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Thursday, January 7, 2021

Posted By on Thu, Jan 7, 2021 at 7:50 AM

After Riots at the Capitol, Busload of Vermont Trump Supporters Returns From D.C.
Derek Brouwer ©️ Seven Days
Vermonters return from Washington, D.C., early Thursday morning
President Donald Trump’s most loyal Vermont supporters had advanced on Washington, D.C., Wednesday with high hopes and mulish conviction. They returned home early Thursday morning in much less of a celebratory mood.

A charter bus ferrying 50 or so Vermonters from the nation's capital pulled into a pitch-black parking lot in South Burlington after 3 a.m., just as Congress finished certifying results that confirmed Joe Biden as the next president. The foot soldiers in Trump’s campaign to overturn the election looked weary as they filed, one-by-one, into the cold, windy night.

They quietly retrieved their bags from luggage compartments, taking care not to grab someone else's "Trump 2020" flag, then offered brief goodbyes to their compatriots. None wore masks.

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Wednesday, December 23, 2020

Posted By on Wed, Dec 23, 2020 at 8:04 PM

click to enlarge Media Note: Paul Heintz Departs Seven Days to Lead VTDigger Newsroom
Matthew Thorsen ©️ Seven Days
Paul Heintz
Seven Days reporter Paul Heintz is leaving the newspaper to become the managing editor at VTDigger.org, the competing news organizations announced Wednesday evening.

"We’re surprised and very sorry to see him go," Seven Days publisher Paula Routly wrote in an email to staff. "But we congratulate him on this new chapter in his journalism career and look forward to competing with him."

Heintz, a Dartmouth College graduate, has worked at Seven Days since 2012, including stints as political editor, Fair Game columnist and most recently as a staff writer.

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Tuesday, December 22, 2020

Posted By and on Tue, Dec 22, 2020 at 3:46 PM

click to enlarge Vermont Nursing Home Residents Begin Getting Vaccines
Photo Courtesy of Porter Medical Center
Helen Porter Rehabilitation and Nursing resident Elsie Johnson gets vaccinated on Monday.
A team of pharmacists jabbed more than a hundred residents and staff of Helen Porter Rehabilitation & Nursing on Monday morning, making the Middlebury home among the first long-term care facilities in the country to begin receiving doses of a COVID-19 vaccine.

More than two-thirds of residents received their first shots in their rooms, while half of the home’s workers took turns getting inoculated in a common area. The clinic marked a milestone in the fight against a virus that has proven especially devastating to nursing homes.

“It feels hopeful,” the home’s medical director, Dr. Karen Fromhold, said.

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Monday, December 21, 2020

Posted By on Mon, Dec 21, 2020 at 5:59 PM

Attorney General Settles With Man Who Sold Masks at Huge Markup
Court filings ©️ Seven Days
Masks sold to Central Vermont Medical Center
A Williston businessman delivered nearly 80,000 masks to Central Vermont Medical Center earlier this month to settle claims that he'd gouged the hospital during the early, desperate days of the pandemic.

Vermont Attorney General T.J. Donovan announced the settlement with Big Brother Security Programs owner Shelley Palmer on Monday. Palmer was accused of selling surgical masks at an exorbitant markup in March, when personal protective equipment was difficult for health care providers to procure.

As part of the deal, Palmer also dropped off 10,000 KN95 masks to the Vermont Department of Public Safety for distribution to schools, health care organizations and other eligible groups.

The "face value" of the goods is approximately $80,000, said Christopher Curtis, the AG's public protection division chief. The office had accused Palmer of reaping roughly $100,000 profit on his earlier sales to the hospital.

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Friday, December 18, 2020

Posted By on Fri, Dec 18, 2020 at 3:51 PM

click to enlarge Commuters Unhappy About Plans to Again Suspend Charlotte-Essex Ferry Route
File: Glenn Russell
Aboard a Lake Champlain Transportation ferry
Five days a week, Tara Smith and her two sons take the 8 a.m. ferry from Charlotte to Essex, N.Y., for work and school.

The North Ferrisburgh mom is vice president for programs at an educational nonprofit based on Main Street in Essex; her job sometimes requires that she works in-person with students at North Country schools. Her boys, ages 3 and 6, attend the Lakeside School at Black Kettle Farm, just a few minutes from the Essex ferry dock.

Smith has been commuting to work on the ferry for about eight years. But starting January 4, she’ll have to figure out an alternative option — as will others who rely on the route for professional, educational and medical reasons. That's the day the Burlington-based Lake Champlain Transportation Company will suspend Charlotte-Essex ferry service.

“Due to the significant decrease in ridership as a result of the pandemic, LCT has temporarily suspended service at our Charlotte/Essex Crossing and consolidated our resources to maintain service at our Grand Isle/Cumberland Head Crossing,” the company said in a statement on Friday. “We will resume service at our southern crossing as soon as we are able.”

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Thursday, December 17, 2020

Posted By on Thu, Dec 17, 2020 at 2:06 PM

Vermont Foodbank Bags $9 Million Gift From Billionaire MacKenzie Scott
Courtesy of the Vermont Foodbank
Andrea Solazzo packs produce for food shelf delivery
The Vermont Foodbank has received the largest gift in its history — $9 million — as part of a $4.2 billion blast of charitable giving announced this week by MacKenzie Scott, the ex-wife of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos.

The gift was unsolicited, came as a total surprise to the organization and was kept quiet until Scott announced it Tuesday in a blog post.

“It was a little bit of a shock,” Vermont Foodbank CEO John Sayles said. “It’s by far the largest gift the Foodbank has received.”

In a post titled "384 Ways to Help" — a reference to the number of organizations that received gifts — Scott wrote that she and her advisers looked at nonprofits "with strong leadership teams and results, with special attention to those operating in communities facing high projected food insecurity, high measures of racial inequity, high local poverty rates, and low access to philanthropic capital."

The post did not reveal the amount each organization received.

Sayles told Seven Days on Thursday that he doesn’t know how the $9 million was determined, but it's approximately equivalent to the nonprofit’s entire 2019 operating budget.

“I would call this a transformational gift,” Sayles said. “It will give the organization the opportunity to do things that certainly we would dream about doing but really wouldn’t have realistic expectations of executing.”

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Monday, December 14, 2020

Posted By on Mon, Dec 14, 2020 at 8:23 PM

Orphanage Task Force Finds Credible Evidence of Abuse — But Not Murder
Natalie Williams ©️ Seven Days
The former orphanage
A task force investigating allegations of murder at the long-shuttered St. Joseph's Catholic Orphanage found no evidence to substantiate claims that children were killed there, according to a report released Monday.

But the task force did find credible evidence of rampant physical, sexual and emotional abuse by the nuns and priests who operated the North Avenue orphanage — claims that officials say were never properly investigated at the time.

"It’s clear that abuse did occur at St. Joseph’s Orphanage, and that many children suffered,” Vermont Attorney General T.J. Donovan said at a press conference Monday afternoon, moments after releasing a nearly 300-page report on the institution.

"Our community, and the institutions of the community, including law enforcement, turned a blind eye," Donovan said. "We did not see them. We did not hear them."

The release of the task force's report brings an end to a two-year investigation that was sparked by an August 2018 Buzzfeed News story titled "We Saw Nuns Kill Children: The Ghosts of St. Joseph’s Catholic Orphanage."

The story relied in part on depositions and first-hand interviews with former residents. Many of the allegations had also previously been documented in dozens of victim lawsuits filed in the 1990s and extensive reporting on the orphanage, primarily by the Burlington Free Press.

One deposition from 1996 featured a former orphanage resident named Sally Dale detailing how she saw a nun push a child from a fourth-floor window. Another claim involved a nun pushing a young girl down a staircase, after which the girl was allegedly never seen again.

Other former residents recalled various forms of abuse that Buzzfeed writer Christine Kenneally described as "straightforwardly awful to the downright bizarre."

In compiling its own report, the task force, with the help of Burlington Police Department investigators, set out to speak with anyone who either lived at the orphanage between 1940 and the time of its closure in 1974 or was related to someone who had. It managed to interview nearly 50 people, many of whom shared claims matching those from the Buzzfeed story, with descriptions of severe neglect and abuse.

One of the most common allegations was beatings. According to the report, survivors recalled nuns using wooden paddles, rosaries and rulers to punish children for seemingly any reason — transgressions as simple as not making the bed correctly or looking out the window, for instance. The beatings sometimes resulted in broken bones or teeth, with some survivors reporting the nuns were less likely to abuse children who they knew went home on the weekends.

A large percentage of survivors also alleged severe mental and emotional abuse, recalling for investigators how nuns would threaten them or say derogatory things about their parents. Many individuals recalled being locked in dark spaces — closets, attics, footlockers, old trunks. Some said there was a chair in the attic that the nuns tied them to.

"Survivors reported that there was no peace to be had at the Orphanage," reads one particularly striking passage of the report. "Children were not nurtured or treated with kindness and love. Many reported that they did not experience any form of healthy, safe, nurturing touch, such as a hug. One cried at the memory of strangers’ hugs during a parade through Burlington celebrating the end of World War II. After years at the Orphanage, it was the first time the survivor could remember having been held with affection."

Several people who spoke to investigators said they were frequently sexually abused by priests, sometimes with more than one adult present. Some survivors said nuns also sexually abused them, with stories that "ranged from babies to older children and included allegations of singular nuns abusing children, or nuns assisting priests in their abuse," the report reads.

The task force sought to corroborate what it could about the allegations. But since murder was the only crime that was not bound by a statute of limitation, detectives spent significant time seeking to uncover evidence that might prove any homicides occurred.

The task force requested documents from the Diocese of Burlington, Vermont Catholic Charities, and the Sisters of Providence, the order of nuns who worked at St. Joseph’s.

The first two organizations provided resident review files, tracking cards and two ledgers that purportedly documented every one of the more than 13,000 children who resided at the orphanage during its 120-year existence. But the Sisters of Providence refused to cooperate with the investigation.

The task force reviewed hundreds of death certificates from the City of Burlington — as well as news reports, police documents and medical records — in search of any proof that someone died at the orphanage.

Detectives also worked with survivors to pinpoint where some of the allegations were said to have occurred, and even met with an excavation foreman, who confirmed that no human remains were found while the orphanage was being redeveloped into the rental apartments it is today, the report said.

Donovan said investigators found "no credible evidence" to prove that any murders occurred at St. Joseph's. "We believe this case is closed," he said. "As in all cases, if new episodes were to emerge, we would assess that evidence and make the appropriate determination."

Donovan said the task force would have needed to find additional evidence beyond the recollections of the survivors to prove a murder charge: "A body or a death certificate — or any type of documentary evidence that this occurred."

"In the absence of that, you are left with testimony of children," he said. "And then you weigh the credibility of children and the time of 80, 70 years ago, [and decide] whether or not that by itself is sufficient to pursue an investigation. The determination was that it was not."

Both Donovan and Burlington Mayor Miro Weinberger said they personally heard from some survivors and believed many of their allegations to be credible.

"In coming forward and sharing their stories, these former residents of the St. Joseph's orphanage have given our community a great gift," Weinberger said. "It is the gift of fully knowing our history — our true history."

Vermont last year eliminated the civil statute of limitations for victims of child sexual abuse. Donovan said his office was not planning on pursuing any civil claims against any of the Catholic organizations.
In a joint statement, the Diocese of Burlington and Vermont Catholic Charities said the report's findings were largely consistent with a previous investigation into the orphanage that took place in the 1990s, including the lack of evidence that any homicides occurred.

"Our hope is that this report will finally lay to rest these allegations of murder against the sisters," the statement read.

Yet the organizations acknowledged that the report nevertheless contained "troubling and horrible" allegations of physical and sexual abuse, and that the diocese was part of a "complete failure" by the system to provide oversight to the orphanage.

"The Diocese continues to accept its full share of the blame for any sins of the past," the statement reads. "We apologize for all hurt caused and for the personal shortcomings of human beings that came before us."

State and local officials acknowledged at the time of the task force's formation that the probe could end up focusing more on fact-finding than legal action, given the relevant statutes of limitation and that many of the victims and alleged perpetrators are elderly or dead. But they said they hoped the process would provide victims a chance to heal and speak regardless of whether charges arose.

With this in mind, the task force created a committee known as the St. Joseph's Restorative Inquiry in April 2019 to focus on repairing the harm caused at the orphanage. The group, led by an independent restorative justice professional, now meets regularly and has engaged in a number of initiatives, from a writer's group to the formation of a memorial committee.

Brenda Hannon and Walter Coltey attended the press conference as spokespersons for Voices of St Joseph's Orphanage, a group of 30-plus members who are the last surviving generation who lived at the home.

Hannon recalled the fear she and many of her peers felt after being sent to live at the orphanage under the custody of "intolerant strangers," some of whom "were actually sadistic." 
"Life was unthinkable for thousands of children placed in that orphanage. We suffered physical, mental and in some cases sexual abuse," Hannon said. "We were threatened and punishment was harsh, swift and extreme. We were beaten with rods, locked in dark closets and trunks, and forced to eat our own vomited food."

The children of the orphanage — whom Hannon called "the forgotten ones" — had to suppress their fear and hide their trauma to survive, she said, and so revisiting those memories decades later "required a reluctant courage none of us knew we had."

The survivors group has made a number of requests to the Catholic organizations who were involved with the orphanage.

First, Hannon said, "we want an acknowledgement that what we say happened to us did indeed happen, and a sincere apology." The group also wants the organizations to pay for the therapies of any former orphanage resident who requests it, release all relevant records and work with the Vermont legislature to better protect vulnerable people from abuse.
The group said it did not yet have a formal response to the report given its size but was planning a press conference on Wednesday.

Hannon encouraged anyone who lived or worked at the orphanage and has not come forward do so.

"Truth deserves to be aired. Cover-up tactics should be widely exposed," she said. "We acknowledge that no one can give us back our childhood, take away the pain and shame we endured, nor untangle the mental and physical struggles many of us have had to deal with in our adult lives.

"However, we can — and we will — hold those accountable."

Read the full report here:

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Thursday, December 10, 2020

Posted By on Thu, Dec 10, 2020 at 9:00 AM

click to enlarge Ben & Jerry's Unveils New Colin Kaepernick Flavor 'Change the Whirled'
Courtesy of Ben & Jerry's
The new flavor
Ben & Jerry’s has a new flavor honoring activist Colin Kaepernick.

The 33-year-old former NFL quarterback is a vegan, and his “Change the Whirled” flavor will be too: It’s a non-dairy "frozen dessert," with a sunflower butter base that’s filled with caramel, fudge chips, graham cracker and chocolate cookie swirls. A portion of the proceeds will go to Know Your Rights Camp, a nonprofit Kaepernick started in 2016 to “to advance the liberation and well-being of Black and Brown communities.”

In a statement, Kaerpernick called it an honor to work with the Vermont-based ice cream maker, which has been especially vocal in recent years in its calls for racial, social and criminal justice.

“Their commitment to challenging the anti-Black roots of policing in the United States demonstrates a material concern for the wellbeing of Black and Brown communities,” Kaepernick said. “My hope is that this partnership will amplify calls to defund and abolish the police and to invest in futures that can make us safer, healthier, and truly free.”

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Thursday, December 3, 2020

Posted By on Thu, Dec 3, 2020 at 2:40 PM

click to enlarge Vermont Sets Daily COVID-19 Case Record; Hospital Didn't Report Some Samples
File: Oliver Parini
Staff testing samples at the Vermont Department of Health lab
Updated at 3:02 p.m.

The Vermont Department of Health reported 178 new coronavirus infections on Thursday, the most yet in a single day.

Three counties each set new case records: Chittenden, with 64 cases, Orleans, with 17 cases and Windham, with 13 cases. The tally includes two unconfirmed "probable" cases, officials said.

Thursday's total, just one week after Thanksgiving, breaks the previous state record of 153 cases set on November 18. New infections had dipped since then but remained higher than at any previous point during the pandemic.

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Tuesday, December 1, 2020

Posted By on Tue, Dec 1, 2020 at 6:56 PM

click to enlarge Colchester Selectboard to Wear Masks Following Mix-Up
Lake Champlain Access Television screenshot
Colchester selectboard members at their November 10 meeting
Members of the Colchester Selectboard have been holding in-person meetings for months without wearing masks — but not because they object to the state's COVID-19 rules.

Instead, town leaders believed Gov. Phil Scott's mask mandate didn't apply as long as selectboard members sat more than six feet apart.

In reality, the July order requires that masks be worn in all public venues, a state spokesperson said on Monday. 

The Colchester misunderstanding apparently went unnoticed until Seven Days contacted Town Manager Aaron Frank about the issue on Tuesday.

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