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Tuesday, July 6, 2021

Posted By on Tue, Jul 6, 2021 at 12:37 PM

click to enlarge Burlington Airport Director Gene Richards Placed On Leave Following Complaint
File: Matthew Thorsen
Gene Richards
Updated at 4:25 p.m.

Burlington International Airport aviation director Gene Richards is on administrative leave pending an investigation, Burlington city officials confirmed Tuesday.

The city's human resources office received a complaint against Richards and began investigating "immediately," a city spokesperson said in a brief email response to an inquiry by Seven Days. He was placed on paid leave June 30.

The city would not provide any information about the nature of the investigation until it concludes, said Samantha Sheehan, a spokesperson for Mayor Miro Weinberger. Richards did not return several requests for comment. A bounce-back message from his government email address said he would be out of office without access to phone or email from July 1 to July 6.

City leaders had not told members of the Burlington City Council or the Burlington Airport Commission of the ongoing investigation. Reached Tuesday afternoon, commission chair Jeff Munger said he learned of it by reading Seven Days.

Commissioner Helen Riehle, who represents South Burlington, said she would have expected the city to alert the advisory board if the director was on administrative leave, especially “if it's been a whole week.” Riehle said she “can't even guess” what the complaint might be about.

“Generally speaking, I think he's a very good administrator,” she said.

Burlington City Council President Max Tracy (P-Ward 2) said he heard of the complaint on Monday night from someone unconnected to the Weinberger administration. Tracy called the city’s Human Resources director, Kerin Durfee, on Tuesday morning and asked that she inform the rest of the council. Durfee subsequently sent a “very general” email to councilors on Tuesday afternoon, Tracy said.

Tracy criticized Weinberger for not sharing the news with councilors until prompted. He likened the situation to when the mayor chose not to tell councilors in summer 2019 that former police chief Brandon del Pozo had been placed on administrative leave for anonymously trolling a department critic on Twitter. Only his subsequent medical leave was publicized.

“The lesson I took from that was that we need to inform the council, to make sure that we all know,” Tracy said, adding that councilors should know “whenever a department head is placed on administrative leave.”

Sheehan said Tracy's criticism was "way off base." The mayor acted swiftly, she said, and councilors were notified "long before any potential Council action is required, or even anticipated." The administration will brief councilors on the investigation at the next city council meeting in executive session, she said.

Weinberger appointed Richards interim director in 2012. He became the permanent director the following year upon approval by the city council.

In addition to his role at the airport, Richards is a longtime landlord and CEO of Spruce Mortgage.

Deputy director of aviation Nic Longo is serving as acting director of the airport.

Courtney Lamdin contributed reporting.

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Saturday, July 3, 2021

Posted By on Sat, Jul 3, 2021 at 12:27 PM

click to enlarge Burlington to Pay $45K Settlement in Kilburn Wrongful Death Case (5)
File: James Buck
Protesters in downtown Burlington last summer
The City of Burlington has reached a $45,000 settlement with the family of Douglas Kilburn, who died in 2019 after a Burlington police officer punched him.

A city spokesperson confirmed the deal Saturday, which was first reported by VTDigger.org. The city's insurer will pay the settlement.

Kilburn's estate filed a wrongful death lawsuit last November, alleging that Officer Cory Campbell used excessive force when he punched Kilburn in the ambulance bay at the University of Vermont Medical Center, breaking several bones in his face. Kilburn was hospitalized, then found dead in his home a few days later.

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Tuesday, June 29, 2021

Posted By on Tue, Jun 29, 2021 at 3:03 PM

click to enlarge Vermont Legal Aid Sues State Over Changes to Motel Program for Homeless
James Buck ©️ Seven Days
Darryl Phillips at Harbor Place
Vermont Legal Aid filed a class-action suit on Monday to block changes to a state emergency housing program that advocates say would be devastating for homeless people with disabilities.

In a suit filed in Vermont Superior Court in Washington County, the organization argued that the Agency of Human Services' proposal to terminate benefits that homeless people receive under the General Assistance Emergency Housing Program was inhumane and unfair. The plaintiffs are requesting an emergency injunction from the court.

“On July 1, hundreds of Vermonters with disabilities will be ousted from their motel shelter to live in vans, barns, campsites, and our city streets,” Vermont Legal Aid lawyers wrote in a press release. “Our clients are anxious and fearful about what comes next, and our local communities are scrambling to develop the infrastructure necessary to meet the needs of this population.”

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Monday, June 28, 2021

Posted By on Mon, Jun 28, 2021 at 4:46 PM

click to enlarge Phish Front Man's Proposed Addiction Treatment Center Divides Ludlow
Photo courtesy of The Divided Sky Foundation

For nearly four months, the Town of Ludlow has been embroiled in a municipal drama concerning a proposed residential addiction treatment center at the site of a former weight-loss clinic, two miles from Okemo Mountain Resort. The fate of the center is now in the hands of Ludlow’s Development Review Board, which must decide by July 12 whether the project can proceed.

In late 2020, Phish front man Trey Anastasio’s Divided Sky Foundation purchased the 18-acre property in the Windsor county ski town for $1.7 million, funded largely by viewer donations from Anastasio’s livestreamed concerts during the pandemic. Ascension Recovery Services, a West Virginia-based health care company that manages similar treatment centers across the country, would operate the 40-bed facility, which is tentatively slated to open later this year.

Anastasio, who is in recovery himself, said that he launched the project to help people of all economic backgrounds who are struggling with addiction. “Substance use disorders affect people from all walks of life,” he told Rolling Stone in March, “and the problem is intimately linked with isolation — whether that’s isolation due to the pandemic or for any other reason.” Last year, overdose deaths in Vermont increased 37 percent from 2019, claiming more lives in 2020 than the COVID-19 pandemic, according to data from the state Department of Health. Opiates claimed the lives of 28 Windsor County residents — more than any other county in Vermont.

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Saturday, June 19, 2021

Posted By on Sat, Jun 19, 2021 at 8:58 PM

click to enlarge Joe Magee Wins Progressive Nomination for Ward 3 Special Election
Courtney Lamdin ©️ Seven Days
Joe Magee
Joe Magee clinched the Vermont Progressive Party's nomination Saturday evening for the upcoming Ward 3 city council election with just one vote more than his closest competitor.

A total of 169 Progs cast ballots in the ranked-choice election, which lets voters rank candidates in order of preference. The lowest vote-getter is eliminated in each round until one candidate surpasses 50 percent.

Magee squeaked out 50.3 percent, or 75 votes, after four rounds, narrowly defeating Julie Macuga, who had 49.7 percent of votes, or 74 total, according to the party's official results.

"I'm very grateful to the candidates that ran in the caucus, and I'm looking forward to building a strong campaign for working families in Ward 3," Magee said. "It's just really great that we had such an impressive turnout in the caucus, and it speaks to the strength of the party in Ward 3 and definitely a strong start going into the special election."

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Tuesday, June 15, 2021

Posted By on Tue, Jun 15, 2021 at 4:15 PM

click to enlarge State Officials, Advocates Prep for the End of the Eviction Moratorium
File: Kim Scafuro
The end is near for the eviction moratorium that has been in place since the start of the pandemic.

On July 15, Vermont courts will allow pending eviction actions to go forward, meaning tenants can be ordered out for nonpayment of rent or for other reasons.

Some tenants, in cases where a court had already ruled in favor of the landlord, could be told to leave 14 days after Vermont's state of emergency ends, said Grace Pazdan, an attorney with Vermont Legal Aid. With COVID-19 infection rates low, and with 80 percent of Vermont's eligible population at least partly vaccinated, the state of emergency is due to expire Tuesday at midnight.

A national eviction moratorium, established by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, is due to end June 30.

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Posted By on Tue, Jun 15, 2021 at 3:15 PM

click to enlarge As Vaccinations Rise, Vermont Border With Canada Could Reopen This Summer
Rtdeleon04 | Dreamstime
The border
With vaccination rates rising rapidly in Canada, Vermont's 15 crossings with Québec could reopen this summer, members of Gov. Phil Scott's administration said on Tuesday.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has said the country will begin to relax its restrictions — including the closure of its U.S. border — once 75 percent of the country’s eligible population has received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine.

The number is currently around 64 percent, according to Vermont Human Services Secretary Mike Smith, who said 12 percent of Canadians are fully vaccinated. And the country's vaccination campaign is moving fast, Smith said — faster than the U.S. campaign, although the two countries' vaccination rates are now about the same.

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Saturday, June 12, 2021

Posted By on Sat, Jun 12, 2021 at 5:30 PM

click to enlarge Students Lead the Way in Hinesburg’s First-Ever Pride Parade
Sara Fleming
Marchers in Hinesburg
A cheerful crowd of people marched Saturday in Hinesburg's first-ever pride parade, carrying rainbow flags and signs supporting the LGBTQ community.

Students and staff from the Champlain Valley School District organized the event. It included a march from Champlain Valley Union High School to a celebration at Hinesburg Community School, complete with speeches, pride-themed art and ice cream.  Marchers carried signs that announced, "We embrace and celebrate you. You are amazing!" and "Hinesburg LGBTQ+ Pride."

“We wanted to show our support for people in our community that don’t always feel it,” Samantha Raymond said. She's a rising junior at CVU who helped emcee the event.

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Wednesday, June 9, 2021

Posted By on Wed, Jun 9, 2021 at 6:57 PM

click to enlarge Rice High Students Say School Mishandled Complaints of Sexual Violence
Oliver Parini
Maddie Goddard and Hannah Sheppard speak to Rice Principal Lisa Lorenz.
Several current and former students stood outside Rice Memorial High School on Wednesday to protest the school’s response to sexual misconduct.

Leading the rare public display at the private Catholic school were young women, including a rising senior, a recent graduate and a 2020 graduate, who each said they’d been sexually assaulted or harassed by fellow students on and off campus in recent years. They said administrators mishandled and downplayed their reports and, in at least one case, assigned a student to the same classroom as the young man she had reported as assaulting her.

“Jesus would not turn his back on a victim in the way the administration has,” they wrote in a letter to school officials. Administrators dispute the students’ claims.

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Tuesday, June 8, 2021

Posted By on Tue, Jun 8, 2021 at 2:38 PM

click to enlarge Receiver Will Run Four Eldercare Homes After Resident Death, Abuse
File: Caleb Kenna ©️ Seven Days
Our House Too in Rutland
A court-appointed receiver is assuming control over a group of four eldercare homes in Rutland after regulators found deteriorating conditions at the homes led to abuse and a resident’s death.

The residential care homes, known collectively as Our House, featured prominently in a Seven Days/Vermont Public Radio series on the industry for similar problems dating back to 2015.

State regulators at the Vermont Department of Disabilities, Aging and Independent Living stepped in last month following what court filings describe as a spate of “troubling events” at Our House homes in the last year that showed a pattern of understaffing and inadequate training.

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