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Thursday, March 25, 2021

Posted By on Thu, Mar 25, 2021 at 2:42 PM

click to enlarge Burlington Police Sergeants, Lieutenants File Petition to Unionize
File: James Buck ©️ Seven Days
Protesters last summer in Burlington
The City of Burlington is opposing an effort by police higher-ups to form a union.

If given the go-ahead by the Vermont Labor Relations Board, the department's 15 sergeants and lieutenants will be able to hold an election to form a collective bargaining unit. These officers are not members of the city's existing police union, the Burlington Police Officers' Association.

A successful union drive would mean that only the Burlington police chief and two deputy chiefs would not be protected by a union.

The New England Police Benevolent Association filed a petition on behalf of the Burlington sergeants and lieutenants on March 3. The city responded on March 15, asserting that the arrangement would be “problematic” as lieutenants serve as sergeants' direct supervisors. Further, the city wrote, the state labor board  ordered sergeants and lieutenants removed from the existing police union in 2001 “because they are supervisory employees.”

“The City does not believe that any circumstances exist to change that prior determination,” assistant city attorney Justin St. James wrote in the two-page filing.

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Posted By on Thu, Mar 25, 2021 at 10:40 AM

click to enlarge Vermont Panel Formed to Plan Semiquincentennial Celebrations
Courtesy of Hubbardton Battlefield State Historic Site ©️ Seven Days
A Battle of Hubbardton reenactment
It’s never too early to start planning for a semiquincentennial.

That would be July 4, 2026 — the 250th anniversary of the adoption of the Declaration of Independence. Gov. Phil Scott's administration has included $25,000 in its budget to put together a 15-member commission to plan events around that date.

Finalized this week, the commission includes Susan McClure, the executive director of the Lake Champlain Maritime Museum, and Jim Lockridge, executive director of the Big Heavy World music nonprofit in Burlington.

Also on the commission is Jonah Spivak, who is hoping to raise the profile of the upcoming 250th anniversary of Bennington Battle Day on August 16, 2027.

Although Vermont didn’t become a state until 1791, there was a lot of energy expended in 1776 in what was then a part of New Hampshire and New York to fight the British on Lake Champlain. Among other notable clashes was the Battle of Valcour Island, where the Americans suffered heavy casualties to the British in one of the first naval battles of the American Revolution.

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Wednesday, March 24, 2021

Posted By on Wed, Mar 24, 2021 at 6:30 PM

click to enlarge Pension Reform Plan Would Cost State Workers More
Tim Newcomb ©️ Seven Days
Current state workers would pay more toward the ballooning cost of their pensions and receive less generous benefits in retirement under a proposal put forward by House leadership Wednesday and immediately blasted by union leaders.

The package of reforms presented in the House Government Operations Committee attempts to confront a pension crisis that has deepened with the revelation in the fall that the state system is $600 million worse off than previously revealed.

“Nobody likes the situation we’re in,” Rep. Sarah Copeland Hanzas (D-Bradford) told her colleagues as she presented the preliminary plan. “But we are looking to try to find the right combination of changes that will make this more sustainable for the General Fund as well as for the retirees and beneficiaries.”

Union officials unloaded on the plan, saying it has not been crafted transparently, unfairly burdens workers and represents a failure of leadership to tackle the problem collaboratively.

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Posted By on Wed, Mar 24, 2021 at 2:45 PM

click to enlarge Deemed Not Historic, Burlington's Midtown Motel Is Demolished
Courtney Lamdin ©️ Seven Days
The site of the former Midtown Motel
The space where Burlington’s landmark Midtown Motel once stood is now an empty lot.

Property owner Jeff Nick tore down the 1950s-era motel last month, hiring a crew trained in asbestos removal to discard the remnants safely. The process took six weeks.

The cordoned-off lot is now filled with gravel, but Nick plans to convert it into a grassy space that he hopes will spur redevelopment of the so-called “gateway block” to the Queen City.

“Hopefully when COVID’s over, everybody can refocus and figure out what should happen on this block,” Nick said, referring to the area contained by Main Street, South Union Street and South Winooski Avenue. “It’s prime even in today’s market.”

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Tuesday, March 23, 2021

Posted By on Tue, Mar 23, 2021 at 2:44 PM

click to enlarge Vaccination Push Aimed at Younger Vermonters, NEK Residents
Courtesy of the University of Vermont Medical Center
Wesley McMillian, director of pharmacy at UVM Medical Center, with a shipment of vaccine
Vermont will use drive-through vaccination clinics, a media campaign and cooperative efforts with New Hampshire in order to get residents inoculated this spring.

The state is now shifting much of its focus to younger Vermonters. Everyone 16 and older will be able to sign up for vaccination appointments by April 19, with smaller "age bands" eligible in the preceding weeks.

“Hopefully those age groups will see a variety of messaging campaigns on social media and traditional media,” Health Commissioner Mark Levine said on Tuesday at one of the state’s twice-weekly COVID-19 briefings.

Levine said state officials will employ a persuasive, not dictatorial, tone with young people, many of whom might not think COVID-19 could have much impact on them. He said symptoms such as chronic fatigue, brain fog, memory loss and shortness of breath can occur weeks and months after infection with the virus, even in the young.

“I don’t wish that on anybody,” Levine said of such symptoms. “These can creep up on them over months and be debilitating.”

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Posted By on Tue, Mar 23, 2021 at 12:40 PM

click to enlarge Moving to Vermont? Proposal Would Make Payback for Expenses Permanent
Kristen Brosnan
Kristen Brosnan moved to Vermont last summer.
It seems everyone has an anecdote lately about Vermonters returning to their home state or newcomers moving in. Housing is scarce in some parts of the state.

But the Senate Committee on Economic Development, Housing and General Affairs isn’t taking any chances when it comes to attracting new residents. This year, it’s seeking to make its popular move-to-Vermont incentives permanent.

The panel has proposed a $1 million program that would reimburse a worker who is new to the state $5,000 for moving expenses. That amount would rise to $7,500 for someone who moves to an area with a higher-than-average unemployment rate or lower-than-average annual wages.

Vermont’s popular remote worker program garnered international headlines when it debuted in 2018 offering a $10,000 moving reimbursement for any new resident who would work remotely. Its success shows that these programs should continue, said Sen. Randy Brock (R-Franklin), a supporter of the bill. He sees the new measure, which would combine two earlier versions, as something similar to the business incentive programs that are used to lure companies.

“There are some states in the South literally spending hundreds of thousands of dollars per job to bring in auto plants and other things,” said Brock. “These are situations a state like Vermont can’t afford.”

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Monday, March 22, 2021

Posted By on Mon, Mar 22, 2021 at 11:56 PM

click to enlarge Welch: Burlington to Receive $27.3 Million in Federal Stimulus Cash
File: Paul Heintz ©️ Seven Days
Rep. Peter Welch
Burlington will receive $27.3 million in federal stimulus dollars to help recover from the coronavirus pandemic, U.S. Rep. Peter Welch (D-Vt.) told the City Council at a meeting on Monday.

The cash comes from the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan Act, which President Joe Biden signed into law earlier this month. Burlington’s piece of the pie includes a $19 million city allocation, plus an $8.3 million "county allocation," Welch said. Additionally, the Burlington School District will receive $14.3 million.
Half the cash should be available within 60 days, Welch said, with the balance to follow in six months to a year. Municipalities have until 2024 to spend the funds.

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Friday, March 19, 2021

Posted By on Fri, Mar 19, 2021 at 7:52 PM

click to enlarge $105 Million COVID-19 Relief Package Wins Unanimous Senate Support
Screenshot
Vermont Senate

A broad COVID-19 recovery bill that would plow $105 million into everything from business grants to affordable housing to free diapers advanced toward approval Friday afternoon.

The Senate unanimously approved H. 315, setting it up for a final vote next week. The bill is lawmakers’ latest attempt to ensure a combination of federal and state funds are spent as soon as possible on programs that will help the state “build back better,” as Sen. Jane Kitchel (D-Caledonia) put it.

“It seems like this bill has touched just about every committee in the Senate,” Kitchel, chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, told her colleagues.

The bill still needs to return to the House for final reconciliation with the Senate’s numerous changes. But House leaders have been in close communication with their Senate colleagues and are committed to ironing out any differences quickly, said Connor Kennedy, spokesperson for House Speaker Jill Krowinski (D-Burlington).

“We’re probably at the five-yard line, to be honest,” Kennedy said.

About $80 million of the money is coming from $1.25 billion Vermont received from the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021. Some funds are left over from last year's federal CARES Act. The balance will be from state funds, which are flush thanks to a surprise $210 million largely from higher-than-expected tax revenues.

The bill includes funding for a number of key Democratic priorities, including affordable housing, grants for struggling businesses, environmental cleanup and workforce development.

One of the largest chunks is $15 million to help schools address indoor air quality, a significant concern as children have returned to the classroom during the pandemic. There’s also $14 million to help clean up and redevelop some of the state’s numerous contaminated industrial sites, or brownfields. Another $10 million would help affordable-housing developers get projects moving that would help hundreds of homeless people still living in motels around the state, Kitchel said.

The Senate also increased to $10 million funds for “gap grants” to businesses that didn’t qualify for previous funding, such as for new businesses that couldn’t demonstrate previous revenues. Outdoor recreation would also enjoy a big boost, with $5 million going to the Agency of Natural Resources for trail work and another $5 million dedicated to the Vermont Outdoor Recreation Economic Collaborative, an economic development effort around recreation businesses.

The bill includes a number of education initiatives, including $3 million to train teachers to improve how they teach literacy, $1.4 million to train new nurses in collaboration with nursing homes, and $1 million to help schools find students they’ve lost track of during the pandemic, a phenomenon she referred to as "ghosting."

"We're really going to have to make some concerted effort to reconnect students with schools," Kitchel said.

Not all expenditures are big-ticket items, however. The Senate also set aside $25,000 for an audit of state deputies, and increased by $82,000 the funds set aside for needy families with children to pay for diapers.

Senate Minority Leader Randy Brock (R-Franklin) asked whether what was characterized as one-time spending would result in programs that the state would need to continue paying for when federal relief dollars dry up. Kitchel said her committee was "absolutely vigilant" to make sure that wasn't the case.

The bill references holding $20 million in reserve to help solve the state’s pension crisis, but Kitchel said her committee didn’t have the time to drill down on that issue and will have to return to it later in the session.

“We intend to address this problem before we leave this year,” she said.

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Posted By on Fri, Mar 19, 2021 at 6:32 PM

click to enlarge AG Donovan Refiles Third Major Case That Sarah George Dismissed
File: Taylor Dobbs ©️ Seven Days
Attorney General T.J. Donovan
Updated at 7:31 p.m.

Attorney General T.J. Donovan is pursuing murder charges against a mentally ill transient who is accused of fatally stabbing a man in downtown Burlington in 2017.

In refiling the first-degree murder charge against Louis Fortier, Donovan has now overridden Chittenden County State's Attorney Sarah George in all three of the high-profile cases she dropped in 2019 on the grounds that the state could not prove the defendants were criminally responsible for their violent acts.

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Posted By on Fri, Mar 19, 2021 at 11:45 AM

click to enlarge Scott Releases Vaccine Timeline, Aims to Have State Largely Reopened Around July 4
Courtesy of Ryan Mercer/UVM Health Network
Health care workers receiving the COVID-19 vaccine
Updated at 1:31 p.m.

Gov. Phil Scott on Friday released a full timeline for when every Vermonter can expect to be eligible for a coronavirus vaccine, saying the state plans to open sign-ups for new age groups each of the next four weeks until the entire adult population is eligible by April 19 — and immunized by July 1.

Vermonters ages 60 and older can start making appointments on Thursday, March 25, Scott said. The next age-band — 50-and-older — can then sign up Monday, March 29. The state will then open up new bands each of the next three weeks, on the following schedule.

  • April 5: age 40 and older
  • April 12: age 30 and-older
  • April 19: age 16 and older
People should expect it to take roughly two months from the date of their registration for them to be fully vaccinated, a timeframe that includes a two-week waiting period after the final dose, officials said. That puts the youngest age group around mid-June.

"To put a finer point on it," Scott said, "for high school seniors, this timeline means that in June ... you should be able to have a more traditional graduation and celebrate what you've accomplished with your friends and family."
click to enlarge Scott Releases Vaccine Timeline, Aims to Have State Largely Reopened Around July 4 (4)
Courtesy of Gov. Phil Scott's office
Vermont's vaccine schedule
Scott on Friday also reaffirmed his desire to have the state's economy largely reopened around the Fourth of July, and said he will provide a full plan for "emerging from the pandemic" within the next few weeks.

Taking a step in that direction, Scott announced that bars and social clubs can reopen March 24 under the same capacity limits and distancing requirements as restaurants, though he said municipalities can enact stricter rules.

Whether the state can meet these goals will depend on vaccine supply and the trajectory of the virus, officials said. But the announcements, which come a year to the day since Vermont's first confirmed COVID-19 deaths, still offer the clearest picture yet of when the state expects to regain a sense of normalcy.

"Normal to me is not a small cookout in your backyard with a couple of friends," Scott said. "It's when things will feel similar to pre-pandemic."
The state estimates that it has about 488,600 people over the age of 16, with those between the ages of 16 and 29 representing the largest age-band. So far, 30 percent of that population — 166,000 — has received at least one dose. A little over half of those people have been fully vaccinated.

The state has the necessary infrastructure to provide about 35,000 vaccine doses per week, according to Human Services Secretary Mike Smith.

While Friday’s news was largely encouraging, officials stressed that Vermont cannot claim victory yet, particularly in light of news this week that another, more contagious, variant of the virus has been found here.
On Thursday, the Vermont Health Department announced that it had confirmed three cases of the B.1.429 variant, a strain first identified in California that is about 20 percent more contagious. Another variant found in Vermont earlier this month — B.1.1.7, which originated in the United Kingdom — is believed to be up to 50 percent more contagious.

The strains must be confirmed using genetic sequencing, and with the health department sending out only 20 samples per week, it’s likely that the variants are more prevalent than is known.

With this in mind, Health Commissioner Mark Levine encouraged people to follow best health practices and get tested if they do not feel well.

“This is the only way for us to stay ahead in the race,” he said

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