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Thursday, January 21, 2021

Posted By on Thu, Jan 21, 2021 at 2:39 PM

click to enlarge Elderwood Cited for Poor Patient Care During COVID-19 Outbreak
Derek Brouwer ©️ Seven Days
Elderwood at Burlington
Regulators have cited Elderwood at Burlington for serious lapses in patient care during a recent COVID-19 outbreak that has infected 127 of the nursing home's residents and employees.

The recent investigation, spurred by five anonymous complaints, did not find any shortcomings in infection control that may have contributed to viral spread. It confirmed instead that a staffing crisis led to dangerously diminished care.

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Posted By on Thu, Jan 21, 2021 at 2:24 PM

Scott's Executive Order to Update Act 250 Draws Fire
Tim Newcomb
Gov. Phil Scott’s latest plan to update the state’s 50-year-old land-use law has quickly run into legislative and legal resistance.

Scott issued an executive order last week shifting power from the nine volunteer district commissions that administer Act 250’s development regulations to a single, professional statewide board.

“We can and must protect our environment and support regional economic development reliant on vibrant downtowns and village centers,” Scott said in a press release. “That’s our focus in this work, because we cannot achieve these goals with the outdated and cumbersome administrative structure we have today.”

Passed in 1970 in response to unchecked growth that followed completion of interstate highways, Act 250 established statewide standards even while setting up district commissions to retain local control. Today, critics contend that the decentralized model creates inconsistency in its administration and duplication of effort when local decisions on large projects are inevitably appealed.

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Wednesday, January 20, 2021

Posted By on Wed, Jan 20, 2021 at 12:22 AM

click to enlarge Burlington Will Put Retail Cannabis Question on March Ballot
File: Luke Eastman
Marijuana products could be sold in Burlington
Burlington voters will get the chance in March to consider whether the Queen City should allow retail cannabis sales when Vermont's legal adult-use market opens in 2022.

The council voted unanimously to place a question on the Town Meeting Day ballot that would permit marijuana sales within city limits. Councilor Chip Mason (D-Ward 5) recused himself from the vote.

Vermont's cannabis law requires municipalities to proactively opt-in to the marketplace through a public vote. Under the law, the state's existing medical marijuana dispensaries can obtain what are known as integrated licenses to manufacture and sell cannabis products to the public in May 2022. Other retail licensees can't open until October 2022.

Burlington's ballot item, however, wouldn't allow any marijuana businesses to open until October 2022.

"This is a modest proposal to try to level the playing field," Councilor Sarah Carpenter (D-Ward 4) said. "We really wanted to try to be fair to all businesses and in particular, small businesses."

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Tuesday, January 19, 2021

Posted By on Tue, Jan 19, 2021 at 6:42 PM

Scott to Quarantine After Potential COVID-19 Exposure at Press Conference
File: Jeb Wallace-Brodeur
Gov. Phil Scott and Health Commissioner Mark Levine at a previous briefing
Gov. Phil Scott and Vermont Health Commissioner Mark Levine will quarantine and be tested for the coronavirus after a "contractor" who worked at two recent press conferences tested positive for COVID-19.

"The briefings are conducted under state guidance, with safety protocols, including physical distancing, in place," the governor's office announced Tuesday evening in a statement. But "out of an abundance of caution," administration officials who attended press conferences on January 15 and 19 will quarantine, while Scott will continue to fulfill his duties remotely "until further notice."

Scott has hosted the regular press briefings at the Pavilion Auditorium on State Street in Montpelier at least twice a week since the pandemic began. His office said roughly 17 people attended both briefings in question. Among the typical attendees are several administration officials and staffers from Scott's office, a handful of broadcast journalists and at least one certified American Sign Language interpreter. Two interpreters worked Tuesday's briefing.

State contact tracers have begun investigating the incident and will reach out to anyone identified as a close contact, or those who spent more than 15 minutes within six feet or less of the positive case. Scott's office has also reached out to everyone at the briefings.

Neither Scott nor Levine has been vaccinated; Scott's spokesperson told VTDigger.org last month that both he and Levine planned to wait for their turn in Vermont's vaccine rollout. The state expects to begin vaccinating people above the ages of 75 starting the week of January 25. Scott is 62; Levine is 67.

Scott's spokespeople did not immediately return questions about whether regular press conference attendees receive COVID-19 tests, or whether the contractor was symptomatic. And it was not immediately clear when the contractor was last tested for the virus.

Scott's press briefing on Tuesday lasted two hours and concluded around 1 p.m., five hours before the press release went out.

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Posted By on Tue, Jan 19, 2021 at 5:03 PM

click to enlarge College Students Return to Vermont Amid Soaring COVID-19 Case Counts
Courtesy of Sally McCay
University of Vermont campus in Burlington

Updated 6:47 p.m.

Thousands of students are moving back into college residence halls around Vermont this week in the midst of a winter surge in the ongoing pandemic.

At many schools, the start of the spring semester will resemble the kickoff of the fall term nearly five months ago, with students undergoing a rigorous quarantine and testing process required by the state on their arrival.

Confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Vermont are more than 25 times higher than when students arrived at schools late in August. Back then, daily new case counts hovered around six. This week, they've averaged 160. And in some areas of the country where students live, the levels are much higher.

State and college officials alike are banking on the success of the virus mitigation strategies that kept levels of COVID-19 low on Vermont's campuses during the fall semester.

"We're hopeful," said Tracy Dolan, deputy commissioner of the Vermont Department of Health. "We still think what we're doing is probably the best thing that we can do."

Those measures include a mandated quarantine period for all students. Also mandated: testing for all students after the first seven days on campus.

Beyond that, said Gary Derr, the University of Vermont's vice president for operations and public safety, the on-campus strategy resembles the the fall's. Students will be reminded to wear facial coverings, wash their hands and maintain social distance.

And just as during the fall semester, UVM will continue mandatory weekly student testing. During the fall semester, the more than 150,000 tests at UVM revealed 99 cases among students and 19 cases among faculty and staff, according to weekly reports on the school's website.

Those numbers are expected to soar this semester, however.

"We're preparing to see more positives, just like the state is," said Derr.

During the two weeks ending January 17, 59 students tested positive — more than half the number of positive student tests during the entire fall semester. But those numbers, Derr noted, were reported after the holidays. State officials have confirmed that, based on their contact-tracing data, Christmas gatherings helped drive a surge in cases.

"I think what we're expecting and hoping for is that that [weekly case number] will start to drop," said Derr.

If students fail to show up for weekly testing, the penalties can be steep. The tests are mandated by the school's Green and Gold Promise, which lays out student conduct requirements during the pandemic. Students in "egregious" violation of the pledge may be fined $250 on their first offense, and suspended on the second.

A UVM spokesperson said the school fined 799 students for violations during the fall semester, and suspended nine.

Though many campus strategies will be the same this semester, one thing will look different: Because of the statewide ban on multi-household gatherings, schools must define what a "household" means on their campuses, and ask students to restrict non-academic gatherings to members of their "household."

That will look different from campus to campus, depending on how each school's housing is set up, explained Dolan. "We asked colleges to keep with the spirit of what we were trying to do with social gatherings," she said.

At a student town hall earlier this month, officials at St. Michael's College, which reported 79 cases during the fall semester — with dozens connected to a hockey-related outbreak in Montpelier — urged students to abide by the household restrictions. The school defines a household as either the residents of a townhouse, suite, or apartment, or, for those in single and double rooms, up to four people from the same wing of a residence hall.

Abiding by these rules is especially important as reports of a more contagious variant, first discovered in the United Kingdom, continue to spread, said Mary Masson, director of student health services at St. Mike's. Though the variant has not yet been identified in Vermont, it's been reported just over the border in New York State.

"It tells us that we have to be all the more vigilant," said Masson.

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Posted By on Tue, Jan 19, 2021 at 1:00 PM

click to enlarge Scott Signs Bill Enabling Mail-In Voting for Town Meeting Day
James Buck
Vermont voters at a polling location last year
A bill that Gov. Phil Scott signed into law on Tuesday will enable Vermont municipalities and school districts to conduct mail-in Town Meeting Day votes this year. It also allows for votes to be delayed until later in the spring, when it might be safer to hold some form of in-person meetings.

"This means they can, if they choose, mail ballots to all registered voters in place of more traditional town meetings, or the typical in-person elections used by many cities and towns," Scott said at a press briefing.

The bill, H.48, seeks to keep residents safe during the coronavirus pandemic by offering flexibility ahead of Vermont's traditional March voting day. It will empower municipalities and school districts to send out ballots in a system similar to the one used during Vermont's first-ever mail-in election in November.

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Monday, January 18, 2021

Posted By on Mon, Jan 18, 2021 at 8:23 PM

click to enlarge Dieng Wants Voters to Weigh In on Burlington Police Staffing Levels
File: Courtney Lamdin ©️ Seven Days
Councilor Ali Dieng (I-Ward 7)
Updated on January 19, 2021.

Burlington city councilors on Tuesday will consider putting a non-binding question about police staffing levels on the Town Meeting Day ballot.

Councilor Ali Dieng (I-Ward 7) introduced the resolution, saying the council vote in June to dramatically cut the police force and invest in social services was a "knee-jerk reaction" to activists' demands. The question he's proposed would ask voters if the city should increase the department's authorized headcount from 74 officers to 84.

Non-binding means the council would not be required to adopt the change, even if a majority of voters approve it.

"The people being policed — none of them have been part of the conversation. It's only those who are vocal," said Dieng, who is running for mayor. "They speak up, and that's it. The council makes a decision. I want to hear from everyone."

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Sunday, January 17, 2021

Posted By on Sun, Jan 17, 2021 at 3:47 PM

click to enlarge Plenty of Police, but No Protesters, Turn Out at Vermont Statehouse on Sunday
Terry J. Allen
Officers outside the Statehouse Sunday
Despite concerns about armed unrest Sunday at statehouses around the nation, the only things descending on Montpelier were anti-fascists and snowflakes — the latter the frozen kind.

Noon came and went at the snowy Vermont Statehouse with no armed protesters in sight, leaving little for the assembled journalists to document beyond heavily-armed state troopers on foot patrol and a guy with a handwritten badge that read "Anti-Fascist Riot Prevention Volunteer," whose head was encased in  a gas mask that looked like it might have seen duty in a world war.  

“I’m wearing it just in case,” said Montpelier resident Thomas Gram, who added that the device served the dual purpose of protection against COVID-19 and any tear gas he might encounter.

Gram and Belynda Jestice of Plainfield had wandered down to the Statehouse from a group of counter-protesters in front of Montpelier City Hall. Jestice said she was relieved that there was no armed protest to counter.

“We wanted to send the message that they can’t come here and do what happened in D.C.,” Jestice said.

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Friday, January 15, 2021

Posted By on Fri, Jan 15, 2021 at 2:56 PM

click to enlarge Political Parties, Public Officials Urge Caution Ahead of Possible Statehouse Protests
Dreamstime
The Vermont Statehouse
Updated at 4:04 p.m.

Public officials, police, and Vermont's Republican and Democratic parties are urging caution ahead of what law enforcement authorities have called possible plans for armed protests at the Vermont Statehouse.

The potential threat prompted the Montpelier City Council on Wednesday to pass a resolution recommending the closure of schools, the Statehouse and city hall on January 20, the date president-elect Joe Biden is sworn in. And on Friday, the Vermont Judiciary announced it would cancel all in-person hearings and meetings scheduled for Tuesday and Wednesday.

“The Judiciary is taking these precautionary steps to ensure continuity of operations and safety in light of reports that public gatherings during the federal inaugural week carry a risk of vandalism or violence in some parts of the country,” Patricia Gabel, the state court administrator, said in a statement.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation has warned local law enforcement in all 50 states about potential threats by armed pro-Trump extremists who falsely claim that President Donald Trump won reelection in November.

Trump supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol on January 6, an insurrection that led to the killing of a police officer and four other deaths.

Law enforcement officials have flagged Sunday, January 17, and Wednesday, January 20, as two dates of potential armed protest.

The Montpelier resolution calls for “residents and visitors to make the safe choice and refrain from direct in-person counter-protest activity due to the risk of violence.

“There are other ways, safer ways to make your voice heard and to stand up for what you believe in,” the resolution reads. “We’re asking you to consider safety first during these events. In addition, there is neither need nor necessity to be armed at a peaceful protest, and anyone coming to any of these events, please do so without firearms.”

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Posted By on Fri, Jan 15, 2021 at 2:29 PM

click to enlarge Vaccinations of Vermonters 75 and Older to Begin Later This Month
Photo Courtesy of Porter Medical Center
Helen Porter Rehabilitation and Nursing resident Elsie Johnson gets vaccinated.
Updated at 3:56 p.m.

Vermont will begin offering the COVID-19 vaccine to people ages 75 and older starting the week of January 25, officials said at a press conference Friday, unveiling the next phase of the state's highly anticipated vaccination plan.

But officials stressed that the vaccine rollout remains hampered by limited supply, noting Vermont continues to receive only about 8,800 vaccine doses from the federal government each week — far less than initial projections.

“We know many are anxiously waiting for their vaccines — and rightfully so," Gov. Phil Scott said. "We want to get every dose out just as quickly as we possibly can. But with so few doses available, we need everyone to be patient.”

The Trump administration raised hopes for expanded access earlier this week in announcing that it would release all doses of available vaccine rather than hold a second dose for those in early phases (both authorized vaccines are two-dose regimens). But the Washington Post reported on Friday that the administration had already begun shipping out reserves last month, dashing hopes of a windfall.

Vermont officials say they are now planning to proceed with the current supply chain, which should allow them to vaccinate the 49,000 or so Vermonters aged 75 or older in about six weeks.