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Saturday, February 27, 2021

Posted By on Sat, Feb 27, 2021 at 12:03 PM

click to enlarge Weinberger Maintains Fundraising Lead
Courtney Lamdin ©️ Seven Days
Candidates Miro Weinberger (left) and Max Tracy at a honk-and-wave Friday evening
Burlington's mayoral election has yet to be decided, but incumbent Mayor Miro Weinberger has undoubtedly won the money race.

Campaign finance reports filed with the Vermont Secretary of State on Friday — the last batch before the March 2 election — show the three-term Democrat has pulled in $132,673 from 483 donors since the campaign's start.

Weinberger raised $6,526 since the last filing deadline of February 20, including a $1,040 donation from former Vermont governor and fellow Dem Peter Shumlin.

Weinberger has raked in six-figure donations in three of his four elections for mayor. Ahead of the March 2 election this year, he beat his personal best of close to $125,000 in 2018.

Progressive challenger Max Tracy, the city council president, has raised $66,570, including $3,234 in the last week. Tracy has received donations from from 575 people thus far — more than any other candidate, a lead Tracy has held through the duration of the race.
click to enlarge Weinberger Maintains Fundraising Lead (2)
Courtney Lamdin ©️ Seven Days
Mayoral candidate Ali Dieng waving to motorists on North Avenue
Independent candidate Ali Dieng, a fellow city councilor, has raised $11,317 from 120 donors. Supporters gave $397 since the last filing deadline.

Weinberger has also outspent both candidates. He's shelled out $102,010 to date, including close to $34,000 in the last week. Larger expenditures include $4,653 for yard signs and postcards, $1,344 for radio spots on WVMT and WCPV and $1,000 in online advertising.

Tracy has spent close to $52,700, while Dieng has spent just under $9,300.

The four other independents in the race — Haik Bedrosian, Will Emmons, Kevin McGrath and Patrick White — did not file any campaign finance reports.

On Friday evening, Dieng, Tracy and Weinberger all showed up on North Avenue at the Route 127 interchange along with supporters to hold up signs and wave to passing motorists.

Cost to the candidates: zero dollars.

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Friday, February 26, 2021

Posted By on Fri, Feb 26, 2021 at 2:58 PM

click to enlarge Burlington Police Get Involved After Prank Callers Target City Councilor
File: Courtney Lamdin ©️ Seven Days
Councilor Joan Shannon (D-South District)

Updated at 4:06 p.m.

Burlington Police have referred an unknown number of people to a restorative justice program for repeatedly calling City Councilor Joan Shannon (D-South District) during a council meeting in December.

Burlington Police Lt. Justin Couture would not disclose how many people were referred to the program, nor would he share their names.

"There was an investigation," he said. "It's being referred to alternative justice, which makes it confidential."

Councilor Shannon, however, told Seven Days that multiple people were referred to the program, which can include moderated discussions between the victim and offenders. Shannon said she hopes the process is productive.

"I want something that makes us better. I want that for Burlington," Shannon said. "I don't think that Burlington is in a healthy place right now. I don't think the way to get change is the way we've been approaching it in the last eight months. This isn't the way to make progress. This is just sowing division."

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Thursday, February 25, 2021

Posted By on Thu, Feb 25, 2021 at 8:46 PM

click to enlarge North District Candidates Aim to Restore Balance to Divided Burlington Council
Courtesy
Mark Barlow and Kienan Christianson
For the second time in as many years, Burlington’s North District has an open city council seat on Town Meeting Day.

All four city council district seats, which represent two wards apiece, are up for election on March 2. Franklin Paulino, a Democrat and one-term councilor in the North District, is the only incumbent not running for reelection.

Competing for his seat are independent Mark Barlow and Progressive/Democrat Kienan Christianson.

While some of their policies differ, the candidates both said the hyper-partisan dynamic on the council motivated them to run. Both say they're best suited to temper the political divide — Barlow because he hasn't aligned himself with either party and Christianson because he's able to work with both.

“I wouldn't caucus with anybody, but I would talk to everybody,” Barlow said. “The people that I would probably seek out most frequently are the people that I disagreed most strenuously with and tried to find common ground.”

Said Christianson: “When people get backed into their corners … it’s hard to find a path forward.” After he earned endorsements from both parties, Christianson said, it’s clear Burlingtonians want a councilor “who can work with both sides.”

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Posted By on Thu, Feb 25, 2021 at 5:20 PM

South Burlington Snares Winooski’s City Manager
File: MATTHEW THORSEN ©️ Seven Days
Jessie Baker

South Burlington has hired away the city manager from "Burlington's Brooklyn."

Jessie Baker, who held the top city post in Winooski for four years, will begin her new role on June 1. She will replace current South Burlington city manager Kevin Dorn, who has held the job since 2013. He'll train Baker for a month before retiring.

The South Burlington City Council was impressed with Baker’s “caliber, competence and persona,” Helen Riehle, the council chair, said in a statement announcing the hire this week.

“We are ecstatic that she will become both the first female and the next City Manager,” Riehle said.

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Posted By on Thu, Feb 25, 2021 at 4:11 PM

click to enlarge Media Note: VPR Announces New 'Vermont Edition' Cohosts
VPR
Mikaela Lefrak and Connor Cyrus
Vermont Public Radio announced Thursday it has hired two journalists to replace longtime "Vermont Edition" host Jane Lindholm.

Connor Cyrus and Mikaela Lefrak will become cohosts and senior producers of the popular news program, the Colchester-based station said.

Cyrus is a morning reporter at WJAR-TV in Providence, R.I. A graduate of Lyndon State College, he previously worked at WCAX Channel 3 and radio stations in Plattsburgh, N.Y., and Presque Isle, Maine. 

“One of the reasons I became a journalist was for opportunities like this one: the chance to make a difference and guide the conversations on the important topics in Vermont," Cyrus said in a statement. "And I’m thrilled to be returning to Vermont for everything the state has to offer.”

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Posted By on Thu, Feb 25, 2021 at 2:50 PM

click to enlarge Vermont Lake Monsters to Be Sold, Play in Collegiate League
courtesy of Vermont lake monsters
Fans taking in a game at Centennial Field
Updated at 4:36 p.m.

The Vermont Lake Monsters will be sold to an investment group, and the team is expected to play in the Futures Collegiate Baseball League this summer, the club announced on Thursday.

The deal with Nos Amours Baseball Club is contingent “on a few agreements,” including a new lease with the University of Vermont, which owns the team’s historic ballpark, Centennial Field.

“The landscape has changed and this transition will allow the Lake Monsters to create amazing summertime memories for years to come,” Kyle Bostwick, the Lake Monsters’ vice president, said in a statement. “We are all looking forward to continuing to root for the home team, and we thank all of our fans, partners, staff, and supporters for an amazing ride.”

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Wednesday, February 24, 2021

Posted By on Wed, Feb 24, 2021 at 5:55 PM

click to enlarge Sirotkin Criticizes Grant Program — to a Larger Audience Than He Intended
Matthew Roy ©️ Seven Days
The Vermont Statehouse
Many have made the mistake, and on Monday, Sen. Michael Sirotkin (D-Chittenden) did: Whipping off a quick critique of some work his colleagues had completed in the House, the senator accidentally hit “reply all," sending his plainspoken rebuke to some of those House colleagues.

“Doug, having a real problem with what [House] Commerce proposed,” wrote Sirotkin, the chair of the Senate Committee on Economic Development, Housing and General Affairs, to state Auditor Doug Hoffer. Earlier that day, Hoffer had issued a memo to lawmakers about a proposed $10 million Gap Recovery Grants program. The program is part of a larger coronavirus relief measure that was first proposed by the Scott administration as part of the Budget Adjustment Act.

Hoffer noted that there’s no way for the state to recoup grant money if a business is later determined to have been ineligible.

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Posted By and on Wed, Feb 24, 2021 at 2:22 PM

click to enlarge Fire Destroys Historic Methodist Church in Middlesex
Jeff Baron ©️ Seven Days
Firefighters by the smoking ruins of the church
A fire swept through the historic Middlesex United Methodist Church on Wednesday morning, destroying a picturesque house of worship that was more than a century old.

The flames spread quickly through the wooden structure, according to Waterbury Fire Chief Gary Dillon, whose department was one of several that responded. Around noontime, the bell tower collapsed.

Sharon Merchant was there to see it.

"I've been going there since I was born, and I'm 60 years old," she said. "I was baptized there, married there, buried my father there, the whole shebang. I talked to my 93-year-old mother today, and she's like, 'I'm supposed to be buried there.'"

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Tuesday, February 23, 2021

Posted By on Tue, Feb 23, 2021 at 8:12 PM

click to enlarge Burlington City Councilors Approve CityPlace Settlement
Courtesy of Freeman French Freeman
A rendering of CityPlace Burlington on Cherry Street
Burlington city councilors on Tuesday unanimously approved a settlement agreement with the owners of the CityPlace Burlington project that promises to pay workers a fair wage on the job site.

Councilors had delayed a vote on the settlement last week because it didn’t guarantee union labor to build the downtown project. While the final agreement doesn’t deliver on that front, it does promise to pay workers the prevailing wage, an hourly rate set by the state for various trades.

The wage for construction workers in the Burlington area, for example, is $18.45 an hour. According to the Vermont AFL-CIO, the prevailing wage could boost workers’ earnings by up to 42.5 percent.

"Approval of this resolution, from my perspective, is a big win," Councilor Chip Mason (D-Ward 5) said before the vote. "I see it as a path forward for the pit that I and all of us have looked at for the last four years."

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Posted By on Tue, Feb 23, 2021 at 5:41 PM

Universal Mail-In Ballot Bill Clears Key Hurdle in Vermont Senate
File: Eva Sollberger ©️ Seven Days
Voters will be able to fix mail-in ballot mistakes under a new bill.
A bill to make universal mail-in ballots a permanent feature of Vermont general elections, and to make it easier for voters to fix mistakes on those ballots, cleared a key legislative hurdle on Tuesday.

The Senate Government Operations Committee voted 4-1 to support the bill, S.15, which now heads to money committees that will assess the cost.

The measure would require town clerks to mail out ballots to all active, registered voters for general elections, pandemic safety issues or not. Every voter would have the chance to return their ballot by mail, deliver it to the polls, or vote as they always have in person.

A key element of the bill would allow people who make errors when filling out their ballots to fix the problem and still have their votes count. During last year’s dramatic expansion of voting by mail, the rate of defective ballots also spiked.

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