a total of $30,000 to settle a human rights complaint alleging that they discriminated against the 17-year-old student on the basis of his disability. Officer David French, who worked at BFA as a school resource officer, was reassigned to a street patrol unit in June 2019, after the school year concluded.

The city released some information about the case on Wednesday in response to a public records request Seven Days filed on July 16. The city and school did not admit wrongdoing as part of the settlement, which includes a $8,750 payment from the city. Insurers are paying the remainder.

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Tuesday, August 25, 2020

Posted By on Tue, Aug 25, 2020 at 2:49 PM

click to enlarge Addison County Sheriff Doubles Down on Accusations Against Vergennes Chief
Tim Newcomb
Illustration
Addison County's sheriff is challenging the findings of a state probe into allegations that he made against a rival police chief, saying Attorney General T.J. Donovan's decision to dismiss the matter amounts to corruption.

 In a brief video posted to his personal Facebook account on Tuesday, Sheriff Peter Newton criticized Donovan for clearing Vergennes Police Chief George Merkel of any wrongdoing related to allegations that Merkel had falsified time sheets so that he could make more money.

The sheriff accused Merkel of the misconduct in a report to the Vermont State Police earlier this year. But Donovan said last week that the VSP investigation revealed discrepancies of only 15 hours over a two-year period, with no evidence to suggest anything more than "clerical mistakes."

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Posted By on Tue, Aug 25, 2020 at 1:19 PM

click to enlarge Burlington Council Green-Lights Litigation in CityPlace Dispute
File: James Buck ©️ Seven Days
CityPlace Burlington construction site
Updated at 9:15 p.m.

Burlington city councilors gave Mayor Miro Weinberger their blessing early Tuesday to sue CityPlace developers Don Sinex and Brookfield Asset Management if negotiations over the long-stalled project sputter out.

The council voted 10-1 to “pursue all legal remedies” should talks with Sinex and Brookfield fail. The vote, taken just after midnight Tuesday, authorized the city to make all "necessary budget allocations to accomplish these ends." Councilor Ali Dieng (I-Ward 7) cast the lone no vote; Councilor Franklin Paulino (D-North District) was absent.

"The city is really wanting to take strong action against Sinex to make him live up to his promises," Council President Max Tracy (P-Ward 2) told Seven Days later Tuesday morning. "It's looking increasingly likely that we will pursue legal action," he added.

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Monday, August 24, 2020

Posted By on Mon, Aug 24, 2020 at 2:03 PM

Chittenden County Senate Recount to Begin Wednesday
COURTESY of JUNE HESTON
June Heston with her son, Keegan
A judge has ordered a recount to begin Wednesday in the primary race for a Chittenden County Senate seat.

June Heston, a nonprofit consultant from Richmond in her first-ever political race, came just 46 votes shy of securing a Democratic nomination for one of the six Senate seats representing the state’s most populous county.

Incumbent Sen. Chris Pearson (P/D–Chittenden) of Burlington received 11,764 votes to Heston’s 11,719, according to the official tally from the Vermont Secretary of State.

On August 14, Heston filed a motion in Chittenden Superior Court demanding a recount. Statewide and Senate candidates within 2 percent of the total votes cast divided by the number of seats in the district can request a recount. Heston was less than 0.5 percent behind Pearson.

Judge Helen Toor held a conference call with elections officials last Thursday and issued her ruling on the recount Monday morning.

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Friday, August 21, 2020

Posted By on Fri, Aug 21, 2020 at 6:08 PM

click to enlarge Scott Wants Gift Cards, Biz Grants in Next Round of COVID Relief
Tim Newcomb ©️ Seven Days
The bulk of Vermont's remaining CARES Act funding should be used to help heal the state's ailing economy, Gov. Phil Scott said Friday. To accomplish that, he wants to send every Vermont household on a shopping spree.

Scott plans to press lawmakers to spend another $133 million in federal coronavirus relief dollars to support Vermont employers in direct and indirect ways, including by offering $150 gift cards for residents to use at local businesses.

"We need to focus like a laser on helping these businesses, and the jobs they provide, survive," Scott said at a press conference.

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Thursday, August 20, 2020

Posted By on Thu, Aug 20, 2020 at 3:00 PM

click to enlarge Burlington Council Approves Limits on Alcohol Sales, House Parties
Luke Awtry
Church Street Marketplace
Burlington bars and restaurants must stop serving alcohol at 11 p.m. through at least September 14, the city council decided during an emergency meeting Thursday. Residential gatherings also face new limits.

The measures, very similar to those proposed on Tuesday by Mayor Miro Weinberger, are intended to reduce the risk of coronavirus outbreaks once university and K-12 classes resume.

Three councilors were not present for the final vote, but the nine who were unanimously passed the emergency resolution over objections from some downtown bar owners who said their businesses were being unfairly targeted.

"We have been completely compliant, and it's not fair to scapegoat the bar industry," said Sean McKenzie, beverage director at the Archives arcade bar on College Street, adding that he would need to lay off employees as a result.

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Wednesday, August 19, 2020

Posted By on Wed, Aug 19, 2020 at 8:22 PM

click to enlarge Burlington Officials Celebrate as Work Begins on Moran Plant
Sasha Goldstein ©️ Seven Days
Mayor Miro Weinberger
Burlington officials past and present celebrated on Wednesday the groundbreaking of a project that they hope will turn the decrepit Moran Plant into a waterfront tourist attraction.

“For 30 years, the Burlington community has been dreaming and imagining great uses of this unique ... structure,” Mayor Miro Weinberger told an assembled crowd of dozens at Water Works Park, which adjoins the Moran property. “Today, we have found a way to achieve many of the city’s long-held goals for this site.”

Crews have already begun stripping the five-story building’s interior and were busy in the background during Wednesday’s event. Workers will gradually strip the entire brick-encased building, leaving just the steel framework standing amid what will eventually be a city park.

The ceremony included no actual groundbreaking, though gleaming shovels leaned against a nearby chainlink fence surrounding the old coal-fired power plant. Instead, the city gave attendees old bricks from the building, adorned with a label designed by Burlington City Arts commemorating the event.

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