emoji that
Legal Weed icket
A Middlebury cannabis retailer contends that Vermont’s restrictive rules on advertising its products infringe on constitutional rights to free speech and are hurting the legal weed market.
Dave Silberman, who co-owns FLORA Cannabis, filed a 20-page lawsuit last Monday in Addison County. It names as defendants the Vermont Cannabis Control Board; its chair, James Pepper; and its executive director, Olga Fitch. e suit asks the court for an injunction to stop the state from enforcing the advertising regulations and to order the creation of “constitutionally appropriate” ones with input from the sector.
Vermont’s cannabis advertising rules rankle those in the industry — as well as newspapers and radio stations that benefit from advertising dollars. (Seven Days, for instance, accepts cannabis ads.) Silberman, an attorney, has been among the most outspoken against the advertising regulations.
Pepper said the suit wasn’t a surprise. Some lawmakers initially wanted to ban advertising completely, he said, but the Attorney General’s Office realized that would be “overly broad” and “overly restrictive on otherwise protected speech.” e fear, Pepper said, was that cannabis advertising would follow in the footsteps of the tobacco industry,
which targeted kids with Joe Camel and other suggestive campaigns.
Current rules require all ads to be approved in advance by Vermont Cannabis Control Board staff. Media outlets must prove that less than 15 percent of their audience is under 21. Ads may not offer samples or prizes or feature cartoon characters or toys that might appeal to children. Each ad must include a 135-word health warning.
e regulations apply not only to advertising in traditional media and on websites but also to the social media accounts that many businesses use to reach potential customers. And, the suit argues, the law goes even further to include in-store signage “and even direct communications with individual customers.”
Getting ads approved can take weeks and cause uncertainty for businesses that are unsure whether they’ll receive the state’s sign-off, the suit argues.
“No such prior restraint regime exists in Vermont for any other industry, including other ‘regulated vice’ industries such as sports gambling, alcohol, or tobacco ... [or] for licensed cannabis businesses in any other states,” the suit says.
Read Sasha Goldstein’s full story at sevendaysvt.com.
RALLY CATS
The UVM men’s soccer team tallied a late equalizer, then scored a golden goal in overtime to win its first NCAA national championship. Not underdogs, just straight up DOGS.
BERNING OUT
U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) said the Senate term he is about to start will “probably” be his last in Congress. Well, yeah, he will be 89 in six years!
DONATIONS APPRECIATED
GoFundMe declared Vermont the most generous state for the third year in a row, with more donors per capita than anywhere else. Money well spent.
GROUNDED CONTROL
Michael Whitaker, a Vermonter who heads up the Federal Aviation Administration, plans to step down when Trump takes o ce. He’s held the post since October 2023.
$6 MILLION
That’s how much the Stowe Electric Department received in federal funding to upgrade its grid and expand access to renewable energy.
TOPFIVE
MOST POPULAR ITEMS ON SEVENDAYSVT.COM
1. “Handy Family Sells Notorious Church Street Apartment Complex” by Courtney Lamdin. What WCAX-TV dubbed the “Nightmare on Church Street” has new local owners.
2. “Tourtière Home Bakers Shut Down by Vermont Agency of Ag” by Melissa Pasanen. A Seven Days piece about a home baker’s meat pies prompted the state to shut down her operation.
3. “Donald Trump’s Return to the Presidency Could Disrupt the Way Many Vermonters Live” by Seven Days staff. Our writers explain how Trump II could affect areas such as education, a planned overdose-prevention site and LGBTQ issues.
4. “Two Pedestrians Critically Injured in Shelburne Road Crash” by Derek Brouwer. e pair were in a crosswalk when a pickup truck entering Interstate 189 struck them.
5. “Locally Filmed ‘Christmas Cowboy’ Tips Its Hat to Vermont” by Hannah Feuer. e latest she-came-home-to-Vermont-and-found-loveand-meaning holiday flick was actually filmed on location here.
LONG STRANGE TRIP
Shawn Dumont was on a back road near Tunbridge when he saw the sign. “No to war,” it said, above a yellow-and-blue peace symbol.
“I got out and took a picture of it and thought, Wow, that’s so cool,” Dumont said.
He kept driving, then saw another roadside peace sign. I’m going to start documenting these, Dumont thought.
Before he knew it, Dumont, a graphic designer and artist who lives in Burlington, was taking drives every weekend with his two young kids.
ey’d set out without a destination, in search of the peace signs that dot Vermont’s landscape.
When they’d find a peace sign, they’d stop and knock on the door and ask whether they
could snap a photo. e answer was invariably yes, Dumont said, and what he found was a much larger story about the people they met — specifically, those associated with the back-to-the-land movement, who came here in the 1960s and ’70s.
“ ey didn’t change Vermont as much as they appreciated it and protected it,” Dumont said, noting that the food co-ops they created, for instance, helped support generational farmers.
e modern-day version of the state, he said, is “all because of these people. e fruit is all here because of the seeds they planted.”
e revelation prompted Dumont to compile a short photo book about what he and his kids found, filled with some of their favorite peace sign images and written reflections sprinkled in.
e result, Peace Signs of Vermont: e Visual Legacy of the Back-to-the-Land Movement,
is available online for $30 and in some shops around Vermont — plus one in Japan.
Dumont guesses his crew has snapped photos of about 100 peace signs around the state. And, he notes in the book, he and his family are no longer “mere observers.” Over the summer, they helped paint a peace sign on a barn at Burlington’s Intervale Community Farm.
“We’re proud to have contributed to the story of this state, where the old ideals of peace, connection, and community continue to find fresh expression across Vermont’s rolling hills and weathered barns,” Dumont writes.
While the book is finished, the journey isn’t. Dumont and the kids recently took a weekend drive, he said, hunting for more signs of peace.
For more, visit sheltercultivationproject.com.
Don Eggert, Colby Roberts
Matthew Roy
Ken Ellingwood, Candace Page
Derek Brouwer, Colin Flanders, Rachel Hellman, Courtney Lamdin, Kevin McCallum, Alison Novak, Anne Wallace Allen
ARTS & CULTURE
Dan Bolles, Carolyn Fox
Chelsea Edgar, Margot Harrison, Pamela Polston
Jen Rose Smith
Alice Dodge
Chris Farnsworth
Rebecca Driscoll
Jordan Barry, Hannah Feuer, Mary Ann Lickteig, Melissa Pasanen, Ken Picard
Alice Dodge, Angela Simpson
Katherine Isaacs, Martie Majoros
DIGITAL & VIDEO
Bryan Parmelee
Eva Sollberger
James Buck
Don Eggert
Rev. Diane Sullivan
John James
Je Baron SALES & MARKETING
Colby Roberts
Robyn Birgisson
Michelle Brown, Logan Pintka, Kaitlin Montgomery
Carolann Whitesell ADMINISTRATION
THE OTHER META
I want to let you know how wonderful it was to watch Eva Sollberger’s latest “Stuck in Vermont” video [“Meta Strick Makes Magical Mixed-Media Art in Fairfi eld,” December 12]. We all need this boost of creative, upbeat energy this time of year. Brilliant and uplifting. Thank you, Eva!
Karen Didricksen GEORGIA
WRONG ABOUT BARRE
— and also Lyndonville — in immeasurable ways during our July floods. His wife, Cathy, cooked dozens of meals for the displaced residents in our shelter at Goddard College, for weeks, and Pastor Dan delivered them.
Dan’s commitment and faith have been a model for all of us and still continue to inspire me to be 100 percent peoplecentered in our response to disaster.
Michael Cerulli Billingsley PLAINFIELD
Billingsley is the emergency management director for Plainfield.
NOT SO SCARY
First of all, I love Seven Days! Thank you so much for existing.
I need to stand up for Barre in response to Joe Sexton’s Scary Barre article. Or excuse me, “Acts of the Apostles” [December 4]. I wish y’all and Joe had heeded your initial caution of Barre being an easy target. Is Joe going to break a new story about drugs on Church Street next?
Marcy Stabile
Andy Watts
Gillian English
CONTRIBUTING WRITERS
Jordan Adams, Justin Boland, Alex Brown, Erik Esckilsen, Steve Goldstein, Amy Lilly, Bryan Parmelee, Suzanne Podhaizer, Samantha Randlett, Jim Schley, Dayton Shafer, Carolyn Shapiro, Xenia Turner, Casey Ryan Vock
CONTRIBUTING ARTISTS
[Re “Acts of the Apostles,” December 4]: Paula Routly’s adoring “From the Publisher” intro of Joe Sexton and his cover story about a church for the addicted in Barre leads me to believe that Seven Days is too deferential to a writer whom you perceive to be better than our local reporters. Within his trope-filled version of Barre, Sexton also writes, “It had an opera house and handsome museums, too.” The tense, of course, is wrong and should have been corrected.
Luke Awtry, Daria Bishop, James Buck, Bear Cieri, Sarah Cronin, Lori Du , Bobby Hackney Jr., Tim Newcomb, Jeb Wallace-Brodeur FOUNDERS
Pamela Polston, Paula Routly
CIRCULATION: 35,000
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Sexton’s article, while painting some engaging human-interest portraits, turns one-dimensional when it comes to writing about the city itself and piles on Barre in the easiest ways. Ultimately, the author is a person from away who made visits to the city for interviews. But your editorial sta — who know better — should have exercised some agency here when it came to substantive editing and fact-checking.
Yes, Vermont cities suffer modern problems — as all American cities do. And, living in Vermont for the past 25 years, yes, I have seen needles on the street and had my car broken into for spare change. But none of those things has happened to me in Barre. I do, however, attend shows at the Barre Opera House, browse the Vermont History Center’s Research and Exhibition Gallery, and visit the Vermont Granite Museum.
Lovejoy Dole BARRE
‘A MODEL FOR ALL OF US’
I wish to thank Joe Sexton and Seven Days for highlighting the work of Enough Ministries in Barre [“Acts of the Apostles,” December 4]. Pastor Dan Molind, along with Southern Baptist Disaster Relief and the Mennonite Disaster Service, taught me so much about lives devoted to service.
Dan helped the town of Plainfield
Ten thousand words dedicated to reinforcing the tired Scary Barre rhetoric, but it’s somehow interesting because now there’s a church involved? Give me a break; evangelical churches setting up in places where people are at their lowest is not new, nor is it news.
You know what is interesting about Barre? Our Main Street right now. It’s a queer and allied landscape of businesses that cannot be found in most rural places. Rainbow Bridge Community Center, Foxy’s bar and my shop, Slowpoke Exchange, are all owned by out-andproud queer folk. Tally bar has hosted multiple queer takeovers and dance parties since opening a year ago!
After opening Slowpoke, I received a message from someone I had never met. They wrote about how they had to move away from Barre the second they could because they are queer and it wasn’t safe. They wrote to tell us how incredible it is to see their hometown becoming a place where being queer is celebrated.
But I get it: Sadness and drugs sell papers. Maybe just keep it to the regular length next time?
Maddie Cobb BARRE
TOO MUCH ‘NEGATIVITY’
I was really disappointed to hear the negativity in the article that was published about Barre [“Acts of the Apostles,” December 4]. Barre is a thriving community and actually quite on the up and up,
despite what was written. There are a ton of new businesses and a great sense of community. Poverty is widespread in rural Vermont, but that doesn’t put a stain on the city or surrounding areas; if anything, it makes it stronger and more closely knit. Maybe for your next article on Barre, you could talk about all the fun businesses that have opened up or look into some of the positive community events that are happening.
Andrea Garritano GRANITEVILLE
FRONTLINE WORSHIP
I appreciate Seven Days covering this Barre church [“Acts of the Apostles,” December 4]. True churches are spiritual hospitals, not mere social gatherings — though the two purposes often effectively overlap.
Vermont needs more private actors to address its opioid and homelessness crisis. These front lines are where the hardest — and most meaningful — work is found.
I think I will attend Enough Ministries some Sunday soon.
John Klar BROOKFIELD
EMBRACE THE ‘GRITTY’
I read a letter to Seven Days complaining about the use of the word “gritty” in the editor’s preamble to an article about
CORRECTION
Last week’s story “Once Upon a Stable,” about the locally filmed Christmas Cowboy, misnamed FellVallee Dressage in Colchester.
Barre [Feedback: “‘Gritty’ Sounds Sh*tty,” December 11]. Barre is a great and storied city, as the editor’s preamble emphasized [From the Publisher: “Leap of Faith,” December 4]. And it is gritty. Vermont has older cities of character, with stories. Vermont residents are making these cities meaningful in today’s world, against the odds, while dealing meaningfully with serious contemporary problems that are characteristic of many American cities.
Go Barre, and Be Gritty. It’s a laurel, not an epithet.
Ned Farquhar WAITSFIELD
HOW TO HELP OLDER VERMONTERS
Community paramedicine is an effective, logical and cost-effective way to care for our nation’s aging population. Community paramedics operate much like the community nurses mentioned in [“Aging Alone,” November 20]. Both could be a key solution. Both are in short supply. Vermont’s emergency medical
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SEE SPOT RUN
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THE NUTCRACKER
TALK WORDY TO ME
Who doesn’t love a good beach read? There’s just something about curling your toes in the sand, popping an ice-cold drink, and cracking the spine on the latest pulpy crime thriller or bodice-ripping romance novel that inspires balmy relaxation. Curling your toes in the snow is less advisable. But winter is an equally ideal time to lose yourself in the pages of a good book.
That’s one reason the Seven Days Reading Issue has always dropped in December. Short days and cold temps provide the perfect excuse, if you need one, to cozy up with your favorite authors. To that end, we asked some of ours in Vermont — state poet laureate Bianca Stone, National Book Award-winning novelist M.T. Anderson and Kirkus Prize-winning author Ken Cadow — for their WINTER READING RECOMMENDATIONS (page 32.)
Another beloved local writer, humorist KIMBERLY HARRINGTON, is leaving the state after 22 winters — 21 and a half, technically. In an essay, she reflects on the changing seasons of both her life and the planet (page 34).
For a more studied take on climate change, turn to University of Vermont environmental science professor PAUL BIERMAN. In his new book, he recounts how the only eureka moment of his distinguished career is deepening our understanding of global warming’s impact (page 46).
Bierman would probably have plenty to talk about with ETHAN TAPPER, who is among the state’s most well-regarded foresters and, surprise, punk musicians. He’s also an author whose new book blends forestry and philosophy (page 60).
Many authors have other artsy pursuits — creatives gonna create. Musician and sculptor CLARK RUSSELL merges mediums in a new photo book about his acclaimed “Riddleville” installation (page 48). Vermont photographer DONA ANN MCADAMS documents her 50-year career in a new photographic memoir (page 58).
And filmmaker-farmer GEORGE WOODARD released his debut children’s picture book, The Christmas Calf (page 47). All are evidence that a picture is worth at least 1,000 words. What, then, to make of
Bookmark this year’s Reading Issue
JANE KENT’s new BCA Center exhibition, “Between the Covers”? The book artist presents prints made in collaboration with major American authors and poets (page 56). We’d say they’re priceless. Cooking is a mystery for many of us, which is why God invented DoorDash. For author SARAH STEWART TAYLOR, the mystery is a cookbook — several of them. Her latest novel takes inspiration from New England community cookbooks to spin a tightly wound murder yarn (page 40). We wonder what she’d make of the killer new BREAD-MAKING BIBLE from King Arthur Flour (page 44).
That’s a whole lot of books, almost all of which you can find at one of Vermont’s many independent bookstores. Their numbers have dwindled over the years — find an obituary in this issue for GARY CHASSMAN, a devoted reader and lover of words who owned and operated Chassman & Bem Booksellers on Burlington’s Church Street from 1985 to 1998 (page 26). Yet strangely, the remaining shops and the last big-box bookstore standing, Barnes & Noble, have found common ground in a common enemy: Amazon. Angela Simpson writes on that unlikely turn and her e ort to VISIT EVERY INDIE BOOKSTORE IN THE STATE (page 28).
NEWS+POLITICS 14
Arresting Moments
A former Grand Isle corporal — and son of the sheriff — berated citizens during traffic stops, videos show
UVM Advises Foreign Students to Return Before Trump Does
Risky Business
Housing violations involving a fastgrowing Vermont roofing company expose role of immigrants in the trades
Burlington Council Blocks Pro-Palestine Item
Handys Sell Notorious Church Street Building
FEATURES 28
Putting Books in Hands A former big-box bookseller’s read on the local bookstore
Hibernation Syllabus ree Vermont writers recommend books to get lost in this winter
The Last Vermont Winter An essay on a changing season
Hot Topic
UVM’s Paul Bierman drills deep into the history of climate change
George Woodard’s New Children’s Book Combines Cows and Christmas Cheer
For more than five decades, Meta Strick has been making mixed-media art in the backwoods of Fairfield. e turquoise-haired, almost 83-year-old Strick invites visitors to
New Photo Book O ers
a Closer Look at Clark Russell’s ‘Riddleville’
Hobby Hand-Me-Downs
Secondhand arts and crafts supply store the Makery opens in Burlington
In the Meta-verse
A tour of mixed-media artist Meta Strick’s gallery and home in Fairfield
Page Turner
In “Between the Covers,” printmaker Jane Kent reimagines words with visuals
Thinking Inside the Box: Black Box by Dona Ann McAdams
Tree Hugger
e Bubs’ Ethan Tapper on his new book about forestry, his band’s new album and what it means to love trees
That’s a Rap Surveying the scene in one of the all-time busiest years for Vermont hip-hop
FOOD+ DRINK 40
Murder’s Cooking
Author Sarah Stewart Taylor used community cookbooks as inspiration for her latest mystery Bread & Chocolate
Short reviews of two recently published Vermont food books
APPAREL/SHOES
BANANA REPUBLIC
BERTHA CHURCH INTIMATE APPAREL
CATAMOUNT STORE
DANFORM SHOES
DEAR LUCY
EARTHBOUND TRADING COMPANY
ECCO CLOTHES
FATFACE
FJÄLLRÄVEN
FREE PEOPLE
HARBOUR THREAD
HATLEY BOUTIQUE
HELLY HANSEN
HUNNYMUSTURD SHOP
LOVERMONT 802
LULULEMON
MAVEN
MK CLOTHING
OUTDOOR GEAR EXCHANGE
THE STORE
THE VERMONT FLANNEL CO.
UNDERGROUND CLOSET
URBAN OUTFITTERS
VERMONT ECLECTIC COMPANY
WHIM BOUTIQUE
HOME/KITCHEN
HOMEPORT
KISS THE COOK
SARATOGA OLIVE OIL
FOOD/DRINK
ALWAYS FULL
AKE'S PLACE
BEN & JERRY'S
BLACK CAP COFFEE & BAKERY
BURLINGTON BAGEL BAKERY
CHURCH STREET TAVERN
COSMIC GRIND COFFEE SHOP
EB STRONG'S PRIME STEAKHOUSE
GAKU RAMEN
HALVORSON'S UPSTREET CAFE
HONEY ROAD
INSOMNIA COOKIES
KEN'S PIZZA AND PUB
KRU COFFEE
LAKE CHAMPLAIN CHOCOLATES
LALIGURAS
LEUNIG'S BISTRO & CAFÉ
LEUNIG'S PETIT BIJOU
PASCOLO RISTORANTE
POKEWORKS
RED SQUARE
RÍ RÁ IRISH PUB
JEWELRY/ACCESSORIES
DANFORTH PEWTER
GLOBAL PATHWAYS
KARLISE FINE JEWELERS
LIPPA'S JEWELERS
THE OPTICAL CENTER
VERMONT GEM LAB
VON BARGEN'S JEWELRY
ZINNIA
CVS
FLOAT ON DISPENSARY
FLORA & FAUNA
FROG HOLLOW
GARCIA'S TOBACCO SHOP
GOLDEN HOUR GIFT CO.
LITTLE ISTANBUL
TEN THOUSAND VILLAGES
TRADEWINDS IMPORTS
TRUE 802 CANNABIS
WILD LARK
BOOKS/GAMES
CROW BOOKSHOP
EARTH PRIME COMICS
PHOENIX BOOKS
QUARTERSTAFF GAMES
BURLINGTON PAINT AND SIP
CHASE BANK
CYNTHEA'S SPA
DREAMLIKE PICTURES
GREEN MOUNTAIN ASHTANGA
JIVANA GREEN SPA AND SALON
NORTHFIELD SAVINGS BANK
ORIGINS MASSAGE & WELLNESS
POSH NAILS
SILVER THREADS TAILORING
STATEMENTS HAIR DESIGN
THE PRIK
TINA'S HOME DESIGNS
VERMONT COMMUNITY ACUPUNCTURE
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MAGNIFICENT
MUST SEE, MUST DO THIS WEEK COMPILED BY REBECCA DRISCOLL
SATURDAY 21 & SUNDAY 22
DO THE LOCOMOTION
All aboard! Families hop on the Okemo Valley Holiday Express at Chester Depot for an hourlong adventure through bucolic landscapes. As winter wonderland scenes zip by, passengers enjoy hot cocoa and cookies, caroling, coloring — and maybe even a visit from that certain special someone with a big, white beard.
SEE CALENDAR LISTING ON PAGE 71
THURSDAY 19
Spinning Yarns
Local “social entrepreneur” Samara Anderson hosts Vermont Library Storytelling: Best of 2024 at the South Burlington Public Library auditorium — where neighbors step into the spotlight à la “ e Moth” to share true, vulnerable narratives. e event is part of Anderson’s much larger statewide effort to bring a community storytelling platform to all 185 public libraries.
SEE CALENDAR LISTING ON PAGE 68
THROUGH SUNDAY 22
Pride and Presents
Shaker Bridge eatre’s charming production of e Wickhams: Christmas at Pemberley, at Briggs Opera House in White River Junction, is a yuletide sequel to Jane Austen’s novel of manners Pride and Prejudice. Audiences can expect to encounter Mr. and Mrs. Darcy — as well as fresh faces such as Cassie, the eager maid, and Brian, the lovesick footman.
SEE CALENDAR LISTING ON PAGE 68
FRIDAY 20
Lilies of the Valley
Brattleboro roots band Low Lily bring their winter solstice concert to Middlebury’s Town Hall eater for a warm, joyful ushering in of the year’s shortest day. e performance showcases the trio’s talents in mandolin, guitar, fiddle and banjo, as well as its infectious, high-energy stage presence — sure to brighten up even the darkest of December nights.
SEE CALENDAR LISTING ON PAGE 70
FRIDAY 20
Horsing Around
e Opera House at Enosburg Falls rolls out the red carpet for an exclusive screening of Khoa Le’s freshly released romance dramedy, Christmas Cowboy. e movie’s cast and crew sit side by side with excited locals to take in the Hallmarkesque flick that was filmed right here in Vermont — including a few scenes shot at the historic opera house itself.
SEE CALENDAR LISTING ON PAGE 70
FRIDAY 20
Flurry of Fun
BarnArts’ original concert “Winter Carols at First Universalist Church and Society in Barnard summons magic and wonder through music. In keeping with the org’s mission to enrich rural communities through participatory arts, Michael Zsoldos directs local talent of all ages in works centered on the season of solstice — including some festive audience sing-alongs.
SEE CALENDAR LISTING ON PAGE 70
ONGOING
Gifts From the Art
e S.P.A.C.E. Gallery’s annual “Small and Large Works” exhibition in Burlington boosts the holiday shopping experience by showcasing gift-size artworks by 130 local artisans. All pieces are either smaller than 12 inches or larger than 24 inches and come ready to wrap — with prices to suit all budgets.
SEE GALLERY LISTING AT SEVENDAYSVT.COM/ART
‘Forget
Everything You Were Ever Told About Writing’
How do you write an article, book, short story or poem that’s a pleasure to read? It’s a daunting challenge, and school is generally poor preparation for it. Teachers and professors have to slog through your research paper, but nobody else does. In real life it doesn’t matter how brilliant your ideas or insights are if you can’t make the case in words that hold a reader’s attention.
I learned this lesson the hard way in 1985, two years after I graduated from Middlebury College, when I walked into Burlington’s original alt-weekly, the Vermont Vanguard Press, and o ered myself up as a dance critic. I had some expertise in the subject — I had studied ballet in my teens — but, before agreeing to give me a freelance assignment, the editor wanted to see some writing samples. I handed over a couple of papers from an English class.
Editor Josh Mamis, three years my senior, responded in writing — typing, actually, on an IBM Selectric — with a page of spontaneous heartfelt advice that I kept, framed and still have on display in my home o ce today. It gets right to the point: “OK. Forget everything you were ever told about writing. The samples you gave me showed me that you can put words together fine, and that the ideas certainly get translated into meaningful sentences. But it’s got that slow stilt of academia lurking between the lines.”
Snap it up Brighten up
Of course, I labored for hours writing the story, but in the end, it wasn’t half bad. I think I got $25 for my e orts — which worked out to be way less than the minimum wage at the time.
Fast-forward 40 years. Seven Days culture coeditors Carolyn Fox and Dan Bolles share the job Josh had at the Vanguard (before he left Vermont for bigger alts in the New Haven, Conn., area). Freelancers often approach
Anytime you stumble, rewrite
Keep the paragraphs short
Okay, now write me a dance piece
them, wanting to write for the paper. To get the best results, what advice should they give? Carolyn wanted to know. She and I were talking about a potential new hire on the phone when I remembered Josh’s sepia-toned letter, took it o the wall and read it to her.
Read the piece aloud
He goes on: “Brighten up. Snap it up by making the sentences short, by not particularly using words that you wouldn’t use in everyday conversation. Read the piece aloud. Anytime you stumble, rewrite. Keep the paragraphs short. Okay, now write me a dance piece.”
Josh gave me my first shot at journalism: He asked me to review Leslie Tucker’s one-woman show at a venue called the Border, above Nectar’s. Following his recommendation, I tried to be “as descriptive as hell,” in a way that would help the reader picture what I witnessed.
In his letter, Josh also warned me: “You may have to stay up all Tuesday night rewriting. Don’t be insulted if I ask you to work on it, and throw it out, and work on it again. And whatever you do, try to let the words come out as naturally as possible, don’t THINK too much. Just let it flow … thanks.”
To my surprise, she loved it and asked me to bring it into the o ce. Next thing I knew, she and Dan had emailed “the JM letter,” as we’ve now dubbed it, to the entire culture sta .
“Goddamn, that is great advice. I want to hang this above my laptop,” consulting editor Chelsea Edgar replied. In a later email to me, Carolyn noted the timelessness of Josh’s instruction. Also: “I like that it’s unflinchingly straightforward — almost brusque — yet also kind. No-nonsense but encouraging. Inspiring!”
Thank you, “JM,” for giving me a chance and generously guiding me through it. I’m happy to be in a position to pass on your words of wisdom to the next generation of journalists, who are writing for readers facing a whole new world of distractions. Hopefully your advice will help them keep our audience informed, engaged — and, on occasion, delighted.
Paula Routly
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REJECTS PRO-PALESTINE MEASURE
SEEDY CHURCH STREET BUILDING SOLD
LAW ENFORCEMENT
Arresting Moments
A former Grand Isle corporal — and son of the sheriff — berated citizens during traffic stops, videos show
BY RACHEL HELLMAN • rhellman@sevendaysvt.com
When 74-year-old Judith Wahler was leaving a Fourth of July parade in South Hero last summer, a Grand Isle County Sheri ’s Department corporal who was directing tra c ordered her to pull over. She did.
“Stop your car!” the corporal roared as he approached the stopped vehicle. “I’m giving you a lawful order. What part don’t you understand?”
In a tense exchange, he accused the woman behind the wheel of trying to run him over.
“You are out of control,” Wahler said to the uniformed deputy, as she sought her license in a wallet on her lap. “Who are you?”
He was Brandon Allen, the son of Grand Isle Sheri Ray Allen, and he’d patrolled the roads for years. He ordered Wahler out of her car, castigated her loudly and, grasping her arm, escorted her to the sidewalk. He barked questions but interrupted her answers. He threatened to arrest her for
gross negligent operation and accused her of attempted murder, bodycam footage obtained by Seven Days shows.
A few weeks later, Wahler filed a complaint with the Vermont Criminal Justice Council, which trains and certi-
MY IMMEDIATE REACTION WAS, THIS GUY HAS NO BUSINESS BEING IN LAW ENFORCEMENT. DENNIS KENNEY
fies law enforcement o cers in the state.
Christopher Brickell, its executive director, said in an email that he was “prohibited from acknowledging whether or not a complaint was filed” until the agency takes an o cial action.
UVM Advises Foreign Students to Return Before Trump Does
BY ANNE WALLACE ALLEN anne@sevendaysvt.com
e University of Vermont is advising foreign staff and students to return to campus before January 20, the date of president-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration.
Jamie McGowan, executive director of international partnerships and programs, emailed members of the campus community on Tuesday to say several people had asked about “communications going out to our international colleagues and students, in light of changes that might take place some 20 days into the new year.”
“We will keep students informed of any changes in federal policies or processes that might impact international travel and visa acquisition in the new federal administration,” she wrote.
Many colleges and universities are advising international students, staff and faculty to return before the inauguration. It’s not yet known what changes, if any, the Trump administration will make to visa and travel requirements for foreign nationals. UVM’s spring semester starts on January 13.
During his first term, Trump imposed entry restrictions on nationals from seven majority-Muslim countries, a move that affected more than 17,000 students, according to Inside Higher Ed.
Police bodycam footage shows that Brandon Allen had become angry during other tra c stops as well. Another woman he pulled over, for speeding, wound up forcefully cu ed as Allen threatened to arrest her. And six months before that incident, a video of the same uniformed cop arguing with a man went viral on YouTube.
Seven Days obtained bodycam video of the stops involving the two women and provided both to Dennis Kenney, a professor with the John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York City. He’s worked for more than 35 years in the law enforcement realm, as a Florida police o cer; a director of research and planning in Georgia; director of research for the Police Executive Research Forum; and in academia. He o ered a blunt assessment of Allen’s actions.
“He managed to turn what should’ve been minor, fairly innocent interactions
About 1,200 of UVM’s 14,500 undergraduate and graduate students are foreign nationals, according to university data.
“We have a significant population of Iranian graduate students, especially in the College of Engineering, but compared to other institutions I have been at, we have a pretty small overall international student body,” said Pablo Bose, a UVM professor and director of the Global and Regional Studies Program. “Regardless, it’s something we’re paying attention to.” Bose, who studies migration and urban environments, noted that Trump has long talked about cracking down on illegal immigration but tends to focus on limiting legal migration for some populations, including people from majority-Muslim countries.
“It’s already challenging for students coming from certain places to get a visa” to enter the U.S., Bose said. “It’s hard for students coming from Africa in every [presidential] administration. ere is a lot of extra scrutiny, a lot of extra paperwork.” ➆
Risky Business
Housing violations involving a fast-growing Vermont roofing company expose role of immigrants in the trades
BY DEREK BROUWER • derek@sevendaysvt.com
The discovery of dozens of bunk beds stuffed into crude, unfinished industrial spaces in Colchester raises questions about the prevalence of migrant laborers in Vermont’s construction sector — and also shines a spotlight on the growing company that housed them.
Following anonymous tips, Vermont Construction Company has been fined
MIGRANTS HAVE LONG BEEN ACKNOWLEDGED AS THE FORCE POWERING THE DAIRY
space heaters. Inspectors did not find any smoke detectors or fire extinguishers; the residence had only one way in and out.
“When you walk through the space, it’s hard to believe,” said Cathyann LaRose, Colchester’s director of planning and zoning.
Vermont Construction is saying little about its unpermitted dwellings; cofounder Dana Kamencik insisted that Seven Days submit questions in writing, then did not answer most of them.
But clues at the sites, LaRose said, indicate they were being used to shelter immigrant workers. Signs were posted in Spanish, and many of the residents’ belong ings were kept in suitcases.
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twice in recent months by the state Division of Fire Safety for operating unsafe dormitory-style housing in commercial buildings at Fort Ethan Allen. On December 5, the Town of Colchester issued an emergency order to evacuate one of the spaces, located at the company’s Hegeman Avenue headquarters. Inside, 17 mattresses were arranged in several rooms and hallways, alongside exposed electrical wiring and
Migrants have long been acknowledged as the force powering the dairy industry in Vermont, but their role in the construc tion sector remains murkier. Some in the trades, however, say migrants are quietly becoming a disruptive force, particularly in the dangerous roofing business. The revelation that one of Vermont’s fastestgrowing firms has been hosting dozens of such workers raises questions of fairness and potential labor abuses just as incom ing president Donald Trump has vowed to round up undocumented immigrants for mass deportations.
The Associated General Contractors of Vermont was quick to distance the industry
Burlington Council Blocks Pro-Palestine Item
BY COURTNEY LAMDIN courtney@sevendaysvt.com
A pro-Palestine resolution was kept off Burlington’s Town Meeting Day ballot on Monday after a Democratic majority on the city council decided the measure was too divisive.
The non-binding measure would have declared Burlington an “apartheid-free community” that supports ending “Israel’s apartheid regime, settler colonialism, and military occupation” of Palestine. About 2,000 registered voters signed a petition to place the item on the March ballot, more than the 5 percent required by state law.
The question was identical to one proposed in January — and met the same fate. The measure failed on a 5-5 tie vote, with five Democrats voting “no” and five Progressives voting “yes.”
Councilor Mark Barlow (I-North District) was absent.
The vote was a foregone conclusion. Democrats, who have a functional majority on the council, said in a statement last Friday that they planned to vote down the measure over concerns that it would stoke both antisemitism and Islamophobia.
The vote was preceded by a pro-Palestine rally outside city hall and more than two hours of public forum. Those opposed to the resolution argued that councilors had no place debating an issue they can’t influence. They said the resolution would make the city’s Jewish residents feel unsafe.
Those supporting it, including anti-Zionist Jews, said the council should respect the democratic process by putting the item on the ballot. They said the issue is relevant to locals, noting that three Palestinian students were shot last year while walking down a Burlington street.
Councilor Melo Grant (P-Central District) spoke to the humanitarian crisis in Gaza. “What’s the body count that someone has [to see] in order to recognize that we have to take a stand on this?” she asked.
Democrats, however, doubled down on their earlier statements.
Councilor Evan Litwin (D-Ward 7) said the measure is “aspirational and symbolic.” Councilor Joan Shannon (D-South District) said the city should find mediators to guide a discussion on the issue.
“I don’t believe that a binary, [accusatory] question is an opportunity to discuss,” she said. “I think that is an opportunity to divide, to draw lines in the sand.” ➆
Arresting Moments «
P.14
into major events,” Kenney said. “My immediate reaction was, this guy has no business being in law enforcement.”
Brandon Allen is no longer with the department. On August 23, he submitted a letter of resignation — two days after the department sent Seven Days bodycam footage of the stop involving Wahler. His brother, Blake Allen, who was a sergeant, also resigned that day.
But the incidents raise questions about the department, which has long been associated with the Allen family. Their South Hero apple orchard, Allenholm Farm, dates back to 1870, and the Allens have run it for seven generations. In 2022, Seven Days’ Eva Sollberger featured the local institution in a “Stuck in Vermont” video.
Sheriff Ray Allen’s wife, Connie Allen, served in the Grand Isle Sheriff’s Department for 19 years, including nine as sheriff. In 2011, Connie died by suicide, as was widely reported at the time. Weeks later, her husband, then a deputy, was appointed sheriff.
Ray has run the department since then, winning three county elections over the course of 12 years. Blake was hired in 2004, and Brandon in 2012. Brandon left the department in 2020, but returned in 2021. As of October, the department had seven sworn deputies.
Seven Days requested interviews with both the sheriff and Brandon Allen. The sheriff declined, writing, “I will not be interviewed at this time while the complaint is investigated,” an apparent reference to Wahler’s formal grievance. His son never responded to messages left via the sheriff or at several phone numbers, but the department did provide Seven Days with a narrative he wrote about his encounter with Wahler.
Questions about Brandon’s professional conduct first surfaced publicly in January 2024 when bodycam footage of a traffic stop was posted on YouTube. It shows a tense interaction between Grand Isle resident Stephen Bellows and deputies Eric Pockette, Blake Allen and Brandon Allen in November 2023.
In the video, Pockette stops Bellows for an inspection sticker violation, and Blake and Brandon eventually arrive at the scene. Bellows argues with the officers and refuses to answer some of their questions.
At one point, Brandon yells at Bellows to “stop interrupting me and shut your mouth,” pushing him against his car. “You eye me one more time, and we’re going to have problems,” Brandon said. The video has amassed more than 1 million views.
Bellows submitted a complaint to the Grand Isle County Sheriff’s Department. To avoid a conflict of interest, Sheriff Allen
asked the Williston Police Department to review the complaint. Its report says the incident “was a lawful traffic stop of reasonable duration and scope.” Still, the video prompted some selectboards on the islands to reconsider their contracts with the sheriff’s department for law enforcement services.
Alburgh Selectboard chair Elliot Knight supported decreasing his town’s funding for the department. “Based on the bodycam footage, this is someone I don’t really trust to run around with a gun and have authority,” Knight said, offering Seven Days his personal opinion of corporal Allen’s conduct.
Ultimately, the Alburgh selectboard decided to continue funding the department — and even approved an increase.
Bellows said the experience was upsetting. “For a while, I didn’t want to leave my house,” he told Seven Days. Bellows paid the ticket he received for having an expired car registration, he said, and reregistered within weeks of the encounter.
Natasha Rainville, an Alburgh resident, had her run-in with corporal Allen six months later, on May 29.
Allen was parked on Route 2 when Rainville sped by in her pickup. He followed Rainville with his lights flashing and siren on. Rainville pulled into a driveway at a house that she later explained belongs to one of her landscaping clients and got out of her truck.
Allen told Rainville that he had pulled her over because she had been driving well over the speed limit. Rainville told him that she was having a bathroom emergency and needed to head into the house.
The corporal agreed to let her go, following closely behind. Their conversation grew tense. She made a gesture with her hand, and, based on the video, it
appears that her dangling bracelet made contact with the officer.
“You just whacked my hand!” he exclaimed.
He informed her she was being detained and ordered her back to her truck, then radioed for backup. “You are ridiculous,” she said. “All you Allens are.”
They argued by her truck as Sheriff Allen arrived, and corporal Allen forcibly handcuffed Rainville.
“She’s been out of control from the very beginning,” the younger Allen told his father. “I tried to work with her, and she won’t listen.”
Eventually, Rainville was freed from the cuffs and ticketed for speeding. Brandon Allen lectured her repeatedly that he was letting her off easy, saying he’d “been nothing but cordial.”
“When the police put their hands on you, you do not have the right to fight the police,” he told her. “You’re lucky that I was more restrained than what I could have been because you could have ended up on the ground, Tasered, pepper sprayed, going to jail today.”
Rainville told Seven Days that she was alarmed by the situation and immediately requested bodycam footage. It was delivered to her on CD more than six weeks later, she said. She also appealed the ticket, which was dropped because Brandon Allen didn’t show up to court, she said.
Kenney, the John Jay professor, said the video clearly shows the officer overreacting. “The idea that she was physically resistant was kind of ludicrous,” he said. “It’s not uncommon that someone would be having a bathroom emergency [during a stop].”
Two months later, the sheriff once again arrived as his son was arguing with an individual he had stopped — this time, Wahler.
“She’s had nothing but attitude,” the corporal told his father, pointing to the mostly silent Wahler. “And she wants to make a complaint about me,” he yelled, thumping on his chest.
Corporal Allen went to his vehicle and looked up Wahler’s information. He returned and informed the woman that he was “looking at charging you for attempted murder.”
“I could be tracking you down to arrest you,” he warned.
Allen handed Wahler her driver’s license, and she headed back to her car. As she left, he shouted: “I hope you leave before you are arrested, and shut your mouth.”
Shaken, Wahler told Seven Days that she drove away and immediately pulled to the side of the road to write down what had happened. She was never arrested. Nor was she even so much as ticketed.
“It was such a terrifying experience for me,” said Wahler, who lives in Burlington. “I don’t understand what the threat was that I presented to him. He did everything he could to provoke me.”
In August, the Grand Isle County Sheriff’s Department sent Seven Days the bodycam footage of the incident, along with Brandon Allen’s written account of
what had happened during the traffic stop. Wahler appeared “agitated” and was driving in a “very unsafe manner,” Allen wrote.
“I felt that my life was in danger.”
“The female driver did not want to comply with my demands,” he continued, adding that “Wahler was very argumenta-
I DON’T UNDERSTAND WHAT THE THREAT WAS THAT I PRESENTED TO HIM. HE DID EVERYTHING HE COULD TO PROVOKE ME.
JUDITH WAHLER
tive during my encounter and did not show any remorse for the way she was operating her vehicle and the danger that she put the public in.”
Doug DiSabito, the Grand Isle County state’s attorney, had not seen the bodycam footage acquired by Seven Days. But he
had a sympathetic viewpoint regarding corporal Allen’s resignation. “It’s getting really difficult for law enforcement officers to even do their job,” he told Seven Days Advocates for police reform say they are concerned about a lack of accountability for Vermont sheriff’s departments. Sheriffs are elected officials, which means the state legislature has a limited capacity to oversee their work.
Recently, lawmakers considered impeaching Franklin County Sheriff John Grismore, who was a captain in 2022 when he was caught on camera kicking a handcuffed suspect in the groin. Grismore was cited by Vermont State Police for simple assault, but the charge was later dropped by DiSabito, Grand Isle’s top prosecutor, after two trials ended with hung juries.
Grismore, who has been defiant since the video came to light, remains Franklin County’s elected sheriff, though he’s been stripped of his law enforcement certification.
“We’ve seen over the last couple of years just egregious behavior that has gone unpunished,” said Falko Schilling, advocacy director for the American Civil Liberties Union of Vermont. “But because of our current structure of oversight, [officers
are] able to maintain an incredible amount of power within their communities.”
After seeing the videos, Kenney, the John Jay professor, said he thinks that Brandon Allen should be banned from working in law enforcement ever again.
“I didn’t get the sense that his reaction was simply because of a lack of training,” Kenney said. “It was a kind of overexcited, almost hysterical response to what he imagined to be some sort of challenge.”
Kenney added: “I can only imagine what’s going to happen when he encounters somebody who actually challenges him.”
The Vermont Criminal Justice Council has revoked the credentials of 15 law enforcement officers since June 2013. But records show that Brandon Allen isn’t one of them, meaning he remains certified. ➆
To see bodycam footage of the traffic stops involving Judith Wahler and Natasha Rainville, visit sevendaysvt.com.
Rachel Hellman covers Vermont’s small towns for Seven Days. She is a corps member of Report for America, a national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms. Find out more at reportforamerica.org.
Handys Sell
Notorious Church Street Building
A notorious apartment complex shuttered by the City of Burlington last year is under new ownership.
Members of the Handy family sold the building at 184 Church Street last month for $1.95 million. e new owner, Queen City Development Group, is planning major renovations to the 17-unit complex before new tenants move in. e building was once so crimeridden and decrepit that first responders wouldn’t enter without a police escort. Last year, city officials took the unprecedented step of suspending the Handys’ rental permit after the landlords failed to address more than three dozen code violations.
e Handys’ attorney, Brian Hehir, didn’t respond to a request for comment. Daniel Goltzman, an architect and one of the new owners, said in an email that purchasing 184 Church fits with his partners’ mission of improving Burlington’s housing stock. He expects to reopen the building by this summer.
In recent years, the property had become a magnet for criminal activity. Police responded there more than 1,000 times in the past decade, including twice in one night last year for gunfire.
Fed up, Burlington officials pressured the Handys last year to fix up the property and relocate problem tenants. When they didn’t, the city pulled their rental permit and filed a $1,180 lien against the property.
e sides eventually settled. An agreement said the building would be vacant by November 3 and that a pending sale would render the city’s original enforcement order moot.
By that time, Goltzman and his partners had already applied for permits.
Code enforcement director Bill Ward, who led the city’s crackdown on the Handys, said the sale was welcome news. e new owners have decades of experience in real estate, and their other Burlington properties have received high ratings during inspections.
“I would not be surprised if the neighbors host a parade or a party for the new owners,” Ward said. “ ey’ll be grateful for the positive changes.” ➆
Risky Business « P.15
from the company’s housing violations and downplayed the prevalence of immigrant workers.
“Seriously, this is just shocking,” executive vice president Richard Wobby Jr. said, adding that he was unaware that Vermont Construction — one of the association’s members — was using an immigrant workforce.
“We have not had the new American wave that you’ve seen in some of the other states,” he said.
Nationally, undocumented immigrants make up somewhere between 15 and 23 percent of construction workers, according to an article in the association’s October magazine. But the group’s surveys suggest that of more than 15,000 workers in Vermont’s construction sector, only about 200 are immigrants, Wobby said.
The actual number is likely somewhat higher, according to Migrant Justice, an advocacy group that primarily represents farmworkers in the state’s dairy industry.
Ecuadorians with roofing expertise began traveling to Vermont from Massachusetts a couple of years ago, Migrant Justice spokesperson Will Lambek said. Since then, more have come to Vermont, including undocumented immigrants and asylum seekers. Recently, some Mexican farmworkers have begun leaving the dairies for construction work, where the hours and pay are better.
Lambek figures more than 300 immigrants now work in the trades here. They typically work as subcontractors, rather than as employees; companies that hire subs do not need to verify those workers’ legal status.
Farms in Vermont have long provided lodging to their migrant workers. The accommodations serve a need for workers and employers alike, but living conditions are sometimes woefully subpar. Vermont Construction appears to be adopting a similar approach.
The firm has quickly become one of the most prominent roofing companies in Northern Vermont since it launched in 2016. Kamencik and David Richards, its cofounders, are ambitious entrepreneurs in their thirties. Kamencik also owns Isham Family Farm in Williston and until recently sat on the board of the Vermont Builders & Remodelers Association. Richards joined the board of Green Mountain Habitat for Humanity this month and in 2023, was named a “Rising Star” by VermontBiz magazine.
That same year, the publication reported the company was the state’s fastest-growing, having experienced a 1,400 percent increase in revenue over the previous five years. Vermont Construction actively markets its brand and in September inked a multiyear sponsorship deal with University of
Vermont Athletics to be its o cial roofing partner. The company listed ReArch and Beta Technologies among its commercial customers.
As the company grows, it has gotten into a related business: real estate. Vermont Construction a liates purchased at least four residential homes in Essex, Williston and Shelburne within the past two years, according to records. State fire inspectors at one point identified 15 people living in the Shelburne home, and the others have yielded noise and trash complaints from neighbors, VTDigger.org reported.
The company acquired a defunct medical o ce building in Fort Ethan Allen early this year, and by September, 57 wooden bunks and air mattresses were clustered with as many as six or eight to a room, according to LaRose, the Colchester town o cial. There was almost no fire detection or suppression equipment, prompting state and town inspectors to order the company to immediately evacuate residents and board up the building. The state also imposed a $1,050 fine.
Earlier this month, following a complaint, inspectors found a similarly dangerous housing setup in a partially renovated portion of Vermont Construction headquarters, just a quarter-mile away. Another emergency order to evacuate followed, as did a $2,500 state penalty.
In an email, Kamencik said Vermont Construction does not provide housing to any of its employees, though the company does use subcontractors.
“We have lease agreements with our tenants — as any other landlord would,” he wrote. Kamencik did not say who was
living at the unpermitted sites or whether Vermont Construction was collecting rent from them.
Last week, a di erent Vermont Construction employee told WCAX-TV that the company was trying its best to house the mostly Latino migrant laborers who are helping support its growth.
“It’s not like they were living in squalor. This is a good accommodation for some of them,” said Byron Gokey, a project manager. Kamencik later told Seven Days that Gokey was not speaking for the company.
One longtime roofer said the use of migrant laborers as subcontractors is already transforming the regional marketplace. Jim Billado runs a small roofing company out of Milton, carrying on a 101-year-old family business. Hiring immigrant subcontractors has become a matter of survival, he said, given the lack of local workers.
Whenever he needs help on a big job, Billado hires a skilled family of Ecuadorians who live in New Hampshire. The subcontractors pay for their own lodging, Billado said, and have assured him they have legal authorization to work.
But Billado sharply criticized Vermont Construction and some other larger firms that appear to use immigrant subcontractors more frequently. The fact that some companies are providing lodging suggests those laborers are functioning more like employees than independent subcontractors, Billado said. Yet companies do not have to pay worker’s compensation insurance or other expenses for the subcontractors they hire. As a result, Billado said, firms such as Vermont Construction are able to consistently underbid him for work.
They’re “cheating the system,” he said. Billado called upon the State of Vermont to investigate.
Kamencik, for his part, did not respond to an emailed request for comment about this specific criticism.
Robert Depper, general counsel for the Vermont Department of Labor, said state and federal laws do not explicitly bar contractors from providing housing as part of a subcontract. There are rules that limit how much control a contractor can have over a subcontractor, however. Depper declined to say whether the department had received any complaints about Vermont Construction or was otherwise investigating the company.
In an email, Kamencik said the subcontractors who provide labor for Vermont Construction do not work exclusively with the firm. The company, he said, has taken steps to “resolve any issues regarding fire safety and prevention measures at our rental properties.”
Roofing is among the most perilous jobs in the country. Last summer, the Vermont Occupational Safety and Health Administration received a complaint that a subcontracted laborer had fallen from a roof at a Vermont Construction job site in Burlington. None of the roofers were wearing fall protection devices, a state inspector observed. The subcontractor and Vermont Construction co-owner Richards declined to allow the inspector on the job site or to provide the names of the laborers, so the state obtained a warrant from a judge, court records show.
Vermont Construction later paid a $4,687 fine for the lack of fall protection. The company was fined another $5,531 in April for fall protection issues at a second Burlington job site, according to federal records.
LaRose, the Colchester official, said she spoke only briefly with Kamencik during the December 5 inspection of the illegal dormitory beneath Vermont Construction’s headquarters. Kamencik, she recalled, “said he had a bid due soon and didn’t have the time” to talk.
Billado’s company, meanwhile, is struggling to stay in business. He once employed 30 people. Today, he employs two.
“Those guys aren’t running [their companies] by the books, and they’re getting away with it, and it’s killing me,” Billado said. “They’re taking all my calls, they’re advertising all over the place, and they’re getting all the work.”
Billado lamented that liberal attitudes around immigration in Vermont may make state intervention unlikely, similar to what has happened with dairy farming. But it remains to be seen whether Trump’s promised immigration crackdown will ripple through the roofing industry. ➆
FEEDback
services providers are highly trained medical professionals able to diagnose and treat acute and chronic illness and injury, but unfortunately they are sometimes limited to only being transporters due to legislation and funding. EMS could be a key player in filling gaps in home care for elders and others.
Simple changes in legislation would help realign EMS as both an essential public first-response service and an essential public health care service able to be reimbursed for on-scene care. At the national level, there’s the Community Paramedicine Act of 2024, H.R. 8042. This bill would create a grant program under the secretary of health and human services that would authorize $25 million per year for five years to support community paramedicine services; award qualified entities up to $750,000 for individual applications and $1.5 million for joint applications; and establish an advisory board composed of national community paramedicine, emergency medical service and fi re service organizations to advise, assist and peer-review grant applications in rural and underserved areas.
A WORD ON SASH
organizations. Five thousand participants are currently enrolled, and more than 12,000 Vermonters have been served!
The program’s success in Vermont has led to its replication in Rhode Island, showing promising trends such as reduced inpatient readmissions and fewer nursing home days among participants.
Aging Alone
More resources must be made available to ensure that Vermonters are safe, healthy and connected. A heartfelt thank-you to the devoted sta within all these organizations for their invaluable contributions.
Liz Genge MONTPELIER
Genge is SASH director at Cathedral Square.
REV IS WRONG
Over the years I’ve been disappointed with your “Ask the Reverend” column, but a recent response from the “Reverend” really bothered me [“How Can I Keep Politics O the Thanksgiving Table?” November 20]. What kind of “Reverend” hosts a wake at their home but then bullies attendees who cry? My answer: not a “Reverend” whose advice column I would read.
Diana Osborn JOHNSON
Thank you for the continued coverage of issues facing older Vermonters through the “This Old State” series. “Aging Alone” [December 4] illustrates the vital importance of connection between older Vermonters with each other, their families and support persons, as well as the sta of community-based aging organizations, such as community nurses and councils on aging.
The many issues you have reported on in the series — workforce and housing shortages and financial scams — are all front and center for the organization I work for, Cathedral Square. We see the challenges of isolation and loneliness on a regular basis and have been working in partnership with our residents on solutions, including creating Support and Services at Home. SASH has also been a cornerstone in supporting healthy aging in place for older Vermonters since 2011. This program, free for Medicare recipients, is primarily based in housing owned by nonprofit and public housing
a value-added tax instead of putting it on the property taxes. They stated that a property tax system would eventually implode. A VAT would lower property taxes to 1997 levels plus inflation, provide a system that allows the millions of visitors to Vermont to help, and replace or reduce sales taxes and rooms and meals taxes.
It’s worth reconsidering as an alternative, in my opinion.
Ken Libby STOWE
DEEP DARK FEAR
Every cold morning when I start a fire
in the woodstove with Seven Days
I worry that the deceased in the Obituary page will come back to haunt me.
BACKWARD BUDGET
The way we deal with grief in our culture is so broken, and the last thing we need is more grief shaming from our local news source. If we want to care for one another better, we have to rehumanize grief and stop shunning or maligning it. If the “Reverend” was intending to make a joke in their response, it didn’t come across that way.
I hope the “Reverend” will rethink their relationship with grief and that Seven Days will consider wiser insights for the “Ask the Rev” column. Amen.
Leslie Ruster MONTPELIER
TAX ‘ALTERNATIVE’
[Re “Vermont Teachers’ Union Pitches Income Tax to Fund Education,” November 22, online]: I applaud the Vermont-National Education Association for opening discussion on how to better fund education, but I suspect their three-tier system will require more staff to implement and require taxpayers to get professional help to apply for inclusion in rebates.
During a late 1990s discussion on Act 60, a large minority of legislators proposed
same direction for the coming year. It’s not surprising that the Vermont teachers’ union would suggest we start by increasing income taxes, rather than reducing the steadily rising costs of educating our kids. After all, the vast majority of school budget funds go to paying union members. But increasing taxes does nothing to make Vermont more a ordable.
Vermont has the third-highest educational cost per student in the nation, so clearly there are ways to improve on that. Starting out by looking for new funding sources is backward and ignores the underlying problem. If you can reduce costs, you won’t have to raise any taxes. We do have a choice of which one to focus on first.
A SEASON OF GRATITUDE
Lester Maple MILTON
[“Vermont Teachers’ Union Pitches Income Tax to Fund Education,” November 22, online] notes that “Dems appear to have gotten the message … Senators pledged to make soaring property taxes their top priority.” Unfortunately, the Dems appear to be mistaken about the message voters actually had in mind.
For anyone who does a household budget or manages a business, the budgeting process begins with determining how much income you’ll have. Then you can decide how to spend the money, based on basic needs and then on personal priorities for whatever is left. Unfortunately, with education spending we do it backward: We decide how much we want to spend and then go looking for sources of money to pay for it. That’s how school budgets get defeated multiple times.
So far, it looks like we’re headed in the
We are grateful for good health, warm homes, family and the First Congregational Church United Church of Christ in Burlington that supports us in times of joy and struggle.
Not everyone is so fortunate in this city, state or nation. Homelessness, addiction, alcoholism and mental illness are epidemic. Many have landed on our doorstep for shelter. They could be your brother, sister, son, daughter, mother, or maybe even you or one of us. They are human beings.
It has been asked: “Why would anyone want to go to this church?” Because we care! Because we seek to practice love, not fear. Because we want to walk where Jesus walked and know that “in as much as you have done it unto one of the least of these, my brethren, you have done it unto me.”
Rob Backus, Paul Bloomhardt, L. Diana Carlisle, Barbara Carter, Janice Clements, Susan Ellwood, Linda Elrick, John Floyd, Cyndy Hall, Tony Hall, Carl Herzog, Carlanne Herzog, Mary Hyde, Steve Hyde, Donna Lee, Bob McKearin, Mary McKearin, Amy Mellencamp, Bill Neil, Faith Neil, Jamie Polli, Susan Saunders, Lynn Schouten, Ann Vivian, Doug Viehmann
SHAME ON WHOM?
Who was the coward who ran a full-page unsigned ad in Seven Days [page 75, November 20] suggesting that the former cathedral be opened as a homeless shelter, as “It is the Christian thing to do”? I, for one, took o ense to that ad. Catholic charities do more behind the scenes for charity than anyone knows, and to try to shame them into opening the cathedral was an
insult. Perhaps the funds are lacking to convert it to a homeless shelter since so much is being paid out for sexual abuse cases having had the statute of limitations eliminated, opening up lawsuits for unproven abuse. Perhaps the pot of gold thought to be there is no longer. But to try to shame them into opening the cathedral is unbelievable and cowardly, to say the least.
Joyce
Coutu ESSEX JUNCTION
Editor’s note: The ad was paid for by the local magazine 05401, as indicated. Its publisher is Burlington architect Louis Mannie Lionni.
NOTES FROM A NEWCOMER
Having recently moved to Shelburne, I find Seven Days very well done and helpful. Random comments on the November 13 edition:
• We did not realize how extensive and varied the cultural/entertainment scene is in the area.
• In the “Last 7” [Emoji That: “Trump Bump”], you note that Elise Stefanik, congressperson from across Lake Champlain, has been nominated to be United Nations ambassador. As a longtime resident of her district, I’m relieved to see her out of there. But be warned: She is a liar (she still claims the 2020 election was stolen, and she was just reelected to her sixth term, having once promised to serve only five). She is self-centered and ravenous for power. She brags about being “ultra-MAGA.” She can do a lot of damage to U.S. interests at the UN.
• Regarding the lack of workers to weatherize Burlington apartments [“Cold Discomfort”]: There are plenty of workers. Donald Trump intends to deport them.
Neal Burdick SHELBURNE
MURAD DESERVES RESPECT
[Re “Burlington Police Chief Jon Murad to Resign Next Year,” November 19, online]: I find Burlington City Councilor Melo Grant’s comment about departing Police Chief Jon Murad distressing. Grant is quoted as saying, “I felt like every day he was in place was another day that we were further away from being better.” This is beyond being a “vocal critic” of Chief Murad; it is a withering, meanspirited comment made by a city leader about a departing city employee.
I do not know Councilor Grant’s history with the police, or with Chief Murad. I do know that Chief Murad is a public servant who has served this city
for the past four years and that it is not light or easy work to be a police officer, let alone to run an understaffed police department.
At the end of this article, Burlington City Council President Ben Traverse says “it is our responsibility as city leaders” — meaning the council and the mayor — “to ensure that we continue to bring stability to the department.”
I agree. And I ask: How will you do this, Council President Traverse, when there is clearly so much hostility toward the police harbored by some of your fellow city leaders?
Polly Vanderputten BURLINGTON
NOT NOTRE-DAME
Isn’t it ironic that the same day that Paris celebrated the reopening of their most beautiful cathedral, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Burlington celebrated the ability to demolish theirs [“Supreme Court Approves Demolition of Burlington Cathedral,” December 6, online]?
The western part of the site of the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception could easily be transformed to provide nine stories of apartments on its current parking lot just west of the cathedral.
With its graffiti removed, the cathedral itself could remain the focus of a well-designed famous piece of landscape architecture. In the short term it could be used as a warming shelter, and in the long term it could become a community center and a much-needed park in what will soon become the densest part of Burlington.
We need parks and open space downtown, not just more apartments. It is possible to have both on this important downtown site.
We all know this was a real estate deal. Hopefully the secret prospective developers will find a way to create several apartments on the cathedral’s parking lot but keep the cathedral and its landscaping intact for all to enjoy — without the graffiti.
Giving or selling the cathedral to someone who will love it and repurpose it is far less expensive than demolishing it.
Building nine stories of apartments on its parking lot would provide enough return on investment without the cost of demolishing a prominent part of Burlington’s cultural heritage.
Deconsecrating can be and is done at churches around the world without destroying them.
Jay White BURLINGTON
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VERMONT • DISMAS OF VERMONT • DOBRA TEA • DOUBLE H RANCH • DOUBLETREE PAR HILTON MONTRÉAL • DOUSEVICZ INC. • DOWNTOWN WINOOSKI • DR. LAURA RAMIREZ DC, PC • DRAGONHEART VT • DROP THE RACQUET • DUMB LUCK PUB & GRILL • DUNKLEY'S GYMNASTICS • DUNKLING & PENNEY DENTISTRY • E&M MECHANICAL • EARL'S CYCLERY & FITNESS • EASTRISE CREDIT UNION • EASTVIEW AT MIDDLEBURY • EAT & BE HOOPY • ECCO • ECHO, LEAHY CENTER FOR LAKE CHAMPLAIN • ECOPIXEL • THE EDGE • EDGEWATER GALLERY • EFFICIENCY VERMONT • EISENBERG, VITAL & RYZE • ELECTRA'S RESTAURANT • ELEMENT REAL ESTATE • ELLI PARR • ELM HARRIS • THE ELOQUENT PAGE • EMMA MULVANEY-STANAK FOR MAYOR • EMPOWER WELLNESS • ENCORE RENEWABLE ENERGY • ENGELBERTH CONSTRUCTION • EOS TRANSITION PARTNERS • EPISCOPAL PEACE FELLOWSHIP • ERIN DUPUIS - VTRECO • EROTEME • ESMOND COMMUNICATIONS • ESSEX EXPERIENCE - DOUBLE E • ESSEX JUNCTION RECREATION & PARKS • THE ESSEX RESORT & SPA • ESSEX WESTFORD SCHOOL DISTRICT • ESV HOLDING, INC. • ETHAN ALLEN HOMESTEAD MUSEUM • EVERNORTH • EVERYBODY WINS! • EXEMPLARS • EXOTIKA DISPENSARY • EYES OF THE WORLD • FAIR LAW VERMONT • FAMILY FIRST CHIROPRACTIC • FARMERS & FORAGERS • FARRELL DISTRIBUTING • FARRELL PROPERTIES • FERRO JEWELERS • FETCH THE LEASH • FILIBUSTER RESTAURANT & BAR • FILLING STATION • FIRE & ICE • FIRETECH SPRINKLER CORP. • FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH • FIRST NIGHT ST. JOHNSBURY • FIRST UU SOCIETY • FLAVOR HOOKS KIDS • FLEDGLING FARM • FLEMING MUSEUM • FLOAT ON CANNABIS CO. • FLUOR • THE FLYNN • FLYNN AVENUE SELF-STORAGE • FLYNN MESSINA LAW GROUP • FOAM BREWERS • FOLEY SERVICES • FOLINO'S • FORBINS RESERVE + FORBINS FINEST CULTIVATION • FOSTER FARM BOTANICALS • FOUR QUARTERS BREWING • FRANCIS SCHWARZ • FRANKLIN COUNTY NRCD • FRESH WINDZ INC. • FRIENDS OF THE FRAME • FRIENDS OF THE MAD RIVER • FRONT FOUR GALLERY • FRONT PORCH FORUM • FURCHGOTT SOURDIFFE GALLERY • FUSE • GAKU RAMEN • GALE LEGAL GROUP • GALLAGHER FLYNN & COMPANY • GARDENER'S SUPPLY COMPANY • GBA ARCHITECTURE • GENERAC/DR POWER EQUIPMENT • GENERATOR • GIRL SCOUTS OF THE GREEN AND WHITE MOUNTAINS • GIRLINGTON GARAGE • GIRLS NITE OUT PRODUCTIONS •
GLOBALFOUNDRIES • GMCS, INC. • GODDARD COLLEGE • GOOD NEWS GARAGE • GOOD SAMARITAN HAVEN • GOODWATER BREWERY • GORDON'S WINDOWS DECOR • GOVERNOR’S INSTITUTES OF VERMONT • GRACE INITIATIVE GLOBAL • GRAM CENTRAL • GRAVEL & SHEA • GRAYSTONE GROUP ADVERTISING • GRAZERS • GREAT EASTERN RADIO • GREATER BURLINGTON INDUSTRIAL CORPORATION • GREATER BURLINGTON MULTICULTURAL RESOURCE CENTER • GREATER BURLINGTON YMCA • GREATER NORTHFIELD SENIOR CENTER • GREEN ENERGY TIMES • GREEN LEAF CENTRAL • GREEN MOUNTAIN CENTER FOR GIFTED EDUCATION • GREEN MOUNTAIN CONSERVATION CAMP • GREEN MOUNTAIN COUNCIL/MT. NORRIS SCOUT RESERVATION • GREEN MOUNTAIN HABITAT FOR HUMANITY - RESTORE • GREEN MOUNTAIN HIGHER EDUCATION CONSORTIUM • GREEN MOUNTAIN PEDIATRIC DENTISTRY • GREEN MOUNTAIN SUPPORT SERVICES • GREEN MOUNTAIN VALLEY SCHOOL • GREEN MOUNTAIN WATERPROOFING • GREENBACKER • GREENHAVEN GARDENS AND NURSERY • GRUNTS MOVE JUNK • HAGAN ASSOCIATES • HALFORD MOTORS • HALL COMMUNICATIONS • HALLKEEN MANAGEMENT • HARDWICK AREA FOOD PANTRY • HARDWICK ELECTRIC DEPT. • HARGER HOWE & ASSOCIATES • HARK • HARRINGTON'S • HARWOOD UNIFIED UNION SCHOOL DISTRICT • HATCHSPACE • HAUSKAA VERMONT • HAZELBUDS CLAY COMPANY • HEADWATERS RESTAURANT & PUB • HEALTHY LIVING • HEARTS YOU HOLD • HEARTWORKS EARLY EDUCATION • HELLBROOK SOLAR • HELLO BURLINGTON • HELLY HANSEN • HEN OF THE WOOD • HEXUM GALLERY • HIGH MOWING SEEDS • HIGHER ELEVATION • HIGHLAND CENTER FOR THE ARTS • HILB GROUP OF NEW ENGLAND • HIRCHAK BROTHERS, LLC • HIREABILITY VERMONT • HMC ADVERTISING • HOME SECURITY & MANAGEMENT COMPANY • HOMEPORT • HOMESHARE VERMONT • HONG'S CHINESE DUMPLINGS • HOOLIE FARM • HOPE • HOPE WORKS • HORIZONS ENGINEERING • HORSFORD NURSERY • HOTEL CHAMPLAIN • HOTEL VERMONT • HOUNDSTOOTH • HOUSE OF VELOUR LLC • HOWARD CENTER • HUBBLE SHIRE FARM • HULA • HUNGER FREE VERMONT • HUNGER MOUNTAIN COOP • IDLETYME BREWING COMPANY • IMIO • IMPERIAL BARBER COMPANY • INCLUSIVE ARTS VERMONT • INDIGO • INGRID MAKSANDER • INNOVATION ADVERTISING • INSPIRED CLOSETS • INTEGRATIVE ACUPUNCTURE • INTEGRATIVE LIFE NETWORK • INTERSECT MEDIA • INTERVALE CENTER • INVEST EAP • IRENE WRENNER FOR SENATE • IROQUOIS MANUFACTURING • ISHAM FAMILY FARM • ISLAND CARE TAKER • ISLAND GIFT CRAFT SHOP • J. MORGAN'S STEAKHOUSE • JAMIE TWO COATS' TOY SHOP • JEANJACQUES PSAUTE • JENNA'S PROMISE • JERSEY MIKE'S • JEWISH COMMUNITY OF GREATER STOWE • JIVANA SPA • JOAN FOR MAYOR • JOB ELEPHANT • JOY OF HOME • JULES ON THE GREEN • JULIO'S CANTINA • KARAMIA • KAREN FAHEY ADVERTISING • KARME CHOLING • KAS, INC. • KATRINA ROBERTS - VTREC • KCP PRESENTS • KELLY BRUSH FOUNDATION • KEN'S PIZZA • KERR ADVERTISING • KIESELSTEIN AUTISM PROGRAM • KILLINGTON RESORT • KING STREET CENTER • KINGDOM COUNTY PRODUCTIONS • KINGDOM EAST SCHOOL DISTRICT • KISS THE COOK • KLINGER'S BREAD COMPANY • KNOLL FARM • KORE POWER • KRAEMER & KIN BREWERY • L'IVRESSE LINGERIE • LAKE CHAMPLAIN ACCESS TELEVISION • LAKE CHAMPLAIN CHAMBER • LAKE CHAMPLAIN CHOCOLATES • LAKE CHAMPLAIN COMMUNITY SAILING CENTER • LAKE CHAMPLAIN MARITIME MUSEUM • LAKE CHAMPLAIN WALDORF SCHOOL • LAKE CHAMPLAIN YACHT CLUB • LAKE MOREY RESORT • LAKESIDE ELECTRIC, INC. • LAMOILLE COUNTY MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES • LAMOILLE COUNTY NATURAL RESOURCES CONSERVATION DISTRICT • LAMOILLE COUNTY PLANNING COMMISSION • LAMOILLE REGIONAL SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT DISTRICT • LAMOILLE RESTORATIVE CENTER • LAUGHING RIVER YOGA • LAVOIE FAMILY DENTAL • LAWSON'S FINEST • LE FESTIVAL INTERNATIONAL DE JAZZ DE MONTRÉAL • LEDBETTER FOR SENATE • LEGAL SERVICES VERMONT • LENNY'S SHOE & APPAREL • LEONARDO'S PIZZA • LESLIE FRY • LETGOYOURMIND SUMMER STEM CAMPS • THE LEUKEMIA & LYMPHOMA SOCIETY • LEUNIG'S BISTRO • LEWIS CREEK BUILDERS • LIGHTING HOUSE • LILAC RIDGE FARM • LIMOGE AND SONS GARAGE DOORS • LIONHEART HOLDINGS • LITTLE SANCTUARY GARDENING • LITTLE VILLAGE ENTERPRISES • LIZ BUCKLER • LOCAL MOTION • THE LODGE AT SPRUCE PEAK • LOGICAL MACHINES • LOST LANTERN WHISKEY • LOST NATION THEATER • LOUIS MEYERS FOR CONGRESS • LUND FAMILY CENTER • LUX BARBER AND BEAUTY • LYNDON INSTITUTE • LYRIC THEATRE • MAC NURSE • MAD RIVER DISTILLERS • MAD RIVER PATH • MAD RIVER VALLEY TV • MADELEINE'S BAKERY • MAGIC MANN • MAGNETO MUSIC • MAHANEY CENTER FOR THE ARTS - MIDDLEBURY COLLEGE • MAIN STREET BARBERS • MAIN STREET LANDING CO. • MALONEY PROPERTIES • MANDARIN • MANSFIELD COMMUNITY FIBER, INC. • MANSFIELD HALL • MAPLE RIDGE MEMORY CARE & SENIOR LIVING • MARBLESTONE WEALTH AT AMERIPRISE FINANCIAL • MARTHA DAY • MARTINE LAROCQUE GULICK FOR VERMONT STATE SENATOR • MARVELL • MASCOMA BANK • THE MASSACHUSETTS COUNCIL ON GAMING AND HEALTH • MATER CHRISTI SCHOOL • MATT HILL FOR SENATE • MCDONALD'S • ME2 ORCHESTRA • MEACH COVE FARMS • MEALS ON WHEELS OF LAMOILLE COUNTY • MEDIA FACTORY • MEETING HOUSE FURNITURE RESTORATION • THE MEN'S ROOM • MENTOR VERMONT • MERCY CONNECTIONS •
MERRILL'S AUCTION • MICKENBERG, DUNN & SMITH, PLC • MIDDLEBURY ACTING COMPANY • MIDDLEBURY COLLEGE MUSEUM OF ART • MIDDLEBURY INN • MIDDLEBURY NEW FILMMAKERS FESTIVAL • MIDDLEBURY PEDIATRIC DENTISTRY • MIDDLEBURY SNOW BOWL • MILTON ARTISTS' GUILD • MILTON TOWN SCHOOL DISTRICT • MIRROR MIRROR • MISERY LOVES CO. • MJS CONTRACTING • MK CLOTHING • MODERN DESIGN • MONKEY DO PLAYGROUND • MONTESSORI SCHOOL OF CENTRAL VERMONT • MONTPELIER ALIVE • MONTRÉAL EN LUMIÈRE • MONTSHIRE MUSEUM • MONTSTREAM STUDIO • MORE FOR LESS • MORNING DEW LANDSCAPING • MORTON BOSTOCK • MOTHAPLANT DISPENSARY • MOTODOG TRAINING • MOTOR • MOUNT PROSPECT ACADEMY • MOUNTAIN TIMES • MOUNTAIN VILLAGE SCHOOL • ED CLOVER CAMP • MOVING LIGHT DANCE • MS WALKER • MSK • MUST LOVE YARN • MYER'S WOOD FIRED • MYERS CONTAINER SERVICE • MYTI • NANCY BROOKS MARKETING • NANCY JENKINS REAL ESTATE • NATIONAL LIFE GROUP - DO GOOD FEST • NATURALLY YOU CHILDBIRTH • NATURE CONSERVANCY OF VERMONT • NBG TEAM • NDI • NECANN • NECTAR'S • NED CHURCH • NEK BROADBAND • NEW ENGLAND FLOOR COVERING • NEW ENGLAND NEWSPAPER AND PRESS ASSOCIATION • NEW FRAMEWORKS • NFI VERMONT, INC. • NFP • NG ADVANTAGE, LLC • NICHOLS LEDGE • NIGHT EAGLE WILDERNESS ADVENTURES • NOFAVT • NOMAD COMMUNICATIONS & PRESS • NORTH BRANCH NATURE CENTER • NORTH COUNTRY COMMUNITY RADIO • NORTH COUNTRY FEDERAL CREDIT UNION • NORTH COUNTRY SUPERVISORY UNION • NORTHEAST DISABLED ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION • NORTHEAST KINGDOM HUMAN SERVICES • NORTHEAST WILDERNESS TRUST • NORTHERN BASEMENT SYSTEMS • NORTHERN BORDER REGIONAL COMMISSION • NORTHFIELD SAVINGS BANK • NORTHLANDS JOB CORPS • NORTHPOINT REALTY • NORTHSTAR LEASING • NORTHWEST REGIONAL PLANNING COMMISSION • NORWICH UNIVERSITY • NOTION FABRIC & CRAFT • NU CHOCOLAT • NVRH • OASIS DAY SPA • OFF THE HOOK • OFFICE ENVIRONMENTS • OFFICE OF SENATOR PETER WELCH • OFFICE OF THE DEFENDER GENERAL • OH MY DOG • OHAVI ZEDEK SYNAGOGUE • OIL N GO • OKAY!! OKAY!! • OLD SPOKES HOME • OMNIMED • ON-CALL BUILDING SERVICES • ONE DAY IN JULY, LLC • ONE LOVERMONT • ONION CITY CHICKEN & OYSTER • ONION RIVER OUTDOORS • ONLOGIC • ONRCD • OOM YUNG DOE VERMONT • OPEN DOOR CLINIC • OPERA COMPANY OF MIDDLEBURY • OPERA HOUSE AT ENOSBURG FALLS • OPTICAL EXPRESSIONS • ORANGE SOUTHWEST SCHOOL DISTRICT • ORLEANS CENTRAL SUPERVISORY UNION • ORLEANS COUNTY CONSERVATION DISTRICT • OTTER CREEK ASSOCIATES • OTTER CREEK AWNINGS • OTTER CREEK CHILD CENTER • OTTER CREEK USED BOOKS • OUR HOUSE • OUTBACK PRESENTS • OUTDOOR GEAR EXCHANGE • OUTRIGHT VERMONT • PACEM SCHOOL • PACK & SEND PLUS • PAIGE COROLOGOS • PALMER'S SUGARHOUSE • PAMELA ISHAM • PAPA FRANK'S • PARAMOUNT THEATRE • PARC SAFARI • PARK ADVERTISING • PARK HOUSE • PARK SQUEEZE • PARKWAY DINER • PARTNERS IN ADVENTURE • PATIENT CHOICES • PAUL ST GELAIS WINDOW WASHING • PAUL, FRANK AND COLLINS • PAWS AT HOME • PCC • PEASE MOUNTAIN LAW • PECHAKUCHA BURLINGTON • PEET LAW GROUP • PENTANGLE • PENZO PIZZA CO • PEREGRINE DESIGN BUILD • PERM-ADS.COM LLC • PERREAULT & SONS • PERRYWINKLE'S • PET FOOD WAREHOUSE • PETE'S GREENS • PETRA CLIFFS • PH INTERNATIONAL • PHIL BARUTH • PHILO RIDGE FARM • PHOENIX BOOKS • PIECASSO • PINZER PRODUCTIONS • PIVOT MARKETING • PLACE CREATIVE COMPANY • PLAINFIELD CO-OP • PLANET HARDWOOD • PLANETARY ART INSTITUTE AT CAMP MEADE • PLATTSBURGH STATE UNIVERSITY • POCO • POMERLEAU REAL ESTATE • POP MONTREAL INTERNATIONAL MUSIC FESTIVAL • POSITIVE PIE • POULIN BUILDING MATERIALS • PRELOAD, INC. • PRESERVATION BURLINGTON • PRESERVATION TRUST OF VERMONT • PREVENT CHILD ABUSE VERMONT • PREVENTIVE MEDICINE • PRIMMER PIPER EGGLESTON & CRAMER • PROHIBITION PIG • PROJECT ALL TOGETHER NOW • PROSPECT PRESS • PROTECT OUR WILDLIFE • THE PUTNEY SCHOOL • PÊCHE MEDICAL SPA • QI VETERINARY CLINIC • QUARRY HILL CLUB • QUEEN CITY BREWING • QUEEN CITY FOOTWARE • QUEEN CITY TANGO • QUINCY HOTEL ENOSBURG FALLS • RACIAL EQUITY, INCLUSION AND BELONGINGBURLINGTON CITY HALL • RADIANCE MEDICAL AESTHETICS & WELLNESS SPA • RADIO NORTH GROUP • THE RADIO VERMONT GROUP • RAGS & RICHES • RAIL CITY MARKET • RAILROAD & MAIN • RALPH MYHRE GOLF COURSE • RANCH CAMP • REAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT STERLING • RECOVERY PARTNERS VERMONT • RED HEN BAKING CO. • RED HOUSE BUILDING, INC. • REDHEAD MEDIA • REDSTONE • REENTRY RESOURCES COUNSELING • REP. BECCA BALINT • REPUBLIC SERVICES COMPANY • RESCUE SOCIAL CHANGE GROUP • THE RESIDENCE AT OTTER CREEK, SHELBURNE BAY & QUARRY HILL • RESONANT MEDICINE, INC. • RESOURCE • RESTORATION & PERFORMANCE MOTORCARS • REVISION MILITARY • REVITALIZING WATERBURY • REVIVE SALON & SPA • RHINO FOODS • RIDGELINE REAL ESTATE - REALTOR JULIE DANAHER • RIGOROUS TECHNOLOGY • RIKERT OUTDOOR CENTER • RIVER ARTS, INC. • RIVER BRANCH COMMUNITY SCHOOL • RL VALLEE/AMATOS/MAPLEFIELDS
• ROBBI HANDY HOLMES • ROBERT FULLER • ROBIN HEWITT • ROCK POINT COMMONS • ROCK POINT SCHOOL • ROCKY RIDGE GOLF CLUB • ROKEBY MUSEUM • RON CARTER • ROOTED ENTERTAINMENT • ROOTS FARM MARKET • ROUNDTREE CONSTRUCTION • RUBIN, KIDNEY, MYER & VINCENT • RUTGER'S INSTITUTE NICOTINE & TOBACCO STUDIES • RUTLAND COUNTY SOLID WASTE DISTRICT • S.D. IRELAND
COMPANIES • SACRED NUMEROLOGY • SAFEART • SAGE MOUNTAIN • SAIL BEYOND CANCER • SAINT MICHAEL'S COLLEGE • SAINT MICHAEL'S GRAD PROGRAM • SALTWATER COLLECTIVE • SALVATION FARMS • SAM MAZZA'S FARM MARKET, BAKERY & GREENHOUSES • SANTIAGO'S • SARA HOLBROOK CENTER • SARDUCCI'S • SATORI VERMONT • SAVE OUR SKIES VERMONT • SAVIDA HEALTH • THE SCALE POKE BAR • SCHOOL OF CREATIVE AND PERFORMING ARTS • SCHOOLHOUSE LEARNING CENTER • SCOUT • SCRAG & ROE • SEABA • SEAWAY CAR WASH • SENIORS HELPING SENIORS • SHEEHEY FURLONG & BEHM P.C • SHELBURNE CRAFT SCHOOL • SHELBURNE FARMS • SHELBURNE MUSEUM • SHELBURNE ORCHARDS • SHELBURNE PLAYERS • SHELBURNE TAP HOUSE • SHERBURNE FIRE DISTRICT #2 • SHERWOOD REAL ESTATE • SHIDAA PROJECTS INC.CULTURAL CAMP • SILLA • SILVER LEAF IN-HOME CARE • SILVER MAPLE CONSTRUCTION • SIMON SAYS • SIMPLE ROOTS BREWING CO. • SIMPLEROUTE • SIMPLY READY • SIX FLAGS NEW ENGLAND • SKI VERMONT • THE SKINNY PANCAKE • SLATE • SLEEPING WELL, LLC • SMALL DOG ELECTRONICS • SMALL MAMMAL • SMITH & MCCLAIN • SMITH-ALVAREZ-SIENKIEWYCZ ARCHITECTS • SMUGGLERS' NOTCH RESORT • SNOWFLAKE CHOCOLATES • SNYDER HOMES • SOCIETÉ DU VIEUX PORT DE MONTRÉAL • SOJOURN BICYCLING & ACTIVE VACATIONS • SOLAVIDA.ORG • SOULSHINE POWER YOGA • SOUTH BURLINGTON PUBLIC LIBRARY • SOUTH BURLINGTON RECREATION & PARKS DEPARTMENT • SOUTH BURLINGTON SCHOOL DISTRICT • SPA NORDIC STATION • SPAFFORD & SONS • SPANISH IN WATERBURY CENTER • SPARKLE BARN • SPARROW ART SUPPLY • SPECTRUM DAEP • SPEEDER & EARL'S • SPIRAL INTERNATIONAL • SPLASH AT THE BOATHOUSE • THE SPOT • SPRING LAKE RANCH • SPRUCE PEAK ARTS • SPRUCE PEAK PERFORMING ARTS CENTER FOUNDATION • SRH LAW
• SSVF - UVM • ST. ALBANS HISTORICAL SOCIETY • ST. JOHNSBURY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE • STACKPOLE & FRENCH • STARBIRD EVENTS
• STARRY NIGHT CAFÉ
• STEPHANIE BUCKWALTER • STEPS TO END DOMESTIC VIOLENCE • STERLING COLLEGE • STERN CENTER FOR LANGUAGE & LEARNING • STICKY BRAND • STONE & BROWNING PROPERTY MANAGEMENT • STONE FENCE BEVERAGES • STONE'S THROW • STORYWORKZ • STOWE CIDER • STOWE ELECTRIC DEPARTMENT • STOWE FARMERS MARKET • STOWE LAND TRUST • STOWE LIVING • STOWE MOUNTAIN RESORT
• STOWE PERFORMING ARTS • STOWE SANDWICH COMPANY
• STOWE STREET EMPORIUM • STOWE TRAILS PARTNERSHIP • STRAM CENTER FOR INTEGRATIVE MEDICINE • STRIDE CREATIVE GROUP • STUDIO PLACE ARTS • SUGARMAN • SUGARSNAP • SUNBELT RENTALS • SUNDIAL SOLAR • SUNDOG POETRY CENTER, INC. • SUNSET LAKE CANNABIS/LAKE EFFECT • SUNSHINE SOLAR AND CONSTRUCTION • SUNY PLATTSBURGH • SUPER THIN SAWS • SWEENEY DESIGNBUILD • SWEETSPOT CANNABIS DISPENSARY • SWITCHBACK BREWING CO. • SYLVAN LEARNING • TAEKWON DO K.I.C.K.S
• THE TARGETED RESUME • TATA HARPER • TEACHERS TREE SERVICE • TEMPLE SINAI • TEN THOUSAND VILLAGES • TENTH CROW CREATIVE • TERRACES • TESLA OWNER'S CLUB • THINGS FROM YAAD • THOMAS CHITTENDEN FOR STATE SENATE • THOMAS HIRCHAK CO. • THOMAS MOCK • THOMAS RENNER • THREE PENNY TAPROOM • TICK TOCK JEWELERS • A TIDY PLACE • TIMBER TENDER • A TIME TO HEAL • TIMELY TIRE • TINA'S HOME DESIGN • TINY THAI RESTAURANT • TOPNOTCH RESORT AND SPA • TOURISME CANTONS DE L'EST - EASTERN TOWNSHIPS • TOURTERELLE • TOWN OF BRISTOL • TOWN OF COLCHESTER • TOWN OF DUXBURY • TOWN OF ESSEX • TOWN OF FAIRFAX • TOWN OF FAIRFIELD • TOWN OF FERRISBURGH • TOWN OF GEORGIA • TOWN OF HIGHGATE • TOWN OF HINESBURG • TOWN OF JERICHO • TOWN OF MIDDLEBURY • TOWN OF MILTON • TOWN OF MORRISTOWN • TOWN OF RICHMOND • TOWN OF SHELBURNE • TOWN OF STOWE • TOWN OF SWANTON • TOWN OF WAITSFIELD • TOWN OF WATERBURY • TOWN OF WESTFORD • TRAPP FAMILY LODGE • TREETREE LLC • TRILLIUM HILL FARM • TRILLIUM MANUAL THERAPIES • TRINITY CHILDREN'S CENTER, INC. • TRIVALLEY TRANSIT • TRUE 802 CANNABIS • TRUE NORTH • TRUEXCULLINS • TURE NELSON FOR AG • TURNER TOYS • TURNING POINT CENTER • TURNMUSIC • TWIN RIVER UROLOGY • TWINCRAFT SOAP CO. • TWO BROTHERS TAVERN • U.S. COMMITTEE FOR REFUGEES AND IMMIGRANTS • U.S. DISTRICT COURT - DISTRICT OF VERMONT • U.S. PROBATION DISTRICT OF VERMONT • UNDERHILLJERICHO FIRE DEPARTMENT • UNION BANK • UNITARIAN CHURCH OF MONTPELIER • UNITED COUNTRY EMS • UNITED PROFESSIONS AFT VERMONT • UNITED WAY NORTHWEST VERMONT • UNIVERSITY MALL • UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT MEDICAL CENTER • UNTAMED CREATIVE • UP END THIS • URBAN MOONSHINE NATURAL PRODUCTS • USDA AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH SERVICE • UVM - OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT • UVM CAMPUS RECREATION • UVM CANCER CENTER • UVM CENTER FOR ACADEMIC SUCCESS • UVM COLLEGE OF EDUCATION & SOCIAL SERVICES • UVM DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION • UVM DEPARTMENT OF RESIDENTIAL LIFE • UVM DINING • UVM DIVISION FOR INCLUSIVE EXCELLENCE • UVM EXTENSION - URBAN & COMMUNITY FORESTRY PROGRAM • UVM FOUNDATION • UVM FRIENDS OF HORTICULTURE FARM • UVM HEALTH NETWORK • UVM HEALTH NETWORK - HOME HEALTH & HOSPICE • UVM HILLEL • UVM INSTITUTE FOR AGROECOLOGY • UVM LANE SERIES • UVM LARNER COLLEGE OF MEDICINE • UVM OFFICE OF THE VICE PRESIDENT FOR RESEARCH • UVM SCHOOL OF WORLD LANGUAGES & CULTURES • UVM STUDENT GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION • UVM VCHIP • V SMILEY PRESERVES • VABVI • VACD • VALLEY PLAYERS • VBSR • VBT BICYCLING VACATIONS • VCAM • VEDA • VELCO • VERMONT ACADEMY OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING •
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Donald Boniface
SEPTEMBER 12, 1952NOVEMBER 22, 2024 BURLINGTON, VT.
Donald Boniface, 72, of Burlington and Jeffersonville, Vt., passed away peacefully
Dorothy Jean Drewes Davies
JULY 7, 1937DECEMBER 2, 2024 SHELBURNE, VT.
Dorothy Jean Drewes Davies, known as “Bunty” to friends and family, died on Monday, December 2, 2024, after sustaining a fall on anksgiving Day. She was peaceful and surrounded by her husband and three daughters at the McClure Miller Respite House in Colchester, Vt., a place
OBITUARIES, VOWS, CELEBRATIONS
on November 22, 2024, at McClure Miller Respite House.
Donald was born in Morristown, N.J., and attended schools there before going on to the University of Virginia, where he majored in landscape architecture and was a member of the Chi Psi fraternity. After graduating, he worked as a computer programmer at Equitable Life Insurance in Manhattan. Later he moved to California, where he worked in ceramic design, expressing his creative passion.
A man of remarkable patience, intelligence and deep empathy, Donald touched the lives of all who knew him. He faced personal challenges with grace and courage, maintaining a sense of humor and a deep connection to nature.
His life was one of resilience, rising above trials with a smile and unwavering acceptance.
For 28 years, Donald shared a deep and enduring relationship with his partner, Ted [Kuhar] Boniface. eir bond was a transformative gift to both of their lives. It came at a time when both were seeking love and solace: Donald, mourning the loss of his previous partner, and Ted, adjusting to life in Vermont after a difficult past. Together, they found not only companionship but a love that fulfilled them in ways neither had imagined.
Donald’s creativity shone through in the beautiful landscaping he designed at Junction Hill. He also made lasting contributions to his community, serving on
the board of the Champlain Housing Trust and Vermont Cares, where he led the speakers bureau. A passionate advocate for historic preservation, Donald was recognized for his work with the architectural restoration of Park Place Co-op in Burlington.
Donald’s life embodied a rare balance of intellectual depth, emotional sensitivity and creative spirit. He will be remembered not only for his artistic contributions but also for the warmth, care and unconditional love he shared with others. His legacy of compassion and enduring love will live on in the hearts of those who knew him.
Donald’s relationship with Ted was one of deep devotion. As Ted once shared in a “StoryCorps”
interview, meeting Donald allowed a love that had long been waiting inside him to blossom. ey supported and cherished each other through life’s complexities, building a bond based on mutual respect, honesty and unwavering commitment. As they often said, “ e death of one of us will separate us, and nothing else will come between.”
Donald is survived by his devoted partner, Ted; mother, Diana Holmes; sister, Carolyn Fritsch; brothers, Chris and John Boniface; as well as several nieces, nephews, grandnieces and grandnephews. He was predeceased by his father, Philip Boniface. His memory and spirit will be forever carried in the hearts of those who loved him.
Donald’s love for nature — especially the fields, streams, mountains and trails of Vermont — was profound. In his memory, donations may be made to McClure Miller Respite House, David’s House Dartmouth or Vermont Land Trust, so that his legacy of love for humanity and nature may continue for generations to come.
A gathering in memory of Donald will be held in his gardens this summer. Arrangements are by A.W. Rich Funeral Home. In the words of E.E. Cummings, “i carry your heart with me (i carry it in / my heart) i am never without it.” May Donald’s memory be a blessing, and may his legacy of love, kindness and beauty continue to inspire us all.
whose mission she admired and where she received excellent care in her last days.
Born on July 7, 1937, in Bronxville, N.Y., she was the beloved only child of Wallace John Drewes and Dorothy Elsie Seiffert Drewes. She was born prematurely and spent her first several weeks of life in the hospital. e nurses called her “little baby Bunting” — an old English term of endearment — and this was transformed into Bunty, becoming her lifelong nickname. She had an infectious, distinctive laugh; was cheerful and outgoing; and never passed up an opportunity for conversation. She kept in touch through handwritten letters, phone calls and personal visits, eschewing email, computers and social media. She loved Lake George, the Adirondacks, and all things Italy, musical and beautiful. She had an excellent eye and enjoyed collecting unique and lovely items throughout her life.
Bunty passed on her lifelong love of Lake George
to her children and grandchildren, bringing them back to the family house each summer and supporting the next generations in developing their own wonderful experiences. She grew up in a very musical household, attending Broadway shows with her parents and developing an enduring appreciation for opera. Her father was an accomplished pianist, and she remembered sitting with him on the piano bench and learning from him as he played after dinner each night. An avid ballet dancer, swimmer and ice skater, she graduated from A.B. Davis High School in 1955, where she was a cheerleader and part of an experimental education program in advanced music theory education, fueling her lifelong appreciation of music. She attended SUNY Plattsburgh and studied elementary school education, working at the Ausable Club as a waitress during the summers. A highlight of her college experience was spending the summer of 1958 in Italy living with a
family in Biella through the Experiment in International Living, a Putney, Vt.-based organization for experiential cross-cultural learning. She graduated in 1959 as editor of the yearbook and then taught third grade in Rye, N.Y. She met her future husband, Hubert Davies Jr., at a party at the home of her friend Carolyn Davies. She recalled how tall and handsome he was and that he had a great car, a Triumph TR3. ey married on a rainy winter day in January 1961, and she always joked in her self-deprecating way as she looked at her beautiful formal wedding portrait that “I didn’t know anything!” but she was clearly a quick study. She and Hubie successfully and enthusiastically raised three daughters, of whom she was very proud. She worked and volunteered extensively in the Shelburne schools, for Lilliput eatre and, from the 1960s until the pandemic, at the First Congregational Church of Burlington. She served
extensively but most notably in the Austin Handbell Choir, Coterie and at the Possibility Shop. She was a 45-year member of PEO and enjoyed staying active playing golf and tennis and downhill skiing. Bunty particularly enjoyed figure skating, and while a member of the Champlain Valley Skating Club she pursued judging and ice dancing credentials through the USFSA.
After getting her girls “launched,” she traveled extensively with friends or with husband Hu. Highlights included an art teachers’ exchange trip to Russia and Kazakhstan and travels with Hu and friends to several European countries. She and Hu also wintered for many years in Venice, Florida and Arizona, visiting Hubie’s brother Don. ey took these opportunities to travel around the Pacific Coast and the West by car. roughout, she gathered beautiful books, objects, maps and other items that decorated and filled their home.
Bunty is survived by her husband, Hubert Davies Jr., and daughters, Jayne (Joseph Tessitore) of Essex Junction, Vt.; Julia (Gregg Yedwab) of St. Charles, Ill., and Ocala, Fla.; and Louise (Matt Golec) of Enfield, N.H. She particularly enjoyed her grandchildren, Martha (Dominic Figueroa) of Malta, N.Y.; Sara (Ryan Volkmann) of Queensbury, N.Y.; Suzanne of St. Charles, Ill.; and William of Enfield, N.H. Her great-grandchildren, Lorenzo, Gabriella and Payton, brought joy to her days through photos and visits. Bunty will be greatly missed by her numerous cousins and extended family. If you are inspired to honor Bunty’s infectious laugh and love of people and all things beautiful, please consider a donation to the Lake George Association in her name or write a letter or gift a beautiful object to a treasured friend. Services are planned for spring 2025. Corbin and Palmer is in charge of arrangements.
Edward John Surdek
MARCH 13, 1936DECEMBER 3, 2024
BURLINGTON, VT.
Edward John Surdek, 88, of Burlington, Vt., died on December 3, 2024.
Ed was born on March 13, 1936, in Montréal, the son of Walter and Mary (Dabrowicz) Surdek. He attended Montréal Institute of Technology and Sir George Williams University (now Concordia).
Ed grew up from humble beginnings and made pivotal decisions which set the course of his future. After several years pursuing the love of his life, Therese Chevrier, he finally won her over, and they were married on September 27, 1958. The first six years of their marriage were spent in Pointe-Saint-Charles before they relocated to the U.S. in 1964. They moved to Connecticut, where he worked for Sperry Semiconductor, and eventually settled in Vermont in 1967, where he spent most of his life. A house bought in Burlington’s New North End was a perfect place to raise a family and provided easy access to Canada for extended family visits, smoked meat indulgences and cheering on his beloved Canadiens. Ed’s career as an engineer flourished during 26 years with IBM, allowing him to pursue his passion for innovation. His work led to extensive travel throughout Europe and Japan and an extended assignment in Germany.
Ed was a genuine man, straightforward and without pretense. What you saw was exactly who he was. He was proud of his many accomplishments and awards during his IBM career, most notably an Outstanding Contribution Award after introducing a new wafer manufacturing process. Those who knew Ed always
saw a big smile on his face. His laughter was contagious. His big heart was truly one of a kind and defied all odds. While he can be credited with making wise choices, he also had a little luck and some help from UVM Cardiology along the way.
There is an endless supply of unforgettable Ed-isms. Ed could master foreign languages in less than 24 hours, and his IBM stories about the good ole days became more and more embellished as he repeated them. He loved researching products more than buying them and was a fierce cribbage competitor and avid collector of things. He couldn’t pass a bowl of mints without grabbing a handful!
Family and friends were at the center of Ed’s life. He had a gift for making everyone feel welcome and took joy in meeting new people. He rarely missed a game, concert or school activity for his children or grandchildren. Whether it was golfing with his IBM buddies in Vermont and Florida or traveling with loved ones, Ed embraced life’s adventures. “You better believe it!” Ed lived a full and rich life! His biggest accomplishment was his family, who he cared for deeply and who loved him just as much. Ed is survived by his devoted wife of 66 years, Therese. He will be deeply missed by their four children and spouses, John Surdek (Denise), Linda Young (David), Rob Surdek (Jill) and Nancy Westbrook (David); 11 grandchildren and spouses, Laura Demerath (Calvin), Austin Young, Anna Golann (Colden), Michael Surdek, Connor Young, Emily Surdek, Samantha Surdek, Libby Westbrook, Ryan Surdek, and Glenna and Mimi Westbrook; and two great-grandchildren, Tate and Briggs Golann. He is also survived by his sister, Stella Surdek (Mehdi). Ed was predeceased by his parents and brother, Chester Surdek.
A mass of Christian burial will be celebrated on March 29, 2025, 11 a.m., at Christ the King in Burlington. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions can be made to BHS Athletics, Burlington High School, 67 Cherry St., Burlington, VT 05401. Arrangements are in the care of Champlain Cremation of South Burlington. To send condolences to his family, please visit champlaincremation.com.
Katherine Schumpf
FEBRUARY 26, 1929DECEMBER 10, 2024 BURLINGTON, VT.
Katherine Charlotte (Bluto) Schumpf, beloved daughter, wife, mother, sister, aunt and best friend, died peacefully at the age of 95 on December 10, 2024.
Born in Grand Isle, Vt., on February 26, 1929, to Julius and May (Blow) Bluto, the youngest of eight children, Mom would tell you she had a wonderful childhood growing up on the shores of Lake Champlain, even though she walked those two miles to school and back each day. She finally got to ride the school bus that her father drove from the islands to Milton High School, from which she graduated in 1947.
Edward Schumpf through her sister Shirley and William Boivin, Edward’s best friend.
Kate and Ed were married on November 6, 1948, and in August 1950 their only son, Douglas, was born.
Mom continued to work after Douglas was born, first at Sears, Roebuck and then at J.C. Penney, from which she retired in 1998.
She taught her son many things, including the art of cooking “comfort food” and being patient and not worrying because everything works out. She loved her family and extended family.
When Mom retired, she got to travel with her sister and her son. She got to spend more time making her “scrubbies” that she handed out at Christmas, playing on her iPad and getting caught up on her reading. Mom had a wonder-filled life.
After graduation from high school, Mom moved to Burlington to live with her sister Shirley and would begin her working career at Brooks Brothers. It was at this time that she met
Monty Fischer
NOVEMBER 1948NOVEMBER 2024 GREENSBORO, VT.
Monty Fischer passed away peacefully in November while sitting in the sun with his dogs and listening to birdsong. He is remembered for his unwavering integrity, service to others and deep love for his family.
Kate is survived by her son, Douglas Schumpf, and her sister Shirley Boivin Hebert, plus many nieces and nephews. Kate is also survived by her extended families of Sean and Amy Whitehouse and their children, as well as Michael and Arica Whitehouse.
Kate was predeceased by her parents, Julius and May; husband, Edward; brothers, Cyril, Justin, Firmin, Richard and Eugene; and her sister Marion.
Thanks and gratitude go to Kate’s caregiver, Callie, and the staff at Loving Home Care who made it possible for my mom to be at home. Callie and Kate formed a special bond.
Also a heartfelt thank-you goes to the staff and volunteers of the McClure Miller Respite House who expressed so much respect, kindness, love and caring for Kate during her final days.
Family and friends are invited to attend calling hours on Wednesday, December 18, 2024, 4 to 6 p.m., at the Ready Funeral Home, 261 Shelburne Rd., Burlington.
A mass of Christian burial will be held at St. Mark Catholic Church, 1251 North Ave., Burlington, on Thursday, December 19, 2024, 11 a.m. Immediately following, a burial will be at Lakeview Cemetery, North Ave., Burlington.
In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to the McClure Miller Respite House in Colchester, Vt.
Arrangements are in the care of Ready Funeral & Cremation Services. To send online condolences, please visit readyfuneral.com.
Born in New York City in 1948, Monty inherited his style and determination from his mother, a fashion designer, and his entrepreneurial spirit from his father, a World War II veteran. Growing up in Chappaqua, N.Y., he attended Browning School for Boys in Manhattan, where he graduated as a scholar-athlete.
Monty dedicated his life to his
community and balancing human enjoyment of the environment with its protection. His passion for service began at Franklin & Marshall College, where he cofounded the Lancaster Air and Water Pollution Action Group. He earned a graduate degree in water resource management from the University of New Hampshire before settling in Vermont.
Monty’s career in politics and policy roles in state government and the U.S. Congress reflected his belief in bipartisanship. He served as an executive director of the Vermont Natural Resources Council and senior vice president at the National Wildlife Federation, eventually chairing the Vermont Governor’s Environmental Advisory Council.
He played a pivotal role in creating the Lake Champlain Islands Trust, the Champlain Maritime Society and the Northeast Kingdom’s Center for an Agricultural Economy, particularly the Food Venture Center. In retirement, he joined the board of the Plymouth Hall Museum, helping restore the 17th-century vessel Sparrow Hawk
Monty is known for his infectious laugh and wit, leaving a lasting impact. A photographer since his youth, he shared stories and connections through imagery. He and his wife, married during a snowstorm, shared a passion for active citizenry and nurturing their garden. They even ran an eel-fishing business on Lake Champlain together.
Monty is survived by his wife, Cheryl King-Fischer, and their two children, both of whom carry on his legacy of respect and responsible stewardship for our natural and human world.
A celebration of life will be held in Vermont on the first weekend of August 2025.
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OBITUARIES, VOWS, CELEBRATIONS
OBITUARIES
Gary Miles Chassman
AUGUST 9, 1940DECEMBER 8, 2024
BURLINGTON, VT.
It is with profound sadness that we share the passing of Gary. He had a vivacious spirit, a quick wit and a deep commitment to his passions. Gary was an adventurous traveler and a lover of music, and he made literature, art and photography his life’s work.
ough he was born in New York, where he lived for most of his childhood and where he attended the Walden School for
DECEMBER 14, 1947-
DECEMBER 10, 2024
SOUTH BURLINGTON, VT.
Rhey Plumley, 76, died peacefully at Respite House due to complications of Alzheimer’s. Fly fisher, tyer, teacher, mentor, friend and all-around wonderful human being, he is survived by his siblings Bruce, Alison and Bob; and by his partner, best friend and fishing buddy, Sheila Reid. Rhey was born and grew
high school, he has lived in Massachusetts, Connecticut and California.
Gary worked at Brentano’s bookstore in the Prudential Center in Boston and then
moved to Claremont, Calif., to become the manager of the Claremont Colleges bookstore.
He was later hired by Aperture, the premier American photography publishing company. Here, he was able to refine his artistic eye and learn the steps of conceiving and developing book production projects from start to finish.
In Burlington, Vt., Gary opened Chassman & Bem Booksellers, a staple on Church Street for two decades. Here, he built a town hub for readers, forging relationships with many writers, artists, musicians and community members in the greater Burlington area.
He saw the store as a place where he could showcase the printed word.
Gary was also a member of the Friends of Indian Music and Dance and participated in bringing Indian music to Burlington.
After selling the store, Gary opened Verve Editions. Over 25 years, Gary and collaborating authors, artists, photographers and designers conceived of, developed and produced scores of original and beautifully made books. In the Spirit of Martin , which Gary conceived of and developed, included art and writing inspired by Martin Luther King Jr. that speaks to the power of art to shape collective
up in various places in upstate New York. After graduating from Ottawa University in Kansas, he began his first career working with people who had developmental disabilities. He worked at Brandon Training School and Howard Center and for the State of Vermont. He was proud of his work with and for his clients, one of whom remained a friend ’til the end. In the mid-1980s, he began his second career in the world of fishing — particularly fly-fishing. He started at
Knight’s Sporting Goods and moved to Classic Outfitters, where he managed the store for many years. He became a certified fly-fishing instructor — one of the very few in Vermont at the time. He immersed himself in fly tying, and then he began sharing his knowledge. It is probably accurate to say that he taught hundreds of people to cast or tie flies. He was a patient and encouraging teacher who always retained his sense of humor. He was generous with his time to Trout Unlimited, Casting for Recovery, and various veterans’ and school groups. Writing was important to Rhey. Although his published output was limited, he loved to let his imagination run wild as he created fiction, or to inform as he wrote about topics pertaining to fishing or fly tying.
Although he fished for many species, his passion was fishing for Atlantic salmon, and he treasured his trips to Maine, Québec, Nova Scotia and Newfoundland/
Labrador chasing Salmo salar.
Always a dreamer, Rhey thought that Vermont should have a fly-fishing fly as a state symbol. He did the research, pitched the idea, gained support from the Fish & Wildlife Department, and obtained legislative backing.
In May 2014, the “Governor Aiken bucktail streamer” became an official state symbol and Vermont the first state to have a fly-fishing fly as a symbol. Rhey then wrote about this process and the symbol for e American Fly Fisher, a scholarly publication of the American Museum of Fly Fishing.
In retirement, Rhey and Sheila continued to fish and travel until COVID-19 curtailed these adventures, as it did for many. A kidney transplant was successful, but the ensuing, rapidly progressing Alzheimer’s changed everything.
A bright spark in the Alzheimer’s journey was music. Rhey loved music, and his taste was eclectic. When
national memory. The book explored the inspiring life and enduring legacy of MLK Jr. and launched a partnership with the Smithsonian traveling art exhibition that toured museums and galleries in the U.S., including the Smithsonian Gallery in Washington, D.C.
We are so incredibly proud of the work that he did and of the beautiful projects that he contributed to the world.
Gary is survived by his loving wife, Deborah Boothby; children Jenn and Josh; brother, Neil; nieces, Keira, Dierdre and Molly; as well as his granddaughters, Elise and Paige. He is predeceased by his daughter Karyn and his parents, Harry and Molly.
He will be deeply missed by his family and by the Burlington community.
A celebration of life will be held on ursday, December 19, 6 p.m., at the Chabad of Burlington house, 57 South Williams St., Burlington, VT. Appetizers and refreshments will be served.
If you are not able to attend but would like to share stories or memories of Gary, please reach out to his daughter Jennifer at jachassman@gmail. com or his son, Josh, at joshchassman@ yahoo.com.
In lieu of flowers, we ask that donations be made to King Street Center or Feeding Champlain Valley.
his speech started to fail, he retained his ability to sing and remembered lyrics from countless songs, as many people with dementia do. To try to capitalize on this phenomenon, Sheila contacted Karen McFeeters Leary (Aphasia Choir of Vermont founder and director), and with her talent and energy and support from Age Well, a singing group was started for people with memory loss and their caregivers. Weekly sessions brought great joy to Rhey for over a year until he could no longer attend.
A group that started with about eight participants now sees up to 30 at a time and continues to flourish.
Special thanks to the people who enriched Rhey’s life and gave Sheila respite, especially over the past year: Alison Plumley, Amy Miller, Ann Mason, Jack Price, Jeff Seward, Judy Barrows, Maida Townsend and Ray Michaud. Profound gratitude to the person who gave Rhey the gift of a kidney that kept him in excellent physical health
for nearly four years. Please consider being an organ donor if you are able. Per Rhey’s wishes, there will be no service. Go and fish a favorite piece of water, tie your go-to fly, enjoy nature, read a good book, sip your preferred beverage or share stories of Rhey with others. And remember him. At a future date, a commemorative brick for Rhey will be placed in the walkway of the American Museum of Fly Fishing in Manchester, Vt. If you would like to honor him with a donation to an organization, consider the following: the Atlantic Salmon Federation, a leading science and advocacy organization dedicated to conserving and restoring wild Atlantic salmon (asf.ca); Caregiver Support at Age Well, the local area agency on aging that has been of great help to Rhey and Sheila (agewellvt.org); and the University of Vermont Home Health & Hospice, our companions for the last few months (uvmhomehealth.org).
Ann Flynn Palmer Page
JULY 13, 1939-DECEMBER 7, 2024 SHELBURNE, VT.
“The privilege of a lifetime is to become who you truly are.”
— Carl Jung
Ann Flynn Palmer Page died peacefully in her beloved Wake Robin community on Saturday, December 7, 2024. She was born in Parkersburg, W. Va., on July 13, 1939, the daughter of Martha Kate Webb and Lewis Edwin Palmer. Although she lived in West Virginia, Georgia, Kansas, Missouri, Massachusetts and Virginia throughout her life, she always called Vermont home. Her early years were spent riding horses and nurturing gardens at her home in Washington Bottom, W.Va. She also participated in the 4-H club, where she fondly recalled leading conservation projects and planting hundreds of trees each year on West Virginia land. As a child, she was always engrossed in books and began writing at a very young age. Literature and words wove a thread through Ann’s life, offering continual sustenance, comfort and support. After finishing her undergraduate degree at Stephens College in Columbia,
Mo., she moved to Boston where she completed a master’s degree in speech and communication at Emerson College. During her young adult years, Ann’s love of language was reflected in her work as a radio host, librarian and writer. Writing was a tool of self-discovery for Ann, helping her process, reflect on her experiences and become the version of herself she wanted to be. Ann also participated in the debate club at Emerson College, a setting where she used her skill with language to be a quiet force for justice, which contributed to her continued advocacy efforts as an adult. In the debate club, Ann met Walter Page, a formidable opponent. Ann and Walter married in 1963, and Walter passed away after a short battle with cancer in 2008.
When the kids were young, the family moved to North Hero, Vt., and Ann continued to pursue her passions by attending the annual Iowa Writers’ Workshop, printing her work in local publications, frequenting writing groups and tending to her daily journaling. She took great joy in her life in North Hero, and the community and friendships she formed there were the most significant of her life. During this time, she opened and ran an artisan-inspired
and curated flower shop with her lifelong best friend, Joyce Borthwick-Leslie. This effort represented an ongoing act of determination, resilience and joy. She also involved herself in the community through work with the Village Players, the United Methodist Church, Island Arts and Artist’s Way. She loved to sing in church, in the theater and in the kitchen (accompanying almost anything on the radio, including the Sunday opera). As she moved through life at Wake Robin, her tattered bright yellow poster for Say it With Music, a production she and Joyce wrote and codirected with the Village Players, proudly hung on the wall of each of her Wake Robin rooms. Her connection with her property on Pelots Point Road in North Hero was almost cellular. It was on that land that she raised a family (as well as chickens, rabbits, cats and dogs), grew food and flowers and felt closest to the natural world. Longtime friends, Chip and Ann Porter, remain a steady anchor in that community.
While many people begin their lives focused on who they are, Ann was often focused on others, on the community and on her family. As her children grew up, she found more space to focus on herself. As she cultivated gardens in North Hero, and later at Wake Robin, she also began cultivating and discovering who she was through writing and reflection. Her Wake Robin memoir group, writing instructors and notebooks were constant companions in her later years.
Dawn Marie Bowler
MARCH 11, 1964DECEMBER 15, 2024 SHELBURNE, VT.
Dawn Bowler, 60, passed away after a long struggle on December 15, 2024.
Dawn was born on March 11, 1964, in Burlington, Vt., to Jacqueline Bowler Blanchard and Phillip M. Bowler Sr., both of whom survive her. Dawn had
two children, Kyle Normandin and Melissa Normandin. She attended Burlington High School and later earned her GED. She was predeceased by her older brother, Phillip M. Bowler Jr., in 2015. In addition to her parents and two children, Dawn is survived by two nephews, Phillip M. Bowler III and William Bowler, and two granddaughters from Melissa, named Aaliyah Cota and Akara Chea.
She loved watching TV cooking shows, comedies, and TV
One of Ann’s favorite writers and steadfast literary idols was Mary Oliver. Ann lived her life in accordance with Mary Oliver’s principles, and she would have encouraged all of us to do the same.
“Instructions for living a life: Pay attention. Be astonished. Tell about it.” — Mary Oliver Ann is survived by her daughter, Kara Lyn Page, of Richmond, Va.; her son, Eric Edmund Page, of Tampa, Fla.; and four grandchildren: Hannah Kate Parker, Savannah Stock Page, Nora Harding Parker and Owen Lewis Parker. She is also survived by her dearest friend, Joyce Borthwick-Leslie, and her adoring black lab, Sadie, who now lives in Virginia with Kara. Her family wants to extend heartfelt gratitude to all of those at Wake Robin who touched Ann’s life. In 2016 Ann chose to return to Vermont from Virginia, writing in her annual Christmas letter, “So, here I am, leaving home and returning home … at Wake Robin I have found a place where the trees and the people who live among them are strong, kind, and caring.” From her friends to the dedicated staff to the kind security team who cared for Sadie during her transition to Virginia, Wake Robin was home to Ann.
A service to celebrate Ann’s life will be planned for the spring. Donations in Ann’s memory can be made to the Friends of Northern Lake Champlain, P.O. Box 1145, St. Albans, VT 05478, or through their website, friendsofnorthernlakechamplain.org.
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golf, and was a forever fan of country and rock music. She was a longtime companion of David Cadorette.
Her family would like to thank the staff of the Visiting Nurse Association for their years of dedicated service and the teams in the ER and ICUs at the University of Vermont Medical Center for their many lifesaving efforts.
Donations may be made in her name to the King Street Center, 87 King St., Burlington, VT.
Post your obituary or in memoriam online and in print at sevendaysvt.com/lifelines Or contact us at lifelines@sevendaysvt.com 865-1020 ext. 121.
Putting Books in Hands
A former big-box bookseller’s read on the local bookstore scene
BY ANGELA SIMPSON • angela@sevendaysvt.com
Let’s just get this out of the way: I love big-box bookstores.
Whoa, whoa, whoa! Before you question my locavore bona fides, let me clarify: I love all bookstores — big, small, used, new, chain, independent — because I love books. (Ask me what I’d take to a desert island, and I’ll tell you it’s Maud Hart Lovelace’s complete Betsy-Tacy I tend to be pretty egalitarian in my book acquisition standards. And to my mind, brick-and-mortar store with local employees is better than a faceless digital monster.
Given a choice between shopping in a quirky indie or a “soulless” corporate giant, yes, I’ll take the singular experience of the indie, especially in Vermont, where the “buy local” ethos is so deeply ingrained. So on my most recent birthday, my husband knew that a copy of the free Vermont Bookstore Tour 2024-25 Passport — humbly printed from our home computer and wrapped up with an o er to accompany me to all 20 independent bookstores listed thereon — was the perfect gift for this book nerd.
Launched a decade ago, the passport invites you to visit bookstores in all corners of the state. I’ve traveled to nine on the list so far (see “Passport to Paradise,” page 29), and my experiences have certainly rea rmed the benefits of shopping locally, including cozy ambience, eclectic inventory and interactions with passionate booksellers.
The tour got me thinking about the enduring appeal of physical bookstores, including the mega ones. In the mid-1990s, I worked at the South Burlington Barnes & Noble — first in the Staples Plaza, then at its current superstore on Dorset Street. During my tenure, that store was largely sta ed by smart, well-read lit lovers who found joy in putting books in people’s hands. I met my husband of 20-plus years there, as well as many coworkers I count as close friends to this day. I still belong to a book club that formed among the employees more than 25 years ago.
It may be difficult to believe that William Barnes and Gilbert Clifford Noble were real people helming a small bookshop in the early 1900s. (So were Tom and Louis Borders in the 1970s; their store became the now-defunct Borders chain.) By the time of my bookselling career in the ’90s, the e ect of the expansion of these and other chain bookstores on small
TO MY MIND, ANY BRICK-AND-MORTAR STORE WITH LOCAL EMPLOYEES IS BETTER THAN A FACELESS DIGITAL MONSTER.
indie shops had been swift and, in many cases, devastating. Aggressive discounts and vast inventories prompted a Davidand-Goliath comparison, immortalized in the 1998 Meg Ryan-Tom Hanks rom-com You’ve Got Mail
The South Burlington B&N was usually bustling from the moment the doors opened — and it stayed open until 11 p.m. every day except Sunday, a tough schedule for smaller shops to compete with. It was so busy that I recall days, usually
at this time of year, when the long line at the registers would meet the equally long queue from the café in a commercial version of a Greek dance.
Among the Burlington stores that shuttered as a result were Everyday Bookshop on College Street and Chassman & Bem on Church Street — where a bookseller once wouldn’t let me leave without buying his recommendation, Pam Houston’s Cowboys Are My Weakness . Even the local outlet of the Borders chain on the Church Street Marketplace ceded to its crosstown rival and closed in 2011. By then, Amazon’s tentacles were already curling around every facet of American life, including B&N’s book-market dominance. A retail
transformation that we’re still assessing today was well under way.
Chris Morrow, then owner of Northshire Bookstore in Manchester Center, told Seven Days in 2011, “It’s not so much chains versus locals these days but online versus bricks and mortar.”
Indeed, Barnes & Noble, the only nationwide bookstore chain left in the country today, almost seems like one of the little guys when you consider the online juggernaut that is Amazon. Half of all books sold in the U.S. are purchased through Jeff Bezos’ behemoth, which, almost unbelievably, started as a digital marketplace for books only. And yet.
After years of declining sales and store closures, B&N’s foot tra c is up 7 percent since 2019, according to location analytics
Passport to Paradise: A Book Nerd’s Vermont Bookstore Tour
The Vermont Bookstore Tour Passport was the brainchild of a former employee at Vermont Book Shop in Middlebury, owner Becky Dayton told me. It launched about a decade ago and was rejuvenated this past spring with a new itinerary of shops. To participate in the current edition, stores had to be a member of the New England Independent Booksellers Association and contribute a small amount toward the program’s costs. Claire Benedict, co-owner of Bear Pond Books in Montpelier, estimated that more than 100 people participate each year, including occasional vacationing out-of-staters.
If you visit all 20 stores by February 2026 and submit your completed passport, prizes include a bookmark designed by a local artist, a sticker and a magnet. But you’ll already have received your true treasure — hours spent happily browsing the stacks at one-of-a-kind shops, finding your next great read and supporting the dedicated booksellers who put it in your hands, not your mailbox.
My first tour stop was EVERYONE’S BOOKS in Brattleboro, whose website says it specializes in “books about social
change, the environment, and multicultural children’s books.” According to its logo, the store has been “raising hell since 1984,” and it does feel as though revolution is in the air. You’ll find recent bestsellers if you want one, but at the back of the store you can peruse several thick binders of left-wing bumper stickers for sale. I left with a copy of Vermont high school principal Ken Cadow’s Kirkus Prize-winning YA novel, Gather, and The Last of the Hill Farms: Echoes of Vermont’s Past by Richard W. Brown.
Since we were Vermont close, my husband and I headed up Interstate 91 to VILLAGE SQUARE BOOKSELLERS in Bellows Falls, where we got happily lost in its wellcurated books, toys and gifts, including a homely-cute collection of Ugly Dolls. I spent a few minutes nostalgically flipping through a picture book I remembered from my childhood, Robert Frost’s Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening, illustrated by Susan Jeffers.
On a bluebird day in October, I headed north to St. Albans to check out the ELOQUENT PAGE , a browser’s paradise where new and used books are shelved cheek by jowl in a happy mélange, often crosswise on top of traditional vertical stacks, making you feel as though you’re in someone’s personal library. You’ll also find a selection of rare first editions. I crossed two gifts off my list with Middlebury professor, author and poet Jay Parini’s Robert Frost: Sixteen Poems to Learn by Heart and local forester Ethan Tapper’s How to Love a Forest , plus used paperback copies of Moyra Caldecott’s Sacred Stones trilogy — tied together with string, no less — for my husband to try.
With three locations, PHOENIX BOOKS is Vermont’s homegrown mini-chain, and the Church Street Marketplace location in Burlington served me the indie-est interaction during my November visit.
A bookseller who had her arms full of merchandise but seemed completely unharried asked me if I needed help (nope!) and then just stood there, as though waiting for me to continue a dialogue. Her name tag said “Renee,” and I recognized her from Seven Days coverage as co-owner Renee Reiner. Since she seemed more interested in conversation than in the completion of her to-do list, we chatted about the new location, the quantity of seasonal foot traffic and the new performance space on the second level before my husband wandered over.
“What do you do?” Reiner asked him, as though she had all the time in the world instead of full arms and a packed preholiday store.
Putting Books in Hands
company placer.ai. Though clearly not as busy as in its heyday, the South Burlington store shows signs of replacing some of the blankets, candles and other tchotchkes that filled the front of the store in recent years with actual books. When making purchases this year, I’ve occasionally waited in a short line, which rarely happened in the past decade.
The primary factor in the chain’s renaissance? New CEO James Daunt — the savior of British book chain Waterstones — has adopted the indies’ playbook, eschewing publisher-paid placement and planograms in favor of letting each of his 600 stores curate its own inventory, tailored to the community in which it operates.
“These big retailer bookstores have failed to hang on to their customers because they weren’t friendly, they didn’t have the right books and they weren’t engaged,” Daunt told the UK’s Guardian in 2023.
Oh, the irony.
Independent stores have not stood idly by. Many now use the American Booksellers Association’s IndieCommerce platform to run their own e-commerceenabled websites in an attempt to elbow their way in with the order-from-home crowd, and they increase their visibility through social media such as TikTok’s #BookTok.
“We want to be available to our customers wherever they want to meet us,” Becky Dayton, owner of Vermont Book Shop in Middlebury, told me. Keeping up with the times pays o : Her store is celebrating its 75th anniversary, and she is only its third owner. According to the Associated Press, membership in the American Booksellers Association has almost doubled since 2016, with 200 new members in the past year alone.
Among the benefits that independent booksellers have always o ered are service, curation and vibe. Amazon’s algorithm has its “frequently bought together” feature, but unless you’re looking for more of the same, it can’t duplicate the enthusiastic left-field recommendations of a bookseller loves what they’re selling, or the exquisitely voyeuristic pleasure of seeing what someone else is browsing or buying.
In a 2022 article, the New York Times touted brick-and-mortar stores’ ability to offer “incidental discovery,” something that’s more di cult, and not nearly as much fun, on a website. “The more Amazon’s market share grows, the less discovery there is overall and the less new voices are going to be heard,” one independent publisher quoted in the story predicted.
And good luck getting Amazon to find a book when you don’t know the title or author. In my bookselling days, it was a badge of honor to locate a requested book from such thin descriptions as “I heard about it on NPR a month or two ago” or “It has ‘horse’ in the title, and I think the cover is blue.”
In many ways, Barnes & Noble and independent booksellers find themselves in a state of détente, united against their common enemy. That same 2022 New York Times story, headlined “How Barnes & Noble Went From Villain to Hero,” cited the chain’s still-sizable orders, which keep the printing and distribution of physical books viable for publishers even as Amazon’s algorithm promotes cheaper
e-books. Those large orders also ensure books are available to indies.
Barnes & Noble has coexisted with independents in the Burlington market for 30 years, and the chain’s CEO has publicly declared that the model of more than 2,500 indie bookstores is its way forward, if that coexistence is to continue. Time will tell if the corporate giant can truly relinquish control to local employees or if it will revert to its previous monolithic uniformity.
My recent tour of some of Vermont’s indie bookshops served up plenty of that quirk, curation and “incidental discovery” that B&N hopes to replicate. I follow the Icelandic tradition of giving a book and a chocolate bar to almost everyone on my Christmas gift list, and the first legs of my tour were well timed for holiday shopping. Printed passport in hand (you can also pick one up in any of the 20 featured shops), I hit up bookshops from St. Albans to Brattleboro, from the eclectically organized the Eloquent Page to the left-leaning Everyone’s Books. And, yes, I’ve been to Barnes & Noble a few times in between my indie tour stops. My mom and I love to meet in the café and leaf through magazines — the store has one of the only remaining newsstands in the area — over cups of co ee.
Because I’m rooting for all the brickand-mortar bookstores. In a world where incidents of book banning are increasing, every book sold is a victory — a blow against ignorance. More books in more people’s hands is a good thing, in my opinion, even if the transaction takes place online, but please, allow yourself the joy of interacting with a fellow reader when you spend your book bucks. Grab your passport and head to a bookstore near you.
“I work in data processing, and I’m a musician,” he replied. Do you sing? Yes. Are you a tenor? Yes. Reiner said the hospice choir she sings with needed tenors, and off they went to trade emails. No online retailer can duplicate that kind of human connection.
My visits to Phoenix’s locations added to my growing stack of books: Matt Haig’s latest novel, The Life Impossible; Seven Days consulting editor Margot Harrison’s first adult novel, The Midnight Club; and
was complete, I just kept buying copies of Gather. (Spoiler alert: If you’re on my Christmas list this year, there’s a very good chance that’s what you’re getting. It’s so good. Trust me.)
At my most recent stop, BEAR POND BOOKS in Montpelier, I was thrilled to note that the floors are once again creaking comfortingly, post flood. Equally encouraging to me was the sound of a young girl reading her chapter book out loud at full volume, curled up in a chair beside house tortoise Veruca’s habitat tank.
I plan to explore all the stores on the passport, and I won’t stop there. CROW
BOOKSELLERS WERE ONLY TOO READY TO OOH AND AHH OVER MY SELECTIONS AT THE REGISTER.
Ingvild Rishøi’s Norwegian Christmas tale Brightly Shining.
We hit four passport stores during a day trip down Route 7. At the BOOKSTORE in Brandon, a mom behind me in line watched me get my passport stamped and asked for details, which the enthusiastic bookseller shared. Her two tweens took copies for themselves and started planning where they would get stamps. My brother-in-law will love Sonny Boy, the new Al Pacino autobiography I didn’t know about until I saw it on display there.
The FLYING PIG BOOKSTORE in Shelburne, VERMONT BOOK SHOP in Middlebury and Phoenix’s Rutland location were all exemplars of the indie vibe: compelling handwritten staff recs, thoughtfully curated displays, and booksellers only too ready to ooh and ahh over my selections at the register. Once my gift list
• curated-gift boxes
• gift cards for jewelry making workshops & ear-piercing
• hand-crafted, Vermont-made jewelry
• candles, fragrance, accessories
• kids gifts
BOOKSHOP in Burlington is still one of my favorite indies, where I’ll always return for serendipitous browsing of new and used books. Newish INKLINGS CHILDREN’S BOOKS in Waitsfield isn’t on the passport either, but it is on my list to check out.
ANTIDOTE BOOKS , also not part of the 2024-25 tour, is just down the street from Everyone’s Books in Brattleboro, so I popped in to browse the tiny but impressive selection of small-press offerings and books by underrepresented poets and writers.
Personally, I recommend you give Gather a read — or ask Reiner for her pick. She’s a human, not an algorithm, and I guarantee her selection will send you on a journey. ➆
Learn more at vtbookstoretour.com.
Hibernation Syllabus
Three Vermont writers recommend books to get lost in this winter
COMPILED BY CHELSEA EDGAR • chelsea@sevendaysvt.com
The urge to read is mysterious and fickle. Sometimes I’ll go months without reading anything but the Dr. Bronner’s soap label while I’m in the shower. Then a book finds me, or I find it, and the next thing I know it’s nine hours later and I’m still on the couch, swaddled in a crumb-dusted blanket and surrounded by empty seltzer cans like a raccoon in its trash nest.
The trash-nest state is depressingly elusive for me, because there are simply too many books one could read, and it’s impossible to live inside all of them at once. That’s not how time works. And then a great sense of futility creeps in.
I cannot offer you a time machine to address this problem in your own life. But I can offer you some book recommendations from three Vermont writers — state poet laureate Bianca Stone, National Book Award-winning novelist M.T. Anderson and Kirkus Prizewinning author Ken Cadow — to help you pass the 7,000 years of winter still ahead of us. ➆
BIANCA STONE RECOMMENDS...
The Undiscovered Self: The Dilemma of the Individual in Modern Society by Carl Jung, Berkley, 128 pages. $12.95. A plea after the devastations of World War II, psychoanalyst Carl Jung emphasizes the urgency of self-reflection in the overwhelming and seductive sway of mass society. The illusion of statistical “truths” in which we stand in awe and our predisposition to blindly follow ideologies and societal trends all lead to a lack of critical thinking and loss of individuality. The all-too-familiar situation of projecting evil onto the other and avoiding uncomfortable aspects of our
own psyche comes at a devastating cost — on a micro and macro scale. To Jung, the way forward must be a personal encounter between individuals, with nothing less than dogged, steadfast soul-searching to make the unconscious conscious.
How to Read a Poem and Fall in Love With Poetry by Edward Hirsch, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 368 pages. $18.95.
Edward Hirsch’s stunning, accessible book on poetry is appropriate for all levels of experience. Hirsch emphasizes the relationality of poetry: “It is the social act of a solitary maker,” Hirsch notes. Deepening our engagement with poetry is, in fact, a vital act of self-discovery and discovery of one another. Hirsch shows poetry as it is: a vividly enjoyable experience that makes bearable the unbearable truths and mysteries of existence.
Metamorphoses by Ovid, translated by Stephanie McCarter, Penguin Classics, 608 pages. $22.
The interesting thing about myths (and all great poetry) is that they keep offering up more, even thousands of years later. We should continue to read the great epic poems because their stories continue to speak to the human condition. Translator Stephanie McCarter notes in her introduction that at the heart of this poem lies one constant theme: power and how it transforms us, both those who have it and those who don’t. We can see how important this issue remains!
Extremely Expensive Mystical Experiences for Astronauts by Dara Barrois/Dixon, Conduit Books & Ephemera, 80 pages. $18. Strangeness, feeling and a subtle, dark hilarity — any book by Dara Barrois/
Dixon is a win, but this latest has all the innovative, uncanny wisdom you can hope for. Here is a poet having fun (the title says it all), reveling in rich play, delighting in the mischievousness of language — but with distinct grief and complexity of emotion. Reading these poems, one feels ... well, not less alone. But more OK with that immense, crushing, innate human loneliness we carry around.
Bianca Stone is Vermont’s poet laureate. She lives in Brandon. Her most recent poetry collection is What Is Otherwise Infinite. She is the creative director of the Ruth Stone House, an organization dedicated to fostering poetry, poetic study, the arts, and the preservation of her grandmother Ruth Stone’s legacy and house in Goshen.
M.T. ANDERSON RECOMMENDS...
This Is How You Lose the Time War by Amal El-Mohtar and Max Gladstone, Saga Press, 224 pages. $16.99. Two assassins assigned to kill each other during a war fought throughout history on many worlds slowly come to realize that they might be in love. It’s a psychopathic sci-fi meet-cute, lushly poetic, richly imagined and sly. Yes, poetic sci-fi. It can happen.
This Land Is Their Land: The Wampanoag Indians, Plymouth Colony, and the Troubled History of Thanksgiving by David J. Silverman, Bloomsbury Publishing, 528 pages. $22. Famously, the Wampanoag sachem we call Massasoit extended hospitality to the starving Plymouth settlers and saved them from famine. Four decades later, those settlers hunted down Massasoit’s son Metacomet and slaughtered him in the midst of one of the bloodiest wars in our history. This nonfiction book forces us as New Englanders to ask what caused this shift from cautious friendship to violent conflict — and what this stain on our nation’s history means today.
The Blank Wall by Elisabeth Sanxay Holding, Persephone Books, 240 pages. $38.
It’s World War II, and Lucia Holley’s husband is off fighting while she tries
to hold together the home front and the family. She writes cheery letters to keep her husband’s spirits up — he doesn’t like to be bothered — but there’s a little problem: Her aged father has accidentally killed a man, and Lucia has been forced to hide the body. Soon, she attracts the attention of both a mobster and an investigating detective. Are they hitting on her or threatening her family? Elisabeth Sanxay Holding’s thrillers always play off the claustrophobic demands of midcentury femininity; this one will have you sweating bullets.
Hidden Systems: Water, Electricity, the Internet, and the Secrets Behind the Systems We Use Every Day by Dan Nott, Random House Graphic, 272 pages. $23.99.
This nonfiction graphic novel for young people won a Vermont Book Award this year, and it’s easy to see why. In simple drawings and thoughtful text, Dan Nott reintroduces us to utilities we take for granted, demystifying them, giving us some history, explaining how they work, and pointing out how the way we think about them blinds us to both their real costs and their miraculous benefits.
National Book Award winner M.T. Anderson is the author of Newbery Honor book Elf Dog & Owl Head and of Nicked, one of NPR’s best books of 2024. He lives in East Calais.
KEN CADOW RECOMMENDS...
The Tyranny of Merit: What’s Become of the Common Good? by Michael J. Sandel, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 288 pages. $28.
What is the story of how the education system has narrowed its focus to recognize — and celebrate — a tinier and tinier spectrum of actual learning? And what is the cost to democracy? How might our citizenry feel if mandatory schooling placed equal value on developing a person’s capacity to contribute, in addition to maintaining the hope that they’ll get into Harvard? Is our definition of
One Man’s Meat by E.B. White, Tilbury House Publishers, 296 pages. $16.95.
I have inscribed this book to myself: “This is Ken’s 4th copy of this book. Please do not let him loan it to you. Thank you.” This is a collection of essays and musings of the goings-on of the complexities of simple life on a small farm in a small Maine town, set against a backdrop of regular seasons and the irregularity of World War II. It may be hard to see the point of some of these essays, occasionally, except that the thoughts within them are of a world and people worth musing about. It’s nice to know that someone capable of such grand but simple eloquence also wrote for children. I do not like to be without it. Please do not let me loan it to you. Go buy your own.
“equality” that everyone deserves an equal chance to get into a top school and join the leisure class? Michael J. Sandel explains the need for American society to better laud the dignity of work, and the worker, at every level, and he offers profoundly possible solutions to make this shift.
James by Percival Everett, Doubleday, 320 pages. $28.
What a book. Such a page-turner from beginning to end. You begin to imagine what it must have been like never to be able to let your guard down or pause for a breath. James, aka “Jim” from Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, tells his story, a story of slavery and repression just before the Civil War.
How to Love a Forest: The Bittersweet Work of Tending a Changing World by Ethan Tapper, Broadleaf Books, 229 pages. $28.99.
Knowledge and know-how do not have to be two roads that diverge in a wood, be it yellow or any other color. This is a beautifully written account of a young man who is passionate about forestry and the planet but still manages to hunt and have a chain saw. Ken Cadow’s debut young adult novel, Gather, won the 2023 Kirkus Prize and was a National Book Award finalist. He lives in Norwich and is coprincipal of Oxbow High School.
The Last Vermont Winter
An essay on a changing season
BY KIMBERLY HARRINGTON
I’ve lived in Vermont for 22 winters. Twenty-one and a half, if you want to get technical about it. That’s just a flash, barely a generation, in a state that takes generations quite seriously. But I’m not a state, only a person, so that amount of time in my one life is quite a lot. And it’s especially quite a lot of winters for someone who doesn’t like winter all that much to begin with.
Just before Christmas 2002, my (then) husband and our two (now dead) dogs left Portland, Ore., moving away from a miscarriage and toward a job. We went on to have two Vermont children, who are now young adults, and yes, I know — I know — it doesn’t mean they will ever be considered true Vermonters. But it doesn’t matter. They’re already making their way out into the world.
Soon I will be, too.
This is my last winter in Vermont. Next year I will move out of state — to where, I still do not know — now single and free, accompanied by a dog that looks just like my first dog, except smaller and with stripes. Patterns are patterns, and don’t we just love to repeat them.
When we moved to Vermont all those years, somehow decades, ago, we drove a rented RV with the 800 number of the company blasted across the side. Remember 800 numbers? It not only advertised the rental RV business but also how much we didn’t know what we were doing, didn’t know how to expertly drive a boxy recreational vehicle, and also that we were possibly heading in the wrong direction, far north and into a blizzard.
But the direction we were headed in was right and true, even if that first winter was particularly brutal.
The storm we arrived in, at the beginning of January 2003, ended up dumping 17 inches of snow. The only time the daily high was above freezing all month was the 31st, when it finally crept up to a toasty 35 degrees. There were almost two weeks of subzero nights that month alone, in our drafty rental, a slowly returning-to-the-earth farmhouse in the middle of a field.
When I had interviewed the previous summer for my job at the design studio Jager Di Paola Kemp (now Solidarity of Unbridled Labour), Michael Jager asked if I snowboarded or skied. I told him no, and also? I wasn’t going to learn. And I never did. When I began working at JDK, I was
one of the few married people and probably the only non-snowboarder in the place. I didn’t want to draw any additional attention to my stodginess and advanced age (35, adorable), so I pretended that I thought this insane climate we had moved to was normal.
Mostly I didn’t comment on it at all, probably because if I opened my mouth I might scream.
When I walked from the studio to my car that first winter, wearing a coat I had previously considered a winter coat, the wind off the lake was so cutting that I felt like I wasn’t wearing any pants. One time a coworker (and new friend) and I were about to get in her car to go grab some lunch. She went to kick a chunk of dirty, snowy crud off her car, and a piece
of the car fell off with it. Weeks later, I was riding in the elevator with other coworkers and they started griping about yet another subzero day. That’s when I finally squeaked, “Are you saying this isn’t normal?” and someone replied, “Noooooo, not like this,” and I practically shouted, “THANK GOD.” But those first few winters in Vermont were reliably harsh, and everything about them — the abundant snow, the arctic temperatures, the godforsaken windchill — became normal to me. They were a test to be passed.
I was pregnant by the fall of our first year in Vermont. As every parent knows, having kids will force you to do a lot of things you would never choose to do otherwise. For instance, you will need to eke entertainment out of long, cold days
and months, or everyone will turn on each other and you will turn on yourself, too. We chopped down Christmas trees. We caroled in the (unheated) Old Round Church in Richmond and another time went sledding down that hill right outside of it, one of the most gorgeous places to risk frostbite and human collisions in all of Vermont. We dressed up for The Nutcracker , albeit while wearing snow boots, because it had iced overnight. My kids and I made a human chain trying to get from the truck to the sidewalk in front of the Flynn without sliding all the way down Main Street like a bowling ball heading helplessly toward a bunch of pins. We went on sleigh rides, so many sleigh rides — every chance I could get, I went on a sleigh ride. We took decadent hot chocolates to go from Lake Champlain Chocolates and watched probably a hundred sunsets, the sun sinking down
into a lake that wasn’t yet frozen while the temperature of the air plummeted, sending up cloud banks of steam fog into the air above.
I took my puffy snowsuited kids to Stowe to watch candy canes being made. Then a thrill of a very different kind happened on the way home. An out-ofstate car (of course it was an out-of-state car) either hadn’t clocked that cars were fully stopped on 89 heading north or they didn’t understand just how slick an inch of freshly fallen (and still falling) snow could be and went flying by, missing our car by a breath. Then it careened down the hill and spun out into the valley, sending up a huge plume of snow in its wake. I remember thinking: We could’ve died going to see candy canes. What kind of place is this?
THERE IS SOMETHING SO LAUGHABLY PURITANICAL ABOUT FEELING LIKE YOU MUST SUFFER FIRST TO DESERVE JOY.
I’ve survived all these Vermont winters by employing every strategy I could think of other than taking up snowshoeing. (Please, I’m begging you, stop pushing snowshoeing on me. The last thing I need is to be cold and slow.) I’d often hear from out-of-state friends and family that Vermont “looked fun” based on my photos, and I’d respond, “I make it fun.” I didn’t mean that I made it fun for anyone else; I meant I made it fun for myself. I grew up in a rural place, and one thing I learned firsthand is that rural places are not fun, and entertainment wasn’t simply handed to you. You couldn’t just walk down the street and go see a movie or browse a bookstore or catch a drink or three at the nice, not scary, bar, because none of those places existed. I learned early that you make your own fun or you die trying.
One winter, I took horseback riding lessons with my daughter inside a somewhat heated barn, even though I spent most of that time worried about getting thrown, breaking both wrists and not being able to work. Another winter, one of my best friends and I wore vintage fur coats and drove out to Underhill to be early in line for the first incarnation of Poorhouse Pies doughnuts, then walked around Mills Riverside Park eating doughnuts and taking photos of each other, because why not. What else was I going to do? Ski? Be serious.
I wanted to attend better holiday parties, so we started throwing them. Every year it took at least two weeks to decorate for it and an entire week to recover. Some years, it snowed on the night of the party in early December. The magic of it. The absolute and undeniable magic of it. In the thick of those parties, I’d head outside, a little (a lot) tipsy, and take a photo of the party from my front yard, with the living room picture window acting as a frame. The glow and the music and the laughter and the tree — it was everything I had wanted.
One winter, when Lake Champlain froze over, my little kids and I walked all the way out to the breakwater and stood on it — a vantage point we never had before and I haven’t had since. It felt like all of Burlington was out there on the ice, freezing and happy. I remember being in awe that in just a few months we’d be swimming in that lake. Living with extreme seasons will endlessly mess with you. It’ll convince you that you’ll never see a blade of green grass again, and alternately that you’ll never be cold again. Your sensory memory purges itself regularly, like a security camera, just so you’ll stay.
I don’t share any of these memories as some sort of proof that I’m an exceptional person or mother, or even a good one. Some of it was deeply boring, too cold, and often I couldn’t wait for it to be over. My kids inevitably whined or spun out of control or smacked each other, as kids will do. Winter is hard, and it will always look better in pictures, because who can hear anyone scream? But as with anything you look back on, once it’s gone forever you get to be nostalgic about it. You put something good in the bank, and these are the returns.
It’s funny to loathe something but also not want it to change. Early on, the occasional mild winter felt like a relief, even a gift, to me personally. But a run of them is alarming. Every time I arrive at a spring that feels marginally warmer than the winter turned out to be, I wonder if I earned it. There is something so laughably puritanical about feeling like you must suffer first to deserve joy. I may not be a true Vermonter, but having been born in Rhode Island and raised in Massachusetts, I am a New Englander through and through.
The first winter I lived in Vermont, the lake froze over. It went on to freeze four of those first five winters. In the past 10 years, though, it’s only done so three times. We’re not imagining these changes. I assumed winter would always
6h-phoenixbooks121824
be Real Winter in Vermont, because it was unfathomable to believe otherwise. It’s the same way we assume our lives will somehow always stay the same even though, of course, that’s impossible. Living creatures and ecosystems, climate and relationships change with time. Children grow up, families evolve, friendships end, and after a while working to make the place where you live feel fun can start to feel like work you’re no longer interested in doing.
According to the Agency of Natural Resources, the last 11-year period in Vermont was the warmest 11-year period on record. I’m not a climatologist, but you don’t need to be to notice obvious things. Winter used to be an enemy I’d attempt to temporarily befriend, but over time, it’s become more like someone I tried so hard to push away only to realize that
There is no perfect place to live. I’ve moved enough in this country to know. It’s always been necessary to pick your poison and your pleasure — country or city, earthquakes or tornadoes, staggering beauty or the choice of more than three restaurants. But now my calculations feel more extreme — what poisons am I willing to ingest, and which pleasures might outweigh them, if any? Do I want more real winters, and exactly what does “real winter” even look and feel like now? As we all know, Vermont was considered a climate refuge right up until it wasn’t, until devastating once-every-100-year floods hit two summers, back-to-back, on the exact same day. It’s harder than ever to predict the future based on past events, because the past is the past and no longer a pattern.
For some people, Vermont is simply a place to visit, to live in their second (or third or fourth) home, a place to perpet-
IT FELT LIKE ALL OF BURLINGTON WAS OUT THERE ON THE ICE, FREEZING AND HAPPY.
they may be gone for good. I’ve realized that the battle is what made it a little entertaining, actually. Look, shoveling sucks and mincing along in my boots, afraid to break every bone in my body after a spell of deceptively cheerfully named “wintry mix,” is not something I’m going to miss. But I realize now that forcing myself to make the most of it, even part of the time, is what made living in Vermont so specific, bizarre, entertaining and endearing.
Although my desire to leave has nothing to do with weather, I’m surprised that seeing winters diminish has left me with a feeling of sorrow. It’s like watching a big, strong man — Old Man Winter, I suppose — become erratic, frail and more vulnerable with time.
When I find myself staring at the brown, bare trees and the brown, bare ground in January, I wonder what the point is. And with kids grown, there isn’t much I feel forced to do any longer. I stopped going to Christmas tree lightings long ago. I thought I would always line up for sleigh rides (or now, wagon rides, because the ground usually isn’t frozen enough, nor is there enough snow at the end of December for the big sleighs and their runners to glide), but I no longer bother. It’s time to do other things.
uate as a sanitized, idealized solution to everything. But what I learned by living here, even as a flatlander, is that it takes a certain type of person to tough it out. To not arrive only for the easy seasons or long weekends to capture it in stills and videos and report back to “civilization.” It takes a certain type of person to fling themselves into seasonality even when it’s not easy, even when it’s downright miserable and even as it changes. It takes a certain type of person to notice that life and climate and expectations can change more than you could have ever anticipated in less than a generation. And it takes a certain type of person to still feel grateful to have been welcomed anyway, to have been invited to make a life and to raise a family here. I tried to be that type of person, though sometimes I wonder how much I succeeded. I’m leaving, after all. ➆
Kimberly Harrington is a creative director and the author of But You Seemed So Happy: A Marriage, in Pieces and Bits and Amateur Hour: Motherhood in Essays and Swear Words . Her work has appeared in the New Yorker , the New York Times and McSweeney’s , and she reviews books for the Washington Post . She also writes the best-selling Substack “HONEY STAY SUPER.”
in association with to over 1,760 Volunteers, M&T Bank, Hotel Champlain, and Global Foundries for making this incredible day happen for our Burlington community.
HOW MUCH DOES BURLINGTON CARE OVER 44 YEARS?
19,800
ATTENDEES HAVE ENJOYED ATTENDING THIS PARTY IN 44 YEARS
660 STAFF MEMBERS HAVE WORKED THE PARTY OVER 1,760 VOLUNTEERS
GLOBALFOUNDRIES ORNAMENT TRADITION STARTED IN 2000 & ALONG WITH M&T BANK
7,400 HAVE BEEN HANDED OUT FOR KIDS TO GIVE AS PRESENTS
11,000 GIFT BAGS FOR CHILDREN HANDED OUT
17 DIFFERENT AGENCIES ATTEND EACH YEAR
6,600 INSTANT PHOTOS TAKEN
CLAUSSEN’S HAS DONATED 50+ POINSETTIAS EACH YEAR FOR THE PARTY SINCE 2000 — THAT’S ALMOST
1,210 TOTAL POINSETTIAS
HILTON HAS SERVED OVER
19,675 MEALS AND SUPPORTED THE PARTY BY LOGGING NEARLY
9,240 HOURS
Murder’s Cooking
Author Sarah Stewart Taylor used community cookbooks as inspiration for her latest mystery
Tired of unpacking boxes in his new Vermont home, police detective Franklin Warren steps onto the porch for air and finds a wicker basket filled with rustic delicacies. They include “a slab of yellow butter, flakes of salt glistening on the surface … a loaf of bread, still warm, the crust a deep brown … [and] a jar of red jam — raspberry, according to the precisely lettered label.”
The year is 1965, Interstate 91 has just been built, and Warren has fled from a personal disaster in Boston to the fictional Vermont town of Bethany, where he joins the state police force. Just moments after tucking the leftovers from the basket into his “giant white Kelvinator” refrigerator, he’s summoned to the neighbor’s house to answer a phone call. A barn on Agony Hill has burned down, and a body was discovered in the wreckage.
Over the course of the next 300 pages, Warren will investigate the case, fry eggs in a cast-iron pan, wrestle with his past and eat clam chowder at the local inn. Whether or not he solves the mystery is something you’ll have to find out on your own.
Released in August, Agony Hill is Hartland author Sarah Stewart Taylor’s ninth mystery novel and the first entry in a new series, which will center on Warren and a cast of intriguing small-town New England characters in the years just before the author’s birth.
She learned early lessons about food traditions from her family. Taylor was brought up on Long Island, but every summer the family packed up
“I was born in 1971,” she said. “It’s always been a little bit of an obsession for me, wondering about the period right before I came on the scene.”
One aspect of the era that fascinates her is the food. “As I imagine [characters’] lives, I always think about what they’re eating and what they’re cooking,” said Taylor, an enthusiastic cook who consulted vintage cookbooks as part of her research. “I really wanted to give readers the flavor of what life in Vermont was like during this period.”
I REALLY WANTED TO GIVE READERS THE FLAVOR OF WHAT LIFE IN VERMONT WAS LIKE DURING THIS PERIOD.
SIDEdishes
UP FOOD NEWS
BY JORDAN BARRY • jbarry@sevendaysvt.com
Miso Curry to Open in Bolton Valley’s Timberline Lodge
JORDAN and MOMO ANTONUCCI have slowly built their ski-resort food empire in the 10 years since launching their MISO HUNGRY food truck at Jay Peak Resort. When Bolton Valley’s recently renovated Timberline Lodge opens this winter, they’ll finally move inside.
The couple’s newest shop, MISO CURRY, will be open on weekends with traditional Japanese curries built on a vegan base full of root vegetables and served over rice, Jordan said. Topping options include katsu — a tender, panko-crusted pork loin — and crispy, air-fried veggie croquettes. Also on the menu are miso soup, sides such as edamame and seaweed salad, and a gluten-free rice bowl topped with tamari- and maple syrup-braised shiitake mushrooms and tofu.
“Almost every ski lodge in Japan has a curry shop,” Jordan said. “We want to honor that Japanese ski-food experience and also create a menu that’s both efficient and made to order.”
The project is led by regional manager JON COHEN, who has been with the company for several years and previously ran an izakaya restaurant in Jackson Hole, Wyo.
The couple and their team will continue to operate the Miso Hungry ramen truck at Jay Peak, as well as
ski-up MISO TOH KOME huts there and at Bolton, Stowe and Sugarbush, serving onigiri and Momo’s miso soup.
While the Antonuccis live closest to Jay, Jordan described Bolton as “a secret gem in Vermont,” adding that “We love that place. The community has really opened their arms to us over the years.”
Domaine La Garagista Adds a Tasting Room in West Addison
Fans of Barnard-based DOMAINE LA GARAGISTA now have opportunities to taste flights of its wines in Addison County. Owners DEIRDRE HEEKIN and CALEB BARBER have farmed a vineyard near the shores of Lake Champlain in West Addison since 2013. Now, the couple have transformed part of the property’s unassuming house into a wine bar-style tasting room inspired by winemaker-run cavistes and frascas in Europe. They held their first pop-up in LITTLE FORÊT on December 15.
The wildflower-filled vineyard at 5646 Lake Street, which Heekin
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Murder’s Cooking
moved to the New Hampshire side of the Upper Valley for two months. There, Taylor’s grandmother, an avid gardener, “cooked in a way that really celebrated the fresh produce of the summer,” she said. Many of the recipes her grandma made, including preserved and canned goods, harked back to the Great Depression and the postwar era — “traditions that were born of necessity,” Taylor recalled.
These days, Taylor lives in a classic white Vermont farmhouse with her husband — former state senator Matt Dunne — and the two of their three children who are still in high school. They grow copious amounts of kale and Swiss chard in a large garden, raise sheep and chickens, keep bees, experiment with apple grafting, and grow blueberries.
When this writer visited, Taylor was baking a loaf of graham bread in one of two ovens that sit side by side in her black, six-burner vintage stove with cherry-red knobs. A homegrown bird roasted in the other — a meal for the evening’s dinner guests. A hutch in the corner was piled with classic Polish pottery glazed white with deep blue accents, and a central island held appliances, ingredients for the loaves she was making and a signed baseball in a wooden basket.
Most of Taylor and Dunne’s cookbooks are tucked away in a bookshelf beneath the kitchen counter. But the oak kitchen table was stacked with the ones she consulted while writing Agony Hill, including the cloth-covered Stowe Community Church Cookbook , a slim green volume called The Vermont Good Luck Cook Book and a paint-speckled copy of Elsie Masterton’s Blueberry Hill Menu Cookbook
“Vermont and northern New England were such an interesting place in those days,” Taylor said. “American cuisine was looking outward to the world. People [had come] back from World War II with these experiences of European cooking.”
Thrift was another strong influence on Vermont cuisine in this period. In Agony Hill, farmer and housewife Sylvie Weber must hurry to cook and can a batch of berry preserves before the fruit crop molds, even though she just lost her husband in the barn fire. The bereaved farm family needs all the income it can get. In other scenes, Weber prepares simple, economical meals for her four young boys.
Meanwhile, Detective Warren is shown to have a secret talent for Italian cuisine, and his well-to-do neighbor, Alice Baldwin — who is involved in several mysteries of her own — has a helper to stand over her stove stirring chicken stock.
Taylor, who identified herself as the primary cook in her household, said her cooking style is a mix of the ones readers will notice in her characters. She prepares seasonal and homegrown ingredients with global flair.
“I’m such a fan of stews and
Yotam Ottolenghi and sometimes with Greek herbs and “a lot of white wine,” she said. One of the couple’s children is now a vegetarian, which has pushed Taylor to explore “how to put vegetables front and center in more of our meals.”
Despite her long-standing love of food, Taylor’s previous mystery books, the Sweeney St. George series and the Maggie D’arcy series, don’t feature quite as much cooking as her new work, she noted. What they all have in common is being rooted in places she loves, including Long Island, Ireland and Vermont.
Taylor said the biggest influence on the food in Agony Hill was the classic volume Out of Vermont Kitchens. The 1947 edition, compiled by the Trinity Mission of Trinity Episcopal Church in Rutland and the Women’s Service League of the Cathedral Church of St. Paul in Burlington, features handwritten recipes from parishioners accompanied by charming, childlike illustrations. “I just love the personality in that … just imagining the women who wrote those recipes,” Taylor said.
One thing she noticed as she delved into historical volumes was differences between the recipes that came from contributors who lived in rural areas and those who inhabited bigger towns and cities.
“Rutland was quite cosmopolitan,” Taylor said, as was Brattleboro. “Maybe some of the women had traveled or had experiences outside of Vermont. There were some French and Italian recipes. You’re also seeing some Chinese inspiration, although some of the recipes were not that authentic.”
Back in her fictional Bethany of 1965, the cuisine still hews to classic New England fare, such as maple baked beans. Readers of Agony Hill will find secrets, lies and stories aplenty, served up with slabs of fresh bread and wedges of cheddar cheese.
Now that the highway has been built, making it easier to move food into and out of Vermont, some things in this small burg are about to change. Perhaps the differences will come to light in sequels to Agony Hill
casseroles, things I can make early in the day and have going in the oven during the colder months,” she said. “That’s my sweet spot.”
The lambs that she and Dunne raise appear regularly on their menus, sometimes as a shawarma inspired by chef
The second book in Taylor’s series, Hunter’s Heart Ridge, is due on August 5. Set about three months after the events of Agony Hill, it deals with a shooting at a men’s hunting and fishing club, an early snowstorm, a dinner party host with a hidden agenda, and an exceptionally fudgy chocolate cake. ➆
INFO
Agony Hill by Sarah Stewart Taylor, Minotaur Books, 320 pages. $28.
SIDEdishes
called “magical in inexplicable ways,” is responsible for all of La Garagista’s reserve wines, including Vinu Jancu, Loups-Garoux, the Champagnemethod Cybele and several oxidative wines.
The Little Forêt pop-ups offer flights of those wines, as well as bottle sales. Barber also prepares a “cute snack” to pair with the wines, including various crostini, using local ingredients such as AGRICOLA FARM’s Monti Verdi Salumi, he said.
The space is a fitting tribute to La Garagista’s name and earliest days: It’s a former two-car garage attached to the house Heekin and Barber purchased with the vineyard in 2021. They’ve
outfitted its two rooms with elegant candelabras, greenery, long tables and a floor-to-ceiling painting of Dionysus that was once a French stage backdrop.
Little Forêt is larger than the pop-up space at their home farm in Barnard (known as Forêt), the couple said, and will host most of their tasting events through the winter.
“The roads in Barnard last winter were really bad, and there’s a flat, paved road here,” Heekin said with a laugh. They also welcome the chance to connect with consumers in Burlington and the rest of the Champlain Valley, she said.
The tasting room will open for pop-ups “every two or three weeks,” Heekin said; dates and plans for “other fun things” will be announced on social media and in the winery’s newsletter. ➆
The
King Arthur
Baking Company Big Book of Bread
Jessica Battilana, Martin Philip and Melanie Wanders, Simon Element, 464 pages. $45.
Like any self-respecting people who were privileged enough to spend lots of time at home during the pandemic, our household took up regular sourdough bread baking for a while. In the dark recesses of the fridge, an abandoned jar of starter still languishes.
The comprehensive new bread bible from Norwich-based King Arthur Baking is for those like us, those better than us who kept up the habit and those who’ve so far only dreamed of baking their own loaves. If you fall into any of those categories, this book has your back … uh, your bread.
The 125 recipes range from quick flatbreads to relatively simple pan breads to complex, multiday endeavors such as chocolate levain. They also include recipes for such bread-adjacent dishes as Chinesestyle pan-fried buns and the Norwegian potato pancakes called lefse.
As one might expect from the self-anointed “premier baking authority” in America, the directions are crystal clear. Many cross-reference a set of introductory, photo-illustrated, step-bystep guides, from shaping a loaf to adding steam to your oven. Even though you’re baking bread the old-fashioned way, you can always follow one of the QR codes to videos of foundational methods.
The two recipes I’ve tried so far have been hits from both baking and eating perspectives. Seedy Cracker Bread is an easy route to a near replica of a nutty, crunchy Trader Joe’s cracker I buy regularly. (A minor quibble: The ingredients list whole rye flour, but the directions call it pumpernickel flour. Not even the two-page “Understanding Rye” reference explained that those are the same.)
I guess I had rye on my mind, because I then made the Pickle Rye pan loaf. Speckled with caraway and flaky salt, the bread was beautiful and delicious. It wins extra points for using pickle juice, another thing I often squirrel away in the back of my fridge.
M.P.
Bread & Chocolate
Short reviews of two recently published Vermont food books
BY JORDAN BARRY & MELISSA PASANEN jbarry@sevendaysvt.com, pasanen@sevendaysvt.com
Wild Chocolate: Across the Americas in Search of Cacao’s Soul Rowan Jacobsen, Bloomsbury Publishing, 288 pages. $28.99. I’ve always trusted Rowan Jacobsen’s sense of taste. When the James Beard Award-winning, Calais-based food writer turns his palate and pen to an obscure aspect of our food culture, there’s a good reason. Whether his subject is oysters, the terroir of maple syrup or — in his latest book, published on October 8 — wild cacao hidden in Central American and Amazonian rainforests, he weaves his deeply researched findings into a delicious tale.
This tale has a little more danger than his others. I’m not sure what’s scarier: being greeted by rifle-toting drug lord lackeys on a private jungle airstrip or the inequitable realities of the global cacao supply chain. Jacobsen observes that mass-produced bars taste “less like chocolate than like a vanilla-scented candle recovered from a warehouse after an electrical fire.” Seeking wild chocolate instead, he found flavors that “dove into a deep, dark place, and then, just when I thought I had a handle on it, the bottom fell out and it dove some more.”
Jacobsen touts the ancient plant’s almost psychedelic vibrancy while also celebrating that of the people working to find and preserve it, including a German agroforesty expert and a young Brazilian tree-to-bar chocolate maker. In between their stories and accounts of his own soggy slogs down rainforest rivers, Jacobsen explains the nitty-gritty of the chocolate biz, from terminology to price fluctuations on the commodity market.
The gold-wrapped bar that started Jacobsen’s adventure cost $13 back in 2009, which “felt insane,” he wrote. Somehow, though, his quest leaves you thinking it should have cost a heck of a lot more.
culture
IHot Topic
n the prehistoric past, Greenland was green. Paul Bierman, an environmental science professor in the University of Vermont’s Rubenstein School of Environment and Natural Resources, can now say with confidence that this was true about 418,000 years ago — more recently than the millions of years ago researchers had thought.
Bierman calls that discovery his only “Eureka!” moment in a 40-year career. And he would never have made it without the Cold War-era researchers who spent years living and working year-round in a city buried deep inside the Greenland ice sheet.
In the 1960s, when Bierman was a child, hundreds of men drilled nearly a mile through the Arctic ice and into the frozen sediment below to extract core samples for study. Decades later, Bierman and his team used those samples, and nearly $3 million in National Science Foundation grants, to prove not only that Greenland was once a verdant landscape but that the ice sheet is more vulnerable to human-induced climate change than anyone suspected. Its
disappearance, which could happen again by century’s end, would have dire consequences for the more than 3 billion people in the world who live along a seacoast.
Bierman, 63, o ers his findings to a general audience in When the Ice Is Gone: What a Greenland Ice Core Reveals About Earth’s Tumultuous History and Perilous Future. Equal parts climate science, history lesson and cautionary tale, the book tells the story of Camp Century, a subsurface U.S. military base originally conceived to deter a Soviet attack over the North Pole.
But the military soon realized that even milethick Arctic ice is not a stable environment. The polar outpost was abandoned in 1967, and many of its precious core samples, rarer even than moon rocks, were lost — or so scientists long believed.
When the Ice Is Gone recounts how those core samples were discovered decades later in a Denmark freezer and revealed to contain plant particles
nothing from this. But the book isn’t set up that way.
I didn’t want to write a “red” or “blue” or “liberal” or “conservative” book on climate change. I specifically emphasized the role of the U.S. military in the earliest research into climate change, and I think that broadens the book’s appeal. I’ve probably gotten a half-dozen emails from people, some of whom worked in Greenland, some who were in the military or worked for the Army Corps of Engineers, who really appreciated it.
I found it interesting that Camp Century’s mission was primarily military, with the scientific research being somewhat secondary. Yet it was the research that proved the most enduring and valuable.
hundreds of thousands of years old. Using repurposed particle accelerators from the 1960s to count ultra-rare radioactive isotopes, researchers pinpointed the age of those fossils, which were too old to carbon date.
A fascinating and easily accessible read, When the Ice Is Gone has attracted considered press attention since its release in August. In part, that’s because the book is free of scientific jargon and a political agenda — beyond sounding the alarm about an imminent catastrophic sea level rise.
Bierman, the subject of an October 11, 2023, cover story in this paper called “On Thin Ice,” spoke to Seven Days recently about his book and the public’s reaction to it.
Did your book generate much pushback from climate-change deniers?
I have not had any hard-core climatechange denial. I’ve published papers before where I got that kind of stu , but
I’ll take a small issue with your leading statement. Camp Century was definitely military, but the military was heavily invested in scientists who were trying to understand the cryosphere [the frozen parts of Earth that include snow, ice and permanently frozen ground]. Obviously, the military was invested mostly for operational reasons, to understand how snow behaves and how it changes with temperature. You can’t run military vehicles reliably across the ice sheet, and you can’t fight in Arctic theaters. It was a military-forward base, but they did so much fundamental engineering research at Camp Century, too.
I feel strongly that this was [Swiss scientist] Henri Bader and his influence on the development of the science from 1947 through the mid-1960s. He was the one who talked the Army brass into caring about the fundamental research and then paying for it. So I put a lot of this on one man’s vision to talk the Army into spending six years drilling a hole and studying the basic physics of snow and ice. Without him, this project wouldn’t have happened.
So Camp Century’s original goal wasn’t to do scientific research but to further the ability of the U.S. military to operate in a harsh Arctic environment and deter the Soviets?
That’s completely right. Their goal was to fortify Greenland and have outposts there and show the Soviets that we’ve got missiles and soldiers and planes that we can deliver over the top [of the world]. But to do that, the Army realized they first
George Woodard’s New Children’s Book Combines Cows and Christmas Cheer
BY HANNAH FEUER • hfeuer@sevendaysvt.com
Nothing screams Vermont quite like the job title “farmer-filmmaker.”
George Woodard, 72, has spent the past few decades balancing two passions: cows and movies. While working on his family farm in Waterbury Center, he wrote and directed the 2023 film e Farm Boy, a World War II-era love story based on Woodard’s parents, and e Summer of Walter Hacks, a coming-of-age Western, released in 2009. Both movies starred his son, Henry.
COURTESY OF SILVER
Woodard
Now, Woodard can add “author” to his job description. In November, the farmer self-published his first children’s book, e Christmas Calf. e black-and-white picture book tells the story of a 9-year-old boy named Henry who lives on a dairy farm and witnesses some magic while helping a cow give birth on Christmas Eve.
Woodard began writing the book 12 years ago, based on a story he’d told his son. is past year, he finally completed it, waking up at 4 a.m. each day to draw at his kitchen table, first in pencil, then with pen and ink. e book took so long to complete partly because Woodard had trouble with the ending. He said he wanted to avoid
the moralistic tone of many children’s stories.
“I just wanted the adventure, not the lesson,” Woodard said.
e black-andwhite illustrations may also seem unusual for a children’s book, but Woodard appreciates how the gray scale lets him experiment with shading and light.
e aesthetic mirrors the style of Woodard’s black-andwhite films. Woodard said he thought about the book’s illustrations like cinematic frames, with establishing shots, reaction shots and pictures from the character’s point of view. e result is more than 60 drawings that together resemble a film storyboard, with multiple illustrations per page helping the tale unfold.
“ e pictures actually came pretty easy,” Woodard said, “because it was sort of like, well, I’ve already made a couple of movies.”
No matter the medium, Woodard said he tends to write what he knows, which is farm life. ough Woodard stopped milking cows three years ago, he still raises beef cattle. e book features educational footnotes about cows, including that a heifer is a young female cow that hasn’t had a calf, and “Come, Boss!” is a traditional call used to herd cows in from the pasture.
Next, Woodard is working on a screenplay about Prohibition, which he hopes to film next summer. He also has ideas for three other children’s books, though he’s not sure when those will materialize.
“We’ll see,” Woodard said. “’Cause I still got to go to the barn and take care of animals, too.” ➆
e Christmas Calf, Old Cuss Press, 45 pages, $24.95, georgewoodard.com
A pride of cheetahs with dice for hats. A wise man from a nativity crèche, hawking a tin full of glittering baubles. An army of plastic dinosaurs, aiming tiny plastic guns. Miniature chickens, towering over an eensy-weensy farmer. ese are some of the scenarios in artist Clark Russell’s “Riddleville,” an installation that occupies most of his downtown Burlington apartment and that he has now documented in a photo book of the same name from Fomite Press.
“Prehistoric” Riddleville, Russell said, dates back to his childhood in St. Louis: “I commandeered the Ping-Pong table in the basement and made my first diorama.”
When he was a University of Vermont student in the early 1980s, playing with the punk band No Fun and living in a third-floor apartment near the Flynn, his old freezer grew an ice cave (as they tended to do).
“ at’s where ‘ancient’ Riddleville started,” he said. “And then it manifested itself onto the top of the refrigerator, then it started climbing the walls, and then it spilled out onto the floor.”
“Modern” Riddleville, as Russell calls it, occupies 90 percent of that same apartment, where he has lived for more than 40 years. It consists mainly
forming 37 freestanding vertical towers with metal bases, as well as 32 “pilasters” affixed to the wall and an unknown number of wall-mounted panels. All of them sprout shelflike protrusions that hold Russell’s dioramas, which he calls “scenarios” — hundreds and hundreds of them. Each scenario is an assemblage of objects ranging from scrap metal to plastic toys and ceramic tchotchkes to delicate glassware. Russell sources his materials from the ReSOURCE on Pine Street, Queen City Steel, and other thrifters and recyclers. Some of the objects are his own childhood toys. People also give him things, especially since the 2022 exhibition of Riddleville at the Amy E. Tarrant
Russell describes Riddleville as a kind of compulsion, something fun to do outside of his “real” art of abstract paper collages and assemblage metal sculptures. But Riddleville is very “real”: Like much contemporary art of the past 40 years, Riddleville is environmental and site specific, having taken over his whole apartment. It’s reminiscent of Sarah Sze’s intricate installations, woven into the fabric of a building.
Riddleville’s scenarios suggest narratives, some direct — a Playmobil Michael Brown faces off against the Ferguson, Mo., police — and some cryptic or silly, which is in line with the artist’s personality. Russell is outgoing and friendly, a natural storyteller more than a modernist.
Given that, readers may be surprised to find that Riddleville in book form is spare, with no text (not even page numbers). It opens with an establishing shot of Russell’s living room full of towers; each subsequent page depicts a detail from the installation. is selective approach allows the reader to think about the story in each scene or the visual relationships between objects without being as overwhelmed as one is by a real-life visit to Riddleville. Russell’s photos offer the reader room for interpretation.
e strength of Riddleville is its spread, its volume of chaos, its celebration of the tacky junk we adore as children and discard as adults. Flipping through the book is a smaller experience. But it gives readers space to imagine themselves back at their own basement Ping-Pong table, reprising an abandoned game of pretend. ➆
INFO
Riddleville by Clark Russell, Fomite Press, 118 pages, $25, fomitepress.com
had to understand the theater they were operating in.
I don’t think it’s a lot di erent today, when the military is very aware of climate change and its strategic implications [for] ensuring that their mission goes on.
What came out of Camp Century that lasted wasn’t the ability to put a base inside an ice sheet. It was this ice core, as well as the knowledge of snow and ice that came from the people who worked there for 20 years.
Has your research, and the press coverage of it, sparked a deeper interest in polar science generally?
I think so. There’s a lot more talk about it and a lot more people jumping on the “Hey, what’s under the ice?” bandwagon … to look at this really important and detailed sediment record under the ice sheet.
The ice is really useful. We can learn so much from ice cores. But it’s timelimited, because the ice in Greenland isn’t very old. The oldest is about 125,000 years old. But with the sediment, we have information going back about 400,000 years, and potentially back to the beginning of the ice sheets 2.7 million or more years ago.
Was it at all fortuitous that you made this discovery relatively late in your career?
This project never would have been as successful if I had done this as a junior faculty member rather than when I had 30 years under my belt, because I know so much more now about glaciers and fossils and how sediment systems work. It was a
FROM WHEN THE ICE IS GONE
Snow is exquisitely frozen water. Every marvelous crystal is unique. It’s fragile, intriguing stuff that falls from the sky in all sorts of shapes and sizes. Snow also carries memories of when and where it crystallized high in the atmosphere. e frozen molecules of water record, in the isotopic composition of each of their oxygen and hydrogen atoms, how cold the air was when they froze and where the air came from. At birth, snowflakes wrap themselves around tiny bits of earth and sea suspended in the atmosphere. Locked to these condensation nuclei, they begin a trip from the clouds to Earth’s surface. If a snowflake lands on an ice sheet, its journey back to the ocean and the atmosphere could take thousands, even millions, of years ... Camp Century was truly a city under the ice. As a military base inside an ice sheet, the camp was a unique outpost of humanity in what many have described as a featureless icescape without end. Over a hundred men lived there isolated for months at a time under the snow, cut off from the world by blizzards, magnetic storms, frigid temperatures, and howling winds. Jon Fresch, an Army photographer who first went to Greenland when he was eighteen years old, described living at Camp Century this way when we talked: “I liken it maybe to being on a submarine because
stroke of luck that it landed on me when I was more experienced.
Glacier archaeologists are racing to recover and document human artifacts that are emerging from polar ice for fear that they’ll disintegrate once they’re exposed to the elements. Is there a similar concern in your field? Absolutely. Lonnie Thompson at Ohio State University has been coring ice in the tropics, on glaciers that are clinging to the tops of very high mountains. Many of the glaciers he cored 25 to 30 years ago are now gone due to climate change. In
once you went down, for the most part, unless you had a job that took you above ground or onto the surface, you had no reason to be up there because when it stormed it stormed, and you didn’t want to get lost, that’s for sure.” … ose investigating the science of climate change in 1958 were like early adolescents, curious but confused. People like Maynard Miller wondered why many Alaskan glaciers were retreating, and the military was worried about its Arctic operations should polar ice begin to melt. Some thought that Earth was getting warmer, but there was no agreement on why, how much, or what drove the warming … Ice is by nature fragile, and as Earth warms, our library of climate history is flowing away in murky streams of glacial meltwater and into the world’s oceans. Soon, racks of cores checked out from Farrier’s ice-sheet libraries may be all we have left, analogous to the surviving fragments of Greek tragedies from the Library of Alexandria, incomplete but tantalizing reflections of their playwrights’ greatness.
the 1970s, people looked at his [National Science Foundation] proposals and said that not only would he fail but he would die doing it. But he didn’t die, nor did he fail. He opened up a window. Now, there are glaciers for which the only ice we have [is] in the freezers at Ohio State.
Has your work attracted more applicants to your program at UVM? Yes, which is a little ironic because the grant is in the wrap-up phase right now. But the thing that I’m most excited about is the breadth of people who seem to be interested in the book. It’s not just
scientists. It’s not just historians. I’ve gotten so many emails out of the blue from people who said, “I read your book. This is so fascinating.” That makes me feel really good, because my goal was to reach a broader audience. ➆
This interview was edited and condensed for clarity and length.
INFO
When
Hobby Hand-Me-Downs
Secondhand arts and crafts supply store the Makery opens in Burlington
MARY ANN LICKTEIG • maryann@sevendaysvt.com
Used cars have long been offered for sale. Ditto secondhand clothes, shoes, books and even housewares. But art supplies?
Avid crafter and thrifter Arianna Soloway read an article about secondhand arts and crafts supply stores a couple of years ago and thought, How do we not have one here? Burlington is full of artists and environmentally conscious people, she said last week. “It just seemed like the place for one.”
Hours: Mon-Sat 11am-7pm Sunday 11am- 4pm
Cannabis has not been analyzed or approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). For use by individuals 21 years of age and older or registered qualifying patient only. KEEP THIS PRODUCT AWAY FROM CHILDREN AND PETS. DO NOT USE IF PREGNANT OR BREASTFEEDING. Possession or use of cannabis may carry signi cant legal penalties in some jurisdictions and under federal law. It may not be transported outside of the state of Vermont. The e ects of edible cannabis may be delayed by two hours or more. Cannabis may be habit forming and can impair concentration, coordination, and judgment. Persons 25 years and younger may be more likely to experience harm to the developing brain. It is against the law to drive or operate machinery when under the in uence of this product. National Poison Control Center 1-800-222-1222. Cannabis Dispensary Ha y Holidays to One and A ! 10 Railroad Street, Suite B, Morrisville 802-851-8735
And now it is. Soloway opened the Makery on Pine Street on November 30. Fabric, quilting supplies, yarn, scrapbooking materials, beads, art kits and books are among many items tastefully displayed. The store, surrounded by art studios and located in the back of the building that houses Great Harvest Bread, is already attracting repeat customers.
Visiting for the third time in two weeks, Skunk Bouchard popped in just after the doors opened last Thursday and left with a handful of treasures, including six 2-inch-long tins with sliding lids. “I don’t know what I’m going to do with them,” the 36-year-old artist said, though turning them into tiny dioramas is one possibility. At 10 cents apiece, the tins were not a risky investment.
Most items sell for roughly half of what they’d cost new.
As excited as most people are to take home supplies — “You’re like a kid in a candy store!” Allison Belisle said to her mother, Sandy Belisle, who gushed over yarn — others are equally thrilled to drop theirs off. The Makery gives store credit for donations and accepts a wide array of items — school supplies, too. It asks that they be free of smells, moths or other pests.
Kitty Daly dropped by to donate two boxes of books and yards upon yards of fabric. She is a dressmaker who has sewn professionally for 55 years. “I’m retired, and I just need to clean out,” she said. Her donation contained mostly wools and silks. Interfacings and linings may come next.
Minutes later, Alicia Terkel set on the Makery’s front counter a heavy box of fine yarns wound onto giant commercial spools. “I have even more,” she told Soloway, almost apologetically. “Remember when I said I could overwhelm you?”
Soloway was willing to be overwhelmed and went outside to help Terkel carry in four more boxes.
“Ah, that feels good,” Terkel said once it was all out of her car. Terkel is a sewing specialist at Fourbital Factory, an apparel
PEOPLE IN THE YARN WORLD JOKE THAT
BUYING YARN AND KNITTING ARE TWO SEPARATE HOBBIES.
manufacturing company a half mile away on Pine Street. Her donation was a combination of company and personal excess.
Soloway, 32, was a walking billboard for her store that day. She wore a multicolored cardigan that she knit with leftover yarn from her own projects.
The Atlanta native, a knitter since age 6, has worked as a props designer, theater administrator, real estate agent and home inspector. She and her husband, a New Hampshire-born University of Vermont grad, moved to Vermont from Chicago three and a half years ago, and Soloway managed Shelburne’s Must Love Yarn store for three years.
She hopes that low price points at her own new business will encourage people to try new crafts, and she is pleased to offer an outlet for items she considers too precious to be thrown away or stashed in an attic. Crafters tend to collect supplies, she said: “People in the yarn world joke that buying yarn and knitting are two separate hobbies.”
When Soloway researched secondhand craft supply stores to help shape her own
store’s aesthetic, she found that they run the gamut. Some offer “all sorts of weird bits and bobs” at super-low prices, while others are upscale resale boutiques — “everything from Let’s make art out of trash to Let’s make sure art supplies don’t become trash,” she said.
The Makery is the latter, a curated space that invites browsing and sparks inspiration. Soloway will offer classes, starting with Mini Makers, a January 4 craft session for kids ages 2 to 5, followed by Bring Your Own Craft Night on January 9, an adult social that’s free to attend. She plans to teach knitting and crocheting and to invite other artists to teach.
After unloading all that yarn, Terkel browsed and bought a picture frame, two cards, three rubber stamps and three tiny wooden snowflakes. She dubbed her visit a success: “I’m taking out a lot less bulk than I brought in.” ➆
The Makery, 388 Pine St., Burlington, themakeryvt.com
In the Meta-verse
A tour of mixed-media artist Meta Strick’s gallery and home in Fairfield
For more than five decades, Meta Strick has been making mixedmedia art in the backwoods of Fairfield. The turquoise-haired 82-year-old invites visitors to open houses and workshops at her gallery next to her log cabin home. Both spaces are chockablock with art and eclectic collections. Strick’s color-coded gallery is filled with paintings and cards, as well as dolls representing Santas, witches and mystical creatures.
In the latest episode of “Stuck in Vermont,” Seven Days senior multimedia producer Eva Sollberger spent a lighthearted afternoon with Strick and participated in a collage workshop. Strick’s next open house dates are Friday, December 20, through Sunday, December 22, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; email metastrick@ gmail.com for details. Snow tires are recommended if you want to make it up her steep driveway.
Sollberger spoke with Seven Days about filming the episode.
How did you hear about Strick?
In 2013 I filmed an episode at the Vermont Hand Crafters show, and one of the artists gave me Strick’s card. She was the president of
the organization for many years, though it dissolved last year, sadly. I added Strick to my list of possible subjects and finally got around to calling her!
How did you connect?
Strick and I hit it off immediately. We had an epic phone chat and made a date to meet up at her home in Fairfield. It was snowing that day, and I was driving a borrowed car that struggled on the unplowed back roads. When I reached the turno for Strick’s road, I gulped — it is long and treacherous in winter. Her driveway is steep, and I got stuck halfway up. Yes, I was literally stuck in Vermont.
greeted me on the front door. Kola, a neighbor’s dog, was the fi rst creature I met, and I almost expected him to start speaking English. I also enjoyed meeting Strick’s tuxedo cat, Dot, who tried to steal the show.
NOBODY SAYS THAT IT HAS TO JUST BE X, Y OR Z. IT CAN BE X AND Y AND Z.
META STRICK
What were your first impressions of the property?
Strick is a collector, and her house is a treasure trove of buttons, baskets, art, dolls, metal bits, glass bottles and ephemera. There is a woodshop in her basement that she calls “sawdust hell.” It’s also full of wood pieces that she uses to create her dolls. As a fellow collector of stu , I could have spent hours just admiring her doodads. Everywhere you look there is a story.
How did Strick end up in Vermont?
lived in a tent at first. By 1971 she was in her log cabin home, which was built from a kit. Years later, she built a garage that became her gallery. It was 20 years before she had electricity, which gives you an idea of how tough she is.
Her life seems very full.
Strick loves people, which is probably why it is so nice spending time with her. She worked full time for the State of Vermont in the human services programs. She was also an art teacher at the Community College of Vermont, and she raised three boys, two of whom live on the property. In addition to all of that, she has been making art most of her life.
Strick makes you feel like anything is possible. She has a fearless and playful approach to life.
How was the collage workshop?
Strick invited her friend Jo Kinney from Colchester to do some collaging with us. Kinney says she has a mini Meta Museum in her home with many of her friend’s works of art. The two women have known each other for almost 42 years and used to work together, as well.
It had been ages since I cut up paper and glued it together again. Strick does not use scissors and instead tears the images by hand. She also added blue paint, which took her collage to the next level. I forgot what a pleasure it is to hang out with cool people and make art.
It reminds me of a psychedelic fairyland. A band saw spray-painted fl uorescent green sat next to a rusted tractor in Strick’s garden. The gently falling snow was the perfect backdrop to her cozy home nestled in the woods. A colorful porch peeked out from a layer of powder, and a trio of life-size painted characters
Befitting the fairyland setting, Strick’s life is a bit like a fairy tale. First o , her unique name is what she was born with, and you pronounce it “Mee-ta.” She grew up in Cleveland, Ohio, and started making art at a young age. She came to Vermont in the late 1960s and bought a 95-acre parcel of land in Fairfield with “five other hippies.” There was no running water or electricity and she
How would you define Strick’s work? It’s hard to classify Strick’s art because she works in so many di erent mediums and is so prolific. She draws; paints; sculpts; works with wood, metal and fabric; collages; collects; writes; and does calligraphy — she does it all! Flipping through her dozens of sketchbooks is like a window into her feverish, creative mind. She even wrote a collection of poem-drawings in 1972. Strick proclaimed, “Nobody says that it has to just be X, Y or Z. It can be X and Y and Z.” It’s worth a trip to her gallery to see her wide-ranging creations for yourself. ➆
on screen
REVIEWS
Maria ★★★
Emilia Pérez ★★★
This season, Netflix makes its bid for awards with larger-than-life diva figures and a whole lot of singing. Pablo Larraín, maker of the irreverent biopics Jackie and Spencer, brings us his take on a third 20th-century icon: Maria , as in Callas, played by no less than Angelina Jolie. Also tuneful is Jacques Audiard’s Emilia Pérez, a musical with a contemporary setting that made a stir at the Cannes Film Festival and scored 10 Golden Globe nominations. Both are currently streaming.
Emilia Pérez gets points for expanding the boundaries of the musical. If The Umbrellas of Cherbourg took place in modern Mexico and involved drug cartels and a chorus of doctors and nurses crooning about vaginoplasty, it might be a little like this.
Let’s back up. Karla Sofía Gascón plays a feared cartel leader who is transgender and wants to live openly as a woman named Emilia Pérez. Zoe Saldana is the overworked, cynical lawyer she hires to arrange her gender confirmation surgery and fake the death of her former identity. All goes to plan, the two women become friends, and Emilia launches a foundation to fight the gang violence in which she once participated. But she misses her wife (Selena Gomez) and her two children, who believe her dead. So she invites them to
live with her, posing as the cousin of the husband and father they remember. Various misunderstandings result from this deception, some cute and some tragic.
The belief-stretching scenario puts a modern spin on old Hollywood “women’s pictures.” It’s easy to imagine Pedro Almodóvar playing Emilia’s story for camp value, using it to comment wryly on our expectations about gender. (His 1987 Law of Desire combined melodrama with a sympathetic portrait of a trans woman, albeit played by a cis actress.) But Audiard, who adapted the story to film from his own operetta and Boris Razon’s novel, seems to take Emilia Pérez more seriously. He milks the pathos of Emilia’s situation — as, for instance, one of her kids wonders in song why this stranger smells and feels so familiar.
Emilia Pérez is a mixed bag, to put it mildly. The performances are mostly good, with Gascón commanding the screen with her charisma and Saldana showing an impressive range. The musical numbers by Camille and Clément Ducol are usually catchy, sometimes touching, sometimes electrifying.
But the plotting and characterization are all over the place, with an opportunistic quality suggestive of a soap opera. In the second half, Gomez prances around like a troublemaker on a Bravo reality
show, while Saldana is relegated to the status of Greek chorus. As for Emilia, we never get deep enough inside her head and heart to form a solid interpretation of scenes in which she appears to revert to aspects of her former identity. The movie presents her as a titillating conundrum — how can someone who committed so much harm now do so much good? — without exploring her as a person. Gascón does her best, but the script isn’t strong enough to support her.
If Emilia (the character) is sometimes in diva mode, Maria (character and movie) always is. Like Larraín’s other biopics, this one focuses on a small but revelatory slice of time: the last year of opera singer Maria Callas’ life. Having lost her matchless soprano voice, the 53-year-old lives in a palatial Paris apartment with her loyal butler, maid and poodles. She spends her time popping pills, dreaming of her late love, Aristotle Onassis (Haluk Bilginer), and stepping out in public for an occasional ego boost. As she puts it, “I go to restaurants to be adored.”
Almost every line of Steven Knight’s screenplay is in that vein, and Jolie delivers them as if Callas were always onstage at La Scala. Asked, “What did you take?” (as in pills), she replies airily, “I took liberties all my life, and the world took liberties with me.” When Callas proclaims, “There is no life away from the stage,” she means it. Only in a brief flashback to her early years in Greece and a scene with her sister (Valeria Golino) do we see a more natural side of her.
Visually, Maria is an irresistible French
pastry, with Edward Lachman’s fine cinematography highlighting the delicate pink florals and glowing jewel tones. Plotwise, it’s a series of soundbites, more diva playbook than full-fledged drama. Egged on by an ambitious conductor, Callas dreams of recovering her voice to sing for herself alone. She hallucinates encounters with a young documentarian (Kodi SmitMcPhee) in which she polishes her mythos and prepares for a death she almost seems to welcome.
But mostly Callas is just in a very picturesque funk. Her inertia contrasts with black-and-white flashbacks to highlights of her career, during which Jolie lipsyncs to arias that every opera fan knows by heart. The performance is fine, but the real Callas’ voice is in another realm of heartbreaking expressiveness, so these scenes just leave us wanting more.
Maria doesn’t take as many risks as Spencer, Larraín and Knight’s previous collaboration. It’s an easy film to sink into — the vibe is impeccable, as the kids say — but we emerge wanting to know all the juicy details about Callas that this movie leaves out.
Both of these films are about embracing and incarnating an exaggerated version of womanhood. Their heroines revel in the diva role, sometimes to a self-destructive degree. But neither film really breaks down the recipe for a diva’s potent cocktail of power and vulnerability. Sometimes being fabulous isn’t enough.
MARGOT HARRISON margot@sevendaysvt.com
NEW IN THEATERS
Starting December 20
HOMESTEAD: A former Green Beret holes up in a prepper compound in this postapocalyptic drama from Angel Studios. Dawn Olivieri and Neal McDonough star. (110 min, PG-13. Essex)
MUFASA: THE LION KING: Disney’s prequel/sequel to its 2019 “live-action” version of The Lion King explores the backstory of Simba’s dad, voiced by Aaron Pierre. Barry Jenkins (Moonlight) directed. (120 min, PG. Bijou, Capitol, City Cinema, Essex, Majestic, Marquis, Star, Welden)
SONIC THE HEDGEHOG 3: Keanu Reeves voices a shadowy new enemy in another animated actionadventure based on the video game series. With Jim Carrey and Ben Schwartz. Jeff Fowler directed. (110 min, PG. Bijou, City Cinema, Essex, Majestic, Marquis, Paramount, Star, Welden)
Starting December 25 (check theater websites for full booking info)
BABYGIRL: A CEO (Nicole Kidman) embarks on a risky affair with an intern (Harris Dickinson) in this erotic thriller from Halina Reijn (Bodies Bodies Bodies). (114 min, R. Essex, Savoy)
A COMPLETE UNKNOWN: Timothée Chalamet plays the young Bob Dylan in James Mangold’s biopic, also starring Monica Barbaro and Elle Fanning. (141 min, R. Essex, Playhouse)
THE FIRE INSIDE: Ryan Destiny plays boxer Clarissa “T-Rex” Shields, whose Olympic dreams took her far from Flint, Mich., in the feature debut from Rachel Morrison. (109 min, PG-13. Essex)
NOSFERATU: Robert Eggers (The Lighthouse) offers his take on one of the foundational cinematic vampire tales, starring Lily-Rose Depp, Nicholas Hoult and Bill Skarsgård. (133 min, R. Essex, Savoy)
CURRENTLY PLAYING
CONCLAVEHHHH A conspiracy interferes with the selection of a new pope in this thriller starring Ralph Fiennes and Stanley Tucci, directed by Edward Berger. (120 min, PG. Catamount, Welden [ends Thu 19 at both])
FLOWHHHHH This Latvian animation follows the fate of a cat who must team up with other animals to survive a natural disaster. Gints Zilbalodis directed. (84 min, PG. Catamount, Savoy; reviewed 12/11)
GET AWAYHHH A desolate Swedish island turns out not to be the perfect spot for a family vacay in this horror comedy written by and starring Nick Frost and directed by Steffen Haars. (86 min, R. Savoy)
GLADIATOR IIHHH Ridley Scott directed the sequel to his 2000 epic of ancient Rome. With Pedro Pascal, Denzel Washington and Connie Nielsen. (148 min, R. Capitol, Essex [ends Tue 24], Majestic)
KRAVEN THE HUNTER: The Marvel Comics supervillain (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) gets an origin story focused on his relationship to his estranged crime lord dad (Russell Crowe). J.C. Chandor directed. (127 min, R. Essex [ends Tue 24], Majestic, Paramount, Stowe)
THE LORD OF THE RINGS: THE WAR OF THE ROHIRRIM: In this animated fantasy set nearly 200 years before Peter Jackson’s trilogy, the king of Rohan (voice of Brian Cox) must defend his land. With Gaia Wise and Miranda Otto; Kenji Kamiyama directed. (134 min, PG-13. Essex [ends Tue 24], Majestic)
MOANA 2HHH The islander heroine (voice of Auli’i Cravalho) must sail unknown seas to break a curse in the sequel to the animated Disney hit. (100 min, PG. Bijou, Capitol, City Cinema, Essex, Majestic, Paramount, Star, Stowe, Welden)
A REAL PAINHHHH1/2 Jesse Eisenberg wrote, directed and stars with Kieran Culkin in this comedydrama about two estranged cousins exploring their family history in Poland. (90 min, R. Savoy; reviewed 12/4)
RED ONEH1/2 The North Pole’s head of security (Dwayne Johnson) joins forces with a bounty hunter (Chris Evans) to rescue a kidnapped Santa Claus in this action comedy. (123 min, PG-13. Capitol, Majestic)
SOUNDTRACK TO A COUP D’ETATHHHH1/2 Johan Grimonprez’s documentary explores how two activist musicians crashed the United Nations Security Council during the Cold War. (150 min, NR. Savoy)
WICKEDHHH1/2 Gregory Maguire’s subversive take on The Wizard of Oz becomes a musical becomes a movie starring Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande. Jon M. Chu directed. (160 min, PG. Bijou, Capitol, Essex, Majestic, Star, Stowe; reviewed 11/27)
OLDER FILMS AND SPECIAL SCREENINGS
A CHRISTMAS STORY (Bijou)
ELF (Bijou, Playhouse)
METROPOLITAN (Catamount, Sat 21 only)
POTICHE (Catamount, Wed 18 only)
ROYAL BALLET: THE NUTCRACKER (Essex, Sun 22 & Mon 23 only)
OPEN THEATERS
(* = upcoming schedule for theater was not available at press time)
*BIJOU CINEPLEX 4: 107 Portland St., Morrisville, 888-3293, bijou4.com
CAPITOL SHOWPLACE: 93 State St., Montpelier, 229-0343, fgbtheaters.com
CATAMOUNT ARTS: 115 Eastern Ave., St. Johnsbury, 748-2600, catamountarts.org
CITY CINEMA: 137 Waterfront Plaza, Newport, 334-2610, citycinemanewport.com
ESSEX CINEMAS & T-REX THEATER: 21 Essex Way, Suite 300, Essex, 879-6543, essexcinemas.com
MAJESTIC 10: 190 Boxwood St., Williston, 878-2010, majestic10.com
MARQUIS THEATER: 65 Main St., Middlebury, 388-4841, middleburymarquis.com
PARAMOUNT TWIN CINEMA: 241 N. Main St., Barre, 479-9621, fgbtheaters.com
PLAYHOUSE MOVIE THEATRE: 11 S. Main St., Randolph, 728-4012, playhouseflicks.com
SAVOY THEATER: 26 Main St., Montpelier, 229-0598, savoytheater.com
STAR THEATRE: 17 Eastern Ave., St. Johnsbury, 748-9511, stjaytheatre.com
*STOWE CINEMA 3PLEX: 454 Mountain Rd., Stowe, 253-4678, stowecinema.com
*WELDEN THEATRE: 104 N. Main St., St. Albans, 527-7888, weldentheatre.com
art
Page Turner
In “Between the Covers,” printmaker Jane Kent reimagines words with visuals
BY AMY LILLY • lilly@sevendaysvt.com
Artist’s books are often presented under a glass vitrine, open to a single page with the rest of the story left a mystery. But at BCA Center in Burlington, printmaker Jane Kent’s solo show of such works — cheekily titled “Between the Covers” — contains only one project in the form of a book. The rest are on loose pages hung on the walls.
Kent, who lives in Burlington and New York City and has taught at the University of Vermont for the past 20 years, chose the format deliberately. As she noted in a recent BCA discussion with poet Major Jackson, artist’s books are “not reasonable. They’re hard to see, hard to sell, hard to show.” Her works “were made to be on the wall for that very reason,” she said.
That makes viewing “Between the Covers” particularly gratifying. Kent’s artist’s books are collaborations with major American authors — Jackson as well as Richard Ford, Susan Orlean, Joyce Carol Oates and the lesserknown Dorothea Grossman — whose writing is itself a draw. For instance, viewers can read Ford’s 1996 short story “Privacy” in its entirety in Kent’s work of the same title.
Yet in Kent’s books those words participate in a deeply considered dance between printed language and visual art to create something new. Kent doesn’t illustrate, as she often points out; she creates prints in which word and image figure equally.
In 1994, Kent set herself the task of completing 10 word-and-image projects, using a variety of print methods, in collaboration with alternating male and female authors. The BCA show includes the six she has so far created (most printed in editions of 35), along with an array of working drawings and individual prints. The copies on display are from UVM’s Special Collections Library; other editions are held by the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City, the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, the New
York Public Library, and Yale University’s Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library.
Twenty-four years elapsed between the completion of Kent’s first artist’s book, “Privacy,” and the latest, Oates’ poem “Little Albert, 1920.” Kent considers, rereads and experiments with each
REVIEW
featuring his poem “Why I Write Poetry,” recently published in Razzle Dazzle: New and Selected Poems 2002-2022
The show, curated by Heather Ferrell, includes two working drawings for that project, in gouache on mezzotint. One drawing depicts a fire extinguisher outlined in black on a patterned red, orange, white and cream background; the other is a purely abstract hatch of red brushstrokes on black.
Kent reworked the viewfi nders so that they evoke a shadowy gray face here, a pair of breasts and a belly in red swirls there.
text for years before arriving at the right marriage between her contributions and the author’s.
“Privacy,” for instance, took five years. Ford, whom Kent got to know while they both taught at Princeton University, handed her the still-unpublished manuscript in 1994. Likewise, the artist has spent three years mulling her current work in progress, a collaboration with former UVM colleague Jackson
The two pieces give a hint of Kent’s approach, which is to begin with an object that the text brings to mind — a “join,” as she calls it — and rework it until it slowly becomes something else that captures the essence of the text. (All text is printed in letterpress at Kent’s longtime fine art publisher, the Grenfell Press in New York.)
In “Privacy,” the join was scenic viewfinders, those binocular-like contraptions mounted at touristy summits. In Ford’s story, a man recalls watching a woman in a nearby apartment undress every night for a week while his new wife sleeps.
On other pages, she transforms the viewfinder’s circular lenses into pairs of eyes, or olives — black circles accented with red or yellow dots. The solid blue circles on the last page evolve into freefloating wheels, reflecting the narrator’s final realization that his life was entering a “cycle of necessity.”
“Orchid Thief Re-Imagined” (2003) uses 11 excerpts from Orlean’s novel The Orchid Thief. Its eight pages present as a coherent composition, with black-andwhite shapes and lines — all suggestive of orchids — spanning the pages rather than being defined by them.
“Orchid” is a work of rich pink, brown, coral and green backgrounds. While Kent made “Privacy” on her etching press, “Orchid” was silk-screened at the Rhode Island School of Design by master printmakers from New York City. “The color is beautiful because of the input of others,” she told Seven Days. Kent often
collaborates with specialists in a variety of printmaking methods.
Drypoint, engraving, mezzotint and silk screen all shape Kent’s third artist’s book, “Skating,” from 2011. Ford proposed a second collaboration after seeing
“The man who is / more like a suitcase / than a man / folds into himself / softsidedly.” The other side shows Kent’s cut-paper construction, a collage of folded and layered parts of envelopes, boxes and patterned paper. The work enacts its text: It comes folded in half three times and, when refolded, is reduced to the words “The man.”
WORDS PARTICIPATE IN A DEEPLY CONSIDERED DANCE BETWEEN PRINTED LANGUAGE AND VISUAL ART TO CREATE SOMETHING NEW.
“Orchid” and sent Kent seven works before the artist chose a brief unpublished text — a catalog of 45 arguments between two people having an affair, beginning with “They argued about love. Specifically whether he or she was in love, or merely loved him, or her.”
Kent arranges the text as a meandering path of 11 di erently sized pages that take up the majority of one wall. It’s as if the couple are hashing out arguments while wandering from place to place. Images evoke a flattened box — perhaps suggesting a move that will never happen — and an ice skater’s repetitive turns etched into a furious, circular pattern.
Boxes reappear in a black-and-white broadsheet that Kent created for her fourth project, “Untitled” (2015), printed o set in an edition of 1,000 and free to visitors, if any copies are left. In search of a female author this time, she discovered Grossman (1937-2012), an epigrammatic poet who lived in Los Angeles and associated with the Beat poets.
Grossman’s untitled 15-word poem fills one side of the broadsheet in large print:
Jackson, who has authored five books of poetry and now teaches at Vanderbilt University, sent Kent everything he’d written for her fifth project. She chose “The Flâneur Tends a Well-Liked Summer Cocktail,” a series of observations of city life. In her single-sheet work from 2019, the artist renders the title in alternating blue and red letters clockwise around the paper’s edge in lithograph and uses a handdrawn polymer text plate for the poem. The dense mass of hand-lettered verses overlays what appear to be moon phases and flows around a full-moon shape that could also evoke the “blossoming mouth of an infant” spotted by the flâneur.
“Her work is elemental, savage, curious,” Jackson said during the BCA talk. “I see a restless, churning interpretation of my work. It feels very improvisatory.”
Kent chose to contain Oates’ 2019 poem “Little Albert, 1920” in traditional artist’s-book format. The poem tells the horrifying story of a real 11-month-old baby who was the subject of a “scientific” experiment on how fear could be taught. Kent’s “Little Albert” (2023) places the text, printed on vintage translucent paper, atop prints of framed mirrors — a join that addresses ideas of reflection and observation.
Kent said the text, even more chilling for being written in Little Albert’s voice, got the “page by page” treatment “because of the gravity of it, the interiority of it.”
In a sense, each of Kent’s works seeks to excavate and embody the ways of seeing that their texts explore. The process may be slow, and artist’s books themselves are, in Kent’s words, “a stubborn enterprise.” But, she added, “I guess that appeals to me.” ➆
INFO
“Between the Covers: Works by Jane Kent,” through January 18 at BCA Center in Burlington. burlingtoncityarts.org
ART BOOK REVIEW
inking Inside the Box: Black Box by Dona Ann McAdams
BY JOHN KILLACKY
As a social documentarian, Dona Ann McAdams illuminates the particularity of place and the innate humanity of the people she photographs. Working with old-school aesthetics, the Sandgate resident shoots with a small Leica camera and prints black-and-white images in an analog darkroom. She never stages photographs, preferring to capture tableaux vivants of the communities she inhabits.
McAdams’ latest book, Black Box: A Photographic Memoir, reproduces 107 pictures alongside elucidating backstories from her 50-year career. She is launching her memoir with a companion exhibition at the Vermont Center for Photography in Brattleboro, on view through December 29.
McAdams studied photography at the San Francisco Art Institute in the early 1970s. She writes about running out of film and stopping at the Castro Camera store, where owner Harvey Milk urged her to merge politics and aesthetics into social action. McAdams’ images of the burgeoning gay pride movement, sex workers at the Hookers Ball, activist Angela Davis and photographer Hilton Braithwaite are testament to Milk’s advice. After Milk’s election as the first openly gay city supervisor in 1977 and his assassination in 1978, McAdams left San Francisco and moved back east.
In New York, McAdams found herself amid an avant-garde community of artists. She was the house photographer at Performance Space 122 for 23 years, capturing compelling images there and at other downtown venues. Her stories in the book enliven striking portraits of Eileen Myles, Meredith Monk, Karen Finley, and David Wojnarowicz — a body of work that won her Obie and Bessie Awards.
e book also includes a single handcolored image from McAdams’ 13 years running an arts workshop on Coney Island for people living with mental illness. One day, a participant began coloring on her black-and-white pictures and was soon joined by others.
“Sometimes they took them back to their group home at the Garden of Eden
or traded them for cigarettes,” McAdams writes. “ e staff at the facility would hang them in their offices. People started trading them like baseball cards.”
McAdams’ agitprop sensibilities are conveyed in adroitly captured shots of queer liberation, ACT UP, and antinuclear and pro-choice protests from the 1980s and ’90s. She comes across not as a detached journalist but as an engaged social agitator. Here is her description of shooting an indelible image of performerpoet Assotto Saint holding up a cardboard coffin during an AIDS protest:
I needed perspective. I needed height. I needed to look down on the protest coffins. I shimmied up a lamppost, the way we did in high school gym with the rope, legs wrapped tight around the pole. A man in the crowd with a makeshift coffin looked up at me and said, Be careful. He stared at me from the street then through the years from the photo.
McAdams and her husband, writer Brad Kessler, moved to Vermont in 1998 and started raising American Nubian goats. In a shift from New York City’s art and protest scenes, she focused her camera on neighboring farmers and their work animals. At the Saratoga RaceTrack, McAdams became certified as a hotwalker — someone who walks horses to
cool them down. ere, she has recorded workers, human and equine, on the backstretch for the past two decades. e stories from her childhood that McAdams includes add poignancy and humor to the book, placed next to family snapshots as well as her later work. She pairs a photograph of a docent lecturing beside a Degas sculpture at the Musée d’Orsay in Paris with an anecdote about one of her high school teachers who
wouldn’t let her write a paper on Diane Arbus because, he said, “Photography is not art.”
INFO
Black Box: A Photographic Memoir by Dona Ann McAdams, Saint Lucy Books, 256 pages. $50. An exhibition accompanying the memoir is on view at the Vermont Center for Photography in Brattleboro through December 29.
CALL TO ARTISTS
STRUT! FASHION SHOW BY SEABA: Seeking fashion designers at any stage of their careers to create one to five looks for models to walk the professional catwalk on April 5. Single designs and signature pieces welcome; sustainable design encouraged. Apply at seaba.com/strut. Hula, Burlington, December 18-January 20. $25; $20 for SEABA members. Info, 859-9222.
OPENINGS + RECEPTIONS
ART AT THE AIRPORT: JAY ASHMAN: A show of watercolors from the retired University of Vermont art professor. Patrick Leahy Burlington International Airport, South Burlington, through March 3. Info, 865-7296.
ART AT THE AIRPORT: TRYSTAN BATES: An exhibition of mixed-media collage incorporating shapes and gestural marks, based on elements of storytelling, myth and ritual. Patrick Leahy Burlington International Airport, South Burlington, through March 3. Info, 865-7296.
‘BEYOND THE BOUQUET: ARRANGING FLOWERS IN AMERICAN ART’: An exhibition, curated by Michael Hartman, of works from the permanent collection that showcase how North American artists working across time and traditions have embraced floral beauty. Hood Museum, Dartmouth College, Hanover, N.H., ongoing. Info, 603-646-2808.
‘BOOKS, PAPER, SCISSORS’: An exhibition by the Collagistas Art Group featuring two-dimensional and three-dimensional collages and handmade
books about paper, writing and words by Suzanne Rexford-Winston, Lori Stroutsos, Carole Hass, Gabrielle Dietzel and Ellen Urman. Kellogg-Hubbard Library, Montpelier, through December 30. Info, loristroutsos@gmail.com.
ART EVENTS
PAINTING DEMO: HOLLY FRIESEN: The painter shows her process, discusses inspirations and presents new work in time for the holidays. Edgewater Gallery at the Falls, Middlebury, Wednesday, December 18, 1-4 p.m. Info, 458-0098.
HARRIGAN STUDIO MOVING SALE: A sale of photography, mixed-media works and cyanotypes, with some furnishings available. Suite 264, Chace Mill, Burlington, December 18-20, noon-5 p.m. Info, harriganpeg@gmail.com.
‘FREE SELF EXPRESSION’: An open forum where the public is invited to celebrate community by sharing performance, music, reading, speaking, dancing, and take-home art and writing. Canal Street Art Gallery, Bellows Falls, Friday, December 20, 5-8 p.m. Info, 289-0104.
SPA SIP & SHOP: A day of free hot chocolate or tea for visitors to “Celebrate!,” the annual members’ show. Studio Place Arts, Barre, Saturday, December 21, 10:30 a.m.-4 p.m. Info, 479-7069.
HOLIDAY ARTISAN FAIR: Crafts by North Hero artists and artisans. GreenTARA Space, North Hero, Saturday, December 21, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Info, 355-2150.
HOLIDAY BRUNCH: A reception featuring jazz trio Deep Think and the solo exhibition “Stood Forever” by Ted Walsh, as well as selections of work from the full roster of represented artists. Edgewater Gallery on the Green, Middlebury, Saturday, December 21, 11 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Info, 989-7419.
SOCIAL SUNDAY: An opportunity for children and caregivers to stop in and complete a 15- to 30-minute activity during the two-hour workshop. Milton Artists’ Guild Art Center & Gallery, Sunday, December 22, 1-3 p.m. Free. Info, 891-2014.
PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT WORKSHOPS FOR ARTISTS: A selection of free online and in-person workshops addressing the most urgent needs, challenges and opportunities facing artists in New England, presented by Assets for Artists in partnership with the Vermont Arts Council. Register online at assetsforartists.org. Vermont Arts Council, Montpelier, through January 28. Info, assetsforartists@massmoca.org. ➆ But wait, there’s
JOIN US FOR A
Art, Music & Cheer Winter Weekend
HOLIDAY HOURS
12/17 - 12/21: 10AM – 5PM
12/22: 11AM – 4PM
12/23: 10AM – 5PM 12/24: 10AM – 3PM
SATURDAY DEC 21 11:00AM - 12:30PM
Jazz Brunch, Ted Walsh Solo Exhibition & Holiday Shopping
SUNDAY DEC 22 ND 4:00PM - 7:00PM
Enjoy a festive winter afternoon of piano duo music in “Shall We Dance?” presented at Town Hall Theater in Middlebury. Edgewater Gallery will host a champagne reception immediately following the performance at our 6 Merchants Row location. The reception is open to all concert attendees.
Edgewater Gallery on the Green 6 Merchants Row, Middlebury
One Mill St and 6 Merchant’s Row, Middlebury Vermont 802-458-0098 & 802-989-7419 edgewatergallery.com
music+nightlife
In a fit of wild abandon, I spent my 23rd birthday rather drunk at a professional wrestling event. It was my first (and only, to date) encounter with that world in a live setting. What I recall most about the experience is that it was a massive mêlée, featuring dozens of colorful, muscle-bound characters trying to throw each other out of the ring — a Royal Rumble.
Like my dog staring at an episode of “Jeopardy!,” I never quite managed to comprehend what was happening in that ring. But the memory of its barely controlled pandemonium, the raw energy that spread like wildfire — it all came back to me years later while watching the Bubs play at the Monkey House in Winooski.
For those who have (sadly) not caught the Burlington punk band, the vibe of a Bubs show falls somewhere on the spectrum between doing an 8-ball at an arcade and that scene in Pulp Fiction where Uma Thurman gets a shot of adrenaline straight to the chest. Clad in white jumpsuits, the 10-piece collective creates a whirling dervish of sound, all centered on talismanic front man Ethan Tapper. Onstage, the muscular, heavily tattooed Saxtons River native is the focal point of the Bubs, howling over the microphone and clutching his trusty black Stratocaster, often with a grin beaming from below a camouflage baseball cap.
It might surprise some to know that when he’s not creating a ruckus onstage, Tapper, 36, spends most of his days barely uttering a sound, hiking and snowshoeing through the forests of Vermont. By day, Tapper is a forester, managing private and public woods across the state. And he’s a good one. In 2021, the NortheastMidwest State Foresters Alliance named him Forester of the Year.
In September, Tapper published a book about his forestry experiences and philosophies, titled How to Love a Forest: The Bittersweet Work of Tending a Changing World. In it, he touches on some of the paradoxes that his line of work presents: How can cutting a tree be a form of loving it? How do you love deer and hunt them at the same time? The book depicts a natural
TREE HUGGER
e Bubs’ Ethan Tapper on his new book about forestry, his band’s new album and what it means to love trees
BY CHRIS FARNSWORTH • farnsworth@sevendaysvt.com
world both damaged and in flux, where complex, emotional and rarely easy answers are needed to heal it.
Initially, the juxtaposition of being a forester and a punk rocker presented another kind of paradox for Tapper, who began working in the woods professionally in 2012.
“When I started as a forester, I was so worried other people would find out I was in a punk band,” Tapper said by phone from his home near Bolton, in a 175-acre forest he bought in 2017 and named Bear Island. He feared that his colleagues, who devote their careers to the preservation of the natural world and spend much of
their time alone in silence like flannelclad monks, might take a dim view of Tapper’s penchant to rage onstage out of the woods. “I was so concerned with adhering to the notion of what I thought I was supposed to be,” he said.
Tapper’s two worlds don’t so much inform one another as balance each other. In the winter, he spends months out in the snow, working in the woods, usually alone. So when it’s time to gather with his friends, he seizes the chance to make a massive amount of noise.
“Everything I do is pretty much about forests,” Tapper explained. “I write about forests. I work in forests. I speak at functions about forests…
“The Bubs is really the only part of my life that’s totally di erent,” he continued. “It’s incredibly special to me that I get to do this cathartic thing with the band. It adds so much enrichment to my life.”
One song on the Bubs’ latest record, Make a Mess, ties directly to Tapper’s day job. The title track is inspired by his love for forest ecology and how he exalts in, well, making a mess in the woods.
“In Vermont, our forests are pretty young and super simple,” he said. “We try to manage them to be more complex and be more like old-growth forests, which looks to most people like we’re taking a well-ordered, parklike forest and making it messy.”
Released one month before How to Love a Forest , the Bubs’ sophomore album was helmed by Grammy-winning producer Eric Heigle (Arcade Fire, Josh Ritter), who saw the band play live at the Waking Windows festival in Winooski in 2022 and was blown away by its energy.
“When he reached out to say he wanted to make an album with us, I was pretty sure it was a scam,” Tapper remembered with a laugh. “But next thing I know, we’re headed down to Brooklyn to record Make a Mess.”
The record captures the band’s raucous, feel-good punk power onstage, something Tapper said Heigle was dead set on re-creating.
“Our first album was good, but it sounded like a modern rock album. Well produced, but it didn’t quite catch the magic,” Tapper said. “This time, with Eric, we got it.”
The two projects have dominated Tapper’s 2024. He’s in the middle of a whirlwind book tour that picks back up in the New Year with an appearance at Jenna’s House Community Center on January 19. He’ll also be speaking at a number of events, which often give him a chance to talk to young would-be foresters.
“When I speak to forestry students, I always say that I wish someone told me in school that you can be a forester and have feelings,” he said. “You can be in a punk band, too, and you can talk about how loving trees makes for complicated decisions.” ➆
INFO
How to Love a Forest: e Bittersweet Work of Tending a Changing World by Ethan Tapper, Broadleaf Books, 229 pages. $28.99.
For more on Tapper’s writing and book tour, visit ethantapper.com. For more on the Bubs, visit thebubsvt.com.
On the Beat
ANDY “A_DOG” WILLIAMS died of leukemia in 2013, but the Burlington DJ and turntablist left an indelible legacy in the community, one that’s stewarded by the Friends for A_Dog Foundation. Over the past decade, the nonprofit has hosted bone marrow drives, music and skateboarding programs and scholarships, and often free programming for local kids. And every year on the last Saturday in August, it celebrates Williams with the citywide A_Dog Day.
Some of Williams’ closest friends and collaborators are planning their own party this year by commemorating the day he died, December 26. Local hip-hop leading lights NASTEE and KONFLIK are throwing the AfterLyfe Bornday Celebration at the Alchemist brewery in Stowe, which features performances from both rappers and some special guests, as well as cake and balloons.
“Konflik and I have wanted to put together a remembrance of A_Dog’s passing for the past two years,” Nastee wrote in an email. “This year we’ve finally put some things together to memorialize his life by recognizing the day he passed away, or as they say where we come from, ‘the day he went back to the essence.’”
They’ve also prepared two special releases specifically for the event. First up is Tribute Volume 1, a scratch DJ compilation featuring locals such as BIG
DOG, KANGANADE and CRE8, as well as New Jersey’s JUST BLAZE and Texas producer STATIK SELEKTAH. The album features a remix of “This Is Me” by VT UNION, Williams’ old hip-hop unit.
The final piece of the tribute is the music video premiere of “Itchy & Statiky,” a track o Tribute that features samples of A_Dog scratching over a beat provided by Statik Selektah. According to Nastee, the video includes neverbefore-seen footage of A_Dog. Editing it was an emotional experience for Nastee — a true labor of love.
Listening In
“Some say it’s weird to have a party for somebody’s death day,” Nastee wrote. “But A_Dog and I always saluted people publicly on their death day, so it only seems fitting I do the same for him … We truly want to raise awareness of who Andy was/is and his importance to the Burlington music scene.”
YouTube videos in November to Broadway World, featuring her performing hit Broadway songs such as “She Used to Be Mine” from Waitress. People can vote for Bettwieser by visiting the Broadway World website. Her family and her music teacher at Hartford High School, ANDREA NARDONE, have been trying hard to get the word out about Bettwieser, urging the local community to support her and vote. They’ve even enlisted the help of New York Times best-selling author JODI PICOULT, who, as the executive producer for several productions by the Upper Valley’s Trumbull Hall Troupe, worked with Bettwieser on student shows. The final round of voting opened on Monday and closes on Wednesday, December 18, at 11:59 p.m.
I posted an online story last week about Hartford High School senior MACY BETTWIESER competing in Next On Stage, Broadway’s biggest national competition for high school and college students who dream of becoming professional performers. At the time, she had advanced from a field of 250 hopefuls to make the semifinal round of 10.
Now Bettwieser has done it again, earning enough online votes to advance to the final five. The winner of this final round of voting will book a trip to New York City on January 17 to perform at the 54 Below Live Finale.
Bettwieser submitted several
“This is a once-in-alifetime moment for Macy, and you can be part of it,” Nardone said.
Frequent readers of the column know how much I adore radio and insist on listening to it daily, despite all the streaming and satellite options. I love how weird and random radio can be: Tuning in is like stumbling into an unmarked library deep in the bowels of a city.
So I’m always on the lookout for cool new stations or programs. Enter 102.9 FM WEXP, a new radio station out of Westport, N.Y., broadcasting throughout the Champlain Valley. Formerly WCLX, aka Farm Fresh Radio, the new station is owned by DENNIS JACKSON, a former
December Cookie Decorating Class
THU., DEC. 19
QUEEN CITY BREWERY EVENT SPACE, BURLINGTON
Tuscan Community Dinner
THU., DEC. 19
STOWE STREET CAFE, WATERBURY VILLAGE
Reindeer Cake Decorating Workshop
FRI., DEC. 20
RED POPPY CAKERY, WATERBURY VILLAGE
Bruce Sklar Trio WITH SPECIAL GUEST
SAXOPHONIST AND COMPOSER DANIEL IAN SMITH
FRI., DEC. 20
THE PHOENIX, WATERBURY VILLAGE
Make Music Winter
SAT., DEC. 21
THE UNDERGROUND, RANDOLPH
TRS Live: EmaLou & the Beat Holiday Show
SAT., DEC. 21
TANK RECORDING STUDIO, BURLINGTON
Forever Home Presents...
Solstice Celebration
SAT., DEC. 21
AFTERTHOUGHTS, WAITSFIELD
Onion River Chorus
SAT., DEC. 21, SUN., DEC. 22
UNITARIAN CHURCH OF MONTPELIER
A Joyful Sound with Solaris Vocal Ensemble
SAT., DEC. 21
THE WHITE MEETING HOUSE, WATERBURY
Gift Wrapping Made Fun!
SAT., DEC. 21
RED POPPY CAKERY, WATERBURY VILLAGE
SUN., DEC. 22
THE HIVE ON PINE, BURLINGTON
Winter Solstice with Yoga and Art
December Bird Monitoring Walk
SAT., DEC. 28
BIRDS OF VERMONT MUSEUM, HUNTINGTON
Highlight 2024
TUE., DEC. 31
BURLINGTON CITY ARTS
Opera In Concert
TUE., DEC. 31
MCCARTHY ARTS CENTER RECITAL HALL AT SAINT MICHAEL'S COLLEGE, COLCHESTER
New Year's Eve Shindig
TUE., DEC. 31
TUNBRIDGE TOWN HALL
Green Mountain Mahler Festival Beethoven's Ninth Symphony
WED., JAN. 1
ELLEY-LONG MUSIC CENTER, COLCHESTER
Silver Bangles Workshop
THU., JAN. 2
STUDIO SPACE, CHARLOTTE
Italian Cookie Workshop
SAT., JAN. 4
RED POPPY CAKERY, WATERBURY VILLAGE
Marty Fogel's Mixed Bag Quartet Plays 'Now and Then'
SAT., JAN. 4
THE PHOENIX, WATERBURY VILLAGE
Focaccia Art Workshop
THU., JAN. 9
RED POPPY CAKERY, WATERBURY VILLAGE
music+nightlife
CLUB DATES
live music
WED.18
BBQ and Bluegrass (bluegrass) at Four Quarters Brewing, Winooski, 6:30 p.m. Free.
Bent Nails House Band (blues, jazz) at Bent Nails Bistro, Montpelier, 8 p.m. Free.
Bob Gagnon (acoustic) at Two Heroes Brewery Public House, South Hero, 6:30 p.m. Free.
A Charlie Brown Holiday (Vince Guaraldi tribute) at Venetian Cocktail & Soda Lounge, Burlington, 8 p.m. $10.
Clive (indie) at Radio Bean, Burlington, 9 p.m. $5/$10.
Jazz Night with Ray Vega (jazz) at Hotel Vermont, Burlington, 8:30 p.m. Free.
Jazz Sessions (jazz) at the 126, Burlington, 9 p.m. Free.
Live Jazz (jazz) at Leunig’s Bistro & Café, Burlington, 6:30 p.m. Free.
Matt Hagen’s Christmas Bath (holiday music) at Nectar’s, Burlington, 7 p.m. $10/$15.
Wednesday Night Dead (Grateful Dead tribute) at Zenbarn, Waterbury Center, 7 p.m. $10. Willverine (electronic) at the Wallflower Collective, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. Free.
THU.19
3rd Thursdays Hip-Hop Night (hip-hop) at ArtsRiot, Burlington, 9 p.m. $5.
Carrie Cook & Lewis Franco (folk) at the Den at Harry’s Hardware, Cabot, 7 p.m. Free.
Charlie Rice (rock) at the Old Post, South Burlington, 6 p.m. Free.
CombustOmatics (rock) at Black Flannel Brewing & Distilling, Essex, 6 p.m. Free.
Dan Ryan Express (jazz) at Foam Brewers, Burlington, 7 p.m. Free.
Electronic Emulsion (electronic) at Despacito, Burlington, 7 p.m. $10.
Headphone Jack (hip-hop) at Radio Bean, Burlington, 6 p.m. $10.
Jazz with Alex Stewart and Friends (jazz) at the 126, Burlington, 8:30 p.m. Free.
JD Tolstoi (indie) at Charlie-O’s World Famous, Montpelier, 8 p.m. Free.
Josh Panda Holiday Concert (holiday music) at Hotel Vermont, Burlington, 7 p.m. Free.
Mitch Terricciano (covers) at On Tap Bar & Grill, Essex Junction, 6 p.m. Free.
Renée Juliette (holiday music) at 14th Star Brewing, St. Albans, 6 p.m. Free.
Vermont Jazz Trio (jazz) at Hugo’s, Montpelier, 7:30 p.m. Free.
FRI.20
Blue Fox (acoustic) at Gusto’s, Barre, 6 p.m. Free.
Sonic Circus
Take a little Captain Beefheart, mix in equal parts shoegaze and shimmery synth pop, and you get the glorious oddity that is Winooski’s RUMINATIONS. The solo project of musician Greg Bonsignore, Ruminations boasts perhaps the most unorthodox-sounding catalog in the Vermont indie scene. Released in July, the album Machine Age Exhibition straddles the edge between experimental and a strange kind of pop synthesis. The new single “Carnival in Town” dropped this month and, to celebrate its release, Ruminations plays Burlington’s Radio Bean on Saturday, December 21, joined by Burlington indie rockers KITBASH.
Bob Gagnon (jazz) at Bleu Northeast Kitchen, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. Free.
Chris von Staats Band Presents: A Charlie Brown Christmas (holiday music) at Foam Brewers, Burlington, 8 p.m. Free.
COOP (funk) at Radio Bean, Burlington, 9:30 p.m. $10/$15.
D Davis (singer-songwriter) at Whammy Bar, Calais, 7:30 p.m. Free.
Dave Mitchell’s Blues Revue (blues) at Red Square, Burlington, 2 p.m. Free.
Grace Palmer (singer-songwriter) at Hotel Vermont, Burlington, 4 p.m. Free.
High Summer, Nate Gusakov (soul, folk) at Radio Bean, Burlington, 7 p.m. $10/$15. IncaHoots (covers) at On Tap Bar & Grill, Essex Junction, 9 p.m. Free.
Jaded Ravins (Americana) at Two Heroes Brewery Public House, South Hero, 7 p.m. Free.
Jerborn & Steve Audy (covers) at On Tap Bar & Grill, Essex Junction, 5 p.m. Free.
Nick Cassarino’s Holiday Spectacular (funk, jam) at Zenbarn, Waterbury Center, 7 p.m. $20.
North Beach Dub All-stars (Sublime tribute) at Charlie-O’s World Famous, Montpelier, 9 p.m. Free.
Paul Webb (jazz piano) at Venetian Cocktail & Soda Lounge, Burlington, 6 p.m. $5.
PET Project (jazz) at Jericho Café & Tavern, 7:30 p.m. Free.
The Phil Abair Band (covers) at the Old Post, South Burlington, 8 p.m. Free.
Rap Night Burlington (hip-hop) at Drink, Burlington, 9 p.m. $5.
Sarah Bell (singer-songwriter) at Bent Nails Bistro, Montpelier, 7 p.m. Free.
Satan’s Dogs (Phish tribute) at Nectar’s, Burlington, 9 p.m. $12.
Soul Porpoise (soul) at Bent Nails Bistro, Montpelier, 9 p.m. Free.
Sunroom, RANGUS, Funeral Date (rock) at Light Club Lamp Shop, Burlington, 8:30 p.m. $10/$15.
SAT.21
The Abyssinians (reggae) at the Lounge at Nectar’s, Burlington, 8 p.m. $20.
Artie’s Christmas Blues Night (blues) at Whammy Bar, Calais, 7:30 p.m. Free.
The Barbelles (folk) at Bent Nails Bistro, Montpelier, 9 p.m. Free. Clay Daniels (singer-songwriter) at the Den at Harry’s Hardware, Cabot, 7 p.m. Free.
The Conniption Fits (covers) at Gusto’s, Barre, 9 p.m. Free.
Forest Station (bluegrass) at Monkey House, Winooski, 7:30 p.m. $10.
Gallison Hill Band (Americana) at Hugo’s, Montpelier, 7:30 p.m. Free.
Green Chapel, Hell Priest, Spaisekult (metal) at Charlie-O’s World Famous, Montpelier, 9 p.m. Free.
Grippo Funk Band (funk) at Nectar’s, Burlington, 8 p.m. Free.
Ian Mack, Lara Cwass & Company, Cal Humberto (indie) at Light Club Lamp Shop, Burlington, 9 p.m. $10/$15.
IncaHoots (covers) at 14th Star Brewing, St. Albans, 6 p.m. Free.
J.J. Booth (singer-songwriter) at Bent Nails Bistro, Montpelier, 7 p.m. Free.
Left Eye Jump (blues) at Red Square, Burlington, 2 p.m. Free.
Live Music Saturdays (live music series) at Dumb Luck Pub & Grill, Hinesburg, 7 p.m. Free.
Live Piano with Paul Lyons (piano) at Kru Coffee, Burlington, 10:30 a.m. Free.
Make Music Winter (various) at the Underground, Randolph, 5 p.m. free.
Maple & Ink (rock, folk) at Poultney Pub, 7 p.m. Free.
Maple Grove (country, rock) at On Tap Bar & Grill, Essex Junction, 9 p.m. Free.
Paul Asbell (jazz) at Bleu Northeast Kitchen, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. Free.
Paul Webb (jazz piano) at Venetian Cocktail & Soda Lounge, Burlington, 6 p.m. $5.
Ray Vega Quartet (jazz) at Venetian Cocktail & Soda Lounge, Burlington, 8 p.m. $10.
SUN.22
Flint & Steale (folk) at Light Club Lamp Shop, Burlington, 6 p.m. $5/$10.
Giovanina Bucci (singersongwriter) at Foam Brewers, Burlington, 1 p.m. Free.
Live Piano with Paul Lyons (piano) at Kru Coffee, Burlington, 10:30 a.m. Free.
Sunday Brunch Tunes (singersongwriter) at Hotel Vermont, Burlington, 10 a.m. Free.
A Very Hairy Swalemess (indie) at Light Club Lamp Shop, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. $20.
Wine & Jazz Sundays (jazz) at Shelburne Vineyard, 5 p.m. Free.
TUE.24
Big Easy Tuesdays with Jon McBride (jazz) at the 126, Burlington, 9 p.m. Free.
WED.18
DJ Mildew (DJ) at Red Square, Burlington, 7 p.m. Free.
Local Dork (DJ) at Foam Brewers, Burlington, 6 p.m. Free.
THU.19
DJ JP Black (DJ) at Red Square, Burlington, 8 p.m. Free.
DJ Two Sev (DJ) at Red Square, Burlington, 11 p.m. Free.
Vinyl Night with Ken (DJ) at Poultney Pub, 6 p.m. Free.
FRI.20
Blanchface (DJ) at Red Square, Burlington, 7 p.m. Free.
DJ CRWD CTRL (DJ) at Monkey House, Winooski, 9 p.m. Free.
DJ Fattie B (DJ) at Venetian Cocktail & Soda Lounge, Burlington, 8 p.m. Free.
DJ K1NG (DJ) at Einstein’s Tap House, Burlington, 10 p.m. Free.
DJ Taka (DJ) at Light Club Lamp Shop, Burlington, 11 p.m. $10/$15. John’s Jukebox (DJ) at Gusto’s, Barre, 9 p.m. Free.
SAT.21
DJ A-Ra$ (DJ) at Red Square, Burlington, midnight. Free.
DJ Raul (DJ) at Red Square Blue Room, Burlington, 6 p.m. Free.
Forever Home Presents: Solstice Celebration (DJ) at Afterthoughts, Waitsfield, 7 p.m. $20.
Matt Payne (DJ) at Red Square Blue Room, Burlington, 10 p.m. Free.
Molly Mood (DJ) at Red Square, Burlington, 10 p.m. Free.
Ruminations, Kitbash (indie rock) at Radio Bean, Burlington, 7 p.m. $10/$15. Tallgrass Getdown (folk) at Radio Bean, Burlington, 9:30 p.m. $10. WD-40 (covers) at On Tap Bar & Grill, Essex Junction, 5 p.m. Free.
music+nightlife
Nastee (DJ) at Einstein’s Tap House, Burlington, 10 p.m. Free.
Roost.world (DJ set) (DJ) at Light Club Lamp Shop, Burlington, 11 p.m. $10/$15.
SUN.22
Mi Yard Reggae Night with DJ Big Dog (reggae, dancehall) at Nectar’s, Burlington, 9 p.m. Free.
open mics & jams
WED.18
Lit Club with Kia’Rae Hanron (poetry open mic) at Light Club Lamp Shop, Burlington, 6:30 p.m. Free.
Open Mic (open mic) at Monopole, Plattsburgh, N.Y., 10 p.m. Free.
Open Mic with Danny Lang (open mic) at Poultney Pub, 7 p.m. Free.
THU.19
Open Mic with Artie (open mic) at Whammy Bar, Calais, 7 p.m. Free.
Poetry Salon & Open Mic (poetry open mic) at Pierson Library, Shelburne, 6 p.m. Free.
FRI.20
Solstice Portal (open art night) at Radio Bean, Burlington, 11 p.m. Free.
SUN.22
Olde Time Jam Session (open jam) at the Den at Harry’s Hardware, Cabot, noon. Free.
MON.23
Open Mic (open mic) at Despacito, Burlington, 7 p.m. Free.
TUE.24
Open Mic Night (open mic) at Drink, Burlington, 8 p.m. Free.
WED.25
Open Mic (open mic) at Monopole, Plattsburgh, N.Y., 10 p.m. Free.
comedy
WED.18
Holidaygasm Party (comedy) at Vermont Comedy Club, Burlington, 6:30 p.m. Free.
THU.19
Ashley Gavin (comedy) at Vermont Comedy Club, Burlington, 7 & 9 p.m. $40. Live Comedy (comedy) at Bent Nails Bistro, Montpelier, 7:30 p.m. Free.
Live, Laugh, Lava: A Comedy Showcase (comedy) at Radio Bean, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. $5.
FRI.20
Ashley Gavin (comedy) at Vermont Comedy Club, Burlington, 9 p.m. $40.
SAT.21
Ashley Gavin (comedy) at Vermont Comedy Club, Burlington, 9 p.m. $40.
TUE.24
Open Mic Comedy with Levi Silverstein (comedy open mic) at the 126, Burlington, 7 p.m. Free.
trivia, karaoke, etc.
WED.18
Karaoke Night (karaoke) at Drink, Burlington, 8 p.m. Free. Karaoke with Cam (karaoke) at Monopole, Plattsburgh, N.Y., 9 p.m. Free.
Musical Bingo (music bingo) at the Depot, St. Albans, 6 p.m. Free.
Musical Bingo (music bingo) at Orlando’s Bar & Lounge, Burlington, 7 p.m. Free.
Trivia Night (trivia) at Dumb Luck Pub and Grill Winooski, 7 p.m. Free.
Trivia Night (trivia) at Stone Corral, Richmond, 7 p.m. Free.
Trivia Night (trivia) at Alfie’s Wild Ride, Stowe, 7 p.m. Free.
Trivia Night (trivia) at Rí Rá Irish
Pub Burlington, 7:30 p.m. Free.
Trivia Night: All ings
Christmas (trivia) at Simple Roots Brewing, Burlington, 5:30 p.m. Free.
Venetian Trivia Night (trivia) at Venetian Cocktail & Soda Lounge, Burlington, 6 p.m. Free.
Wednesday Team Trivia (trivia) at Einstein’s Tap House, Burlington, 9 p.m. Free.
THU.19
Radio Bean Karaoke (karaoke) at Radio Bean, Burlington, 9 p.m. Free.
Trivia (trivia) at Four Quarters Brewing, Winooski, 6 p.m. Free.
Trivia Night (trivia) at Essex Free Library, 6 p.m. Free.
Trivia Night (trivia) at Nectar’s, Burlington, 6:30 p.m. Free.
FRI.20
Karaoke Friday Night (karaoke) at Park Place Tavern & Grill, Essex Junction, 8 p.m. Free.
SUN.22
Karaoke with DJ Coco Entertainment (karaoke) at Old Soul Design Shop, Plattsburgh, N.Y., 5 p.m. Free.
Sunday Funday (games) at 1st Republic Brewing, Essex, noon. Free.
Venetian Karaoke (karaoke) at Venetian Cocktail & Soda Lounge, Burlington, 7 p.m. Free.
THU.19-SAT.21 // ASHLEY GAVIN [COMEDY]
Queer Eye
New York City-based comedian ASHLEY GAVIN likes to lay claim to the title of “the only angry lesbian beloved by all, including old, straight, white guys.” As proof, she points outs out that she was the first openly gay comedian booked for the Carnival Cruise Line. Gavin was featured in the 2024 Netflix is a Joke Festival but is best known for her crowd work going viral on TikTok and her chart-topping podcast, “We’re Having Gay Sex,” which was designated as one of the best LGBTQ+ podcasts of 2023 by Women’s Health. Gavin performs at Vermont Comedy Club in Burlington this Thursday through Saturday, December 19 through 21.
MON.23
Trivia Monday with Top Hat Entertainment (trivia) at McKee’s Original, Winooski, 7 p.m. Free. Trivia with Brain (trivia) at Charlie-O’s World Famous, Montpelier, 8 p.m. Free.
Trivia with Craig Mitchell (trivia) at Monkey House, Winooski, 7 p.m. Free.
TUE.24
Karaoke with DJ Party Bear (karaoke) at Charlie-O’s World Famous, Montpelier, 9:30 p.m. Free.
WED.25
Karaoke with Cam (karaoke) at Monopole, Plattsburgh, N.Y., 9 p.m. Free. ➆
On the Beat « P.61
broadcaster on Burlington’s WDOT. Jackson is turning WEXP into what he calls “pop-up experimental radio.”
“Radio used to be block programmed like television, with different shows at different times of the day and week,” Jackson wrote in a press release. “So we had the idea to work with well-known local radio personalities and experiment
with ‘pop-up programming’ to offer kinds of music that aren’t available elsewhere.”
To that end, WEXP currently spotlights eight genres that don’t show up on radio stations in the greater Burlington area. On weekday mornings, tune in for free-form album rock from Vermont Association of Broadcasters
Hall of Famer RUSS KINSLEY, the original founder of classic-rock station WIZN
the Wizard. “COUNTRY JOE” LOVERRO, one of the area’s top country music DJs in the 1980s at WDOT, hosts “Friday Night Gold,” a show featuring oldies and country hits. Former local radio rivals RJ POTTER and GEORGE GOLDRING now cohost a program specializing in “great American standards” that puts the spotlight on big-band music and the pop of yesteryear.
WEXP is also only the second station
in the country to feature “Groove Salad,” an ambient music and downtempo electronica program out of San Francisco. Saturdays deliver “The Squid” for all your R&B and soul needs before turning to modern jazz in the evening.
“We’d like to get an idea of what might catch on with radio listeners looking for something different,” Jackson wrote. “Meanwhile, we’re having some fun with it.” ➆
music+nightlife
That’s a Rap
Making a top 10 list is never easy. When it comes to Vermont’s exploding hip-hop scene, that calculus is harder than ever. In 2024, we’ve been blessed with dozens of worthy album releases, and the bar for quality control is set professionally high. The only problem? The embarrassment of riches makes it difficult for artists to stand out — and for listeners to keep up.
Accurately summing up all this hustle and flow is an impossible task. In preparation for this doomed attempt, I have been picking the brains of local hip-hop artists, promoters, producers and fans for weeks. Beyond the fact that everyone feels there’s too much going on to keep track of, there is very little clear consensus on the best music of the year.
Certain names come up a lot, though. Established rappers Konflik, Charlie Mayne and D.FRENCH get love from every corner of the state. Breakout newbies such as Devon Dutchmaster, HAKIMXOXO, Topia and Flywlkr have made waves beyond their social circles, too. The Funky Diabetic is universally hailed as a hard worker with a great live set, and Real Ricky’s upcoming debut album is a highly anticipated release.
Vermont producers get a lot of respect, as well. In my conversations, Caleb Lodish’s obsessive perfectionism and huge musical range were often cited. Rico James has been an undeniable force, delivering a record label’s worth of output by himself this year. “I’ve given up on trying to get noticed,” he admitted, “and I’m just cranking out beats. It’s made it fun and satisfying again.”
While youthful energy has driven the narrative in 2024, the pillars of the scene remain in place. DJ, producer and promoter David Chief is still one of Burlington’s foremost tastemakers, and nearly everyone
JUSTIN BOLAND’S TOP 10 802 HIP-HOP ALBUMS OF 2024
CALEB LODISH, An Evening Into Sweet Despair
D.FRENCH, All Saints Day
FLYWLKR, YW8?
JUICEBOX, Ollies in the Hallway
MAARI AND ES-K, All Is Fair in Love & War
MAVSTAR, Verona
RIVAN, rivan
ROBSCURE, WATER: Whirled Around the Endless Ripple
SINNN, Art N Depression TOPIA, KO RABWA
gives props to AfterLyfe Music founder and VT Union legend Nastee. Despite formally retiring as a group, the individual members of 99 Neighbors are at the forefront of the new wave. Conswank’s solo debut, Low Point Retreat, was one of 2023’s finest local albums, and maari’s All Is Fair in Love & War, a collaboration this year with Burlington producer Es-K, continues their unbroken winning streak.
Since the glory days of Lynguistic Civilians, veteran rapper and promoter Mister Burns has never stopped working. Last month alone, he brought Talib Kweli and the Pharcyde to Vermont. If he ever retires or jumps ship to another state, it will be a huge loss for 802 music fans.
On the question of who had the best album drop in 2024, however, things get messy fast. Much of this discord stems from the same debates the scene has had my entire life: what qualifies as “real” hip-hop, organic support versus label-money promotional clout, and the eternal complaint of
Surveying the scene in one of the all-time busiest years for Vermont hip-hop BY JUSTIN BOLAND
Burlington’s outsize influence over the rest of the state. None of these issues is ever getting resolved, and I have grim news for my fellow old heads: If the kids like it, it’s dope, and that’s it.
There is also the question of what qualifies as “Vermont hip-hop” when so many of the small scene’s champions are currently living out of state — which is itself a marker for the strength of the scene. Windsor’s Jarv, Burlington’s rivan and Washington’s Robscure are all doing incredible work in New York City, as is video artist, concert promoter and cultural force Kelly ButtsSpirito, one of the main architects behind the breakout success of Burlington’s young scene after 2020.
That success has inspired a vital culture since then. The Genesis promotion team got its start doing DIY parties around Vermont State University in Castleton, but this year it’s had triumphant appearances at the Double E in Essex and, most recently, the newly revitalized ArtsRiot in Burlington. Alongside upstart stars such as Pleasant Boys, tyler serrani and Obi the Voicegod, Genesis has earned a reputation for mustsee events.
Then there’s “Wave Cave Radio Show,” hosted by Flywlkr and Gingervitus, who recently recorded their 42nd episode on 105.9 FM the Radiator. Wide-open playlists, along with the hosts’ deep love for the scene, have made the show the single most essential outlet in the state right now. The duo has no plans to stop anytime soon. “It’s a lot of fun,” Flywlkr said, “and feels good to give back to the community that gave me a platform.”
It’s worth noting that Flywlkr dropped two projects that got heavy praise from his peers: the tripped-out Flying Car 2, followed by YW8?, a knockout LP that stands among
the year’s best. His top pick for 2024? Topia’s self-produced KO RABWA
That attitude is typical of the new generation of 802 hip-hop artists, and it’s not just modesty; it’s mutual respect. For his part, Topia said, “Honestly, I kinda shut out outside influences and locked in on my own art.” Even so, his top pick would be rivan’s self-titled reinvention of an EP. “It really impressed me because it seemed super authentic,” Topia said.
Another big story was the return of audio engineer and musical savant Zach Crawford, who reopened his SkyLab studio after a long hiatus and immediately set to work mixing and mastering incredible albums for artists around the country.
Two of them are on this list: D.FRENCH’s All Saints Day got a lot of enthusiastic nominations, and boom-bap believers everywhere were still bumping Verona, Mavstar’s monumental tribute to his mother. Expect to see and hear even more of Crawford’s work in 2025.
While this all adds up to an undeniably triumphant year, there’s still a lot of work to be done. Many artists I talked to lamented a lack of serious artist management or mentors to help them with the business side of the music industry. A universal suspicion persists that many Vermont venues are deliberately avoiding the genre. And there’s widespread concern that this big, inclusive scene may be backsliding into cliques and in-groups.
Such growing pains are inevitable. But it’s a safe bet that those same challenges will create new success stories by this time next year. For fans and listeners, we’re in a golden era of Vermont hip-hop, a multigenerational renaissance of diverse sounds and styles. Using the list above as a starting point, take some time over the holidays to get caught up. You won’t regret it. ➆
calendar
DECEMBER 18-25, 2024
WED.18
business
QUEEN CITY BUSINESS
NETWORKING INTERNATIONAL
GROUP: Savvy businesspeople make crucial contacts at a weekly chapter meeting. BCA Center, Burlington, 11:15 a.m.1 p.m. Free. Info, 829-5066.
crafts
YARN CRAFTERS GROUP: A drop-in meetup welcomes knitters, crocheters, spinners, weavers and other fiber artists. BYO snacks and drinks. Must Love Yarn, Shelburne, 5-7 p.m. Free. Info, 448-3780. etc.
CHAMP MASTERS
TOASTMASTER CLUB: Those looking to strengthen their speaking and leadership skills gain new tools. Virtual option available. Dealer. com, Burlington, 6-7:30 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, champmasterstm@gmail.com.
film
See what’s playing at local theaters in the On Screen section.
GREAT ART WEDNESDAY
SERIES: ‘HOW MUCH DOES YOUR BUILDING WEIGH, MR. FOSTER?’: Viewers follow legendary architect Norman
Foster’s journey from humble beginnings to designing iconic structures in this 2010 documentary. Town Hall Theater, Middlebury, 11 a.m.-12:30 p.m. $15. Info, 382-9222.
WINTER & PRODUCER
SHOWCASE: Film buffs gather for a screening session of recently completed works by media locals. A Q&A follows. The Media Factory, Burlington, 6:30-9 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 651-9692.
food & drink
VEGAN IN VERMONT COOKIE
SWAP: Folks following a plantbased diet connect with others and exchange tasty treats. Fletcher Free Library New North End Branch, Burlington, 6-7:30 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 863-3403.
games
CHESS CLUB: Players of all ages and abilities test their skills with instructor Robert and peers. Kellogg-Hubbard Library, Montpelier, 3:30-5 p.m. Free. Info, 223-3338.
health & fitness
CHAIR YOGA: Waterbury Public Library instructor Diana Whitney leads at-home participants in gentle stretches supported by seats. 10 a.m. Free. Info, 244-7036.
These community event listings are sponsored by the WaterWheel Foundation, a project of the Vermont band Phish.
LIST YOUR UPCOMING EVENT HERE FOR FREE!
All submissions must be received by Thursday at noon for consideration in the following Wednesday’s newspaper. Find our convenient form and guidelines at sevendaysvt.com/postevent
Listings and spotlights are written by Rebecca Driscoll Seven Days edits for space and style. Depending on cost and other factors, classes and workshops may be listed in either the calendar or the classes section. Class organizers may be asked to purchase a class listing.
Learn more about highlighted listings in the Magnificent 7 on page 11.
holidays
ARTISAN HOLIDAY MARKET:
Festive shoppers flock to a onestop gift destination featuring handmade jewelry, ceramics, paintings, fiber arts and household goods. Chandler Center for the Arts, Randolph, noon-6 p.m. Free. Info, holidaymarket@ chandler-arts.org.
FESTIVE PUB SING: Neighbors unite for a merry sing-along of brilliant and unusual English carols, led by locals Laurel Swift and Alex Cumming. Lyric sheets available. Revels North, Lebanon, N.H., 7-9 p.m. Free. Info, 603-558-7894.
MERRY & BRIGHT ART
MARKET: Holiday gift hunters discover unique handmade items crafted by more than 35 Vermont artists. Brandon Artists Guild, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Free. Info, 247-4956.
language
SPANISH
CONVERSATION: Fluent and beginner speakers brush up on their vocabulario with a discussion led by a Spanish teacher. Presented by Dorothy Alling Memorial Library. 5-6 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, programs@damlvt.org.
québec
‘THE SECRET CHORD:
A LEONARD COHEN
EXPERIENCE’: Audience members delight in a tribute to the Canadian artist’s extraordinary life, music and poetry. Sylvan Adams Theatre, Segal Centre for Performing Arts, Montréal, 1 & 7:30 p.m. $33-80. Info, 514-739-7944.
theater
‘BEAUTY AND THE BEAST’: Northern Stage mounts the classic Disney tale as old as time about learning to look beyond appearances. Byrne
FIND MORE LOCAL EVENTS IN THIS ISSUE AND ONLINE:
Find visual art exhibits and events in the Art section and at sevendaysvt.com/art.
See what’s playing in the On Screen section. music + nightlife
Find club dates at local venues in the Music + Nightlife section online at sevendaysvt.com/music.
= ONLINE EVENT
= GET TICKETS ON
Theater, Barrette Center for the Arts, White River Junction, 7:30 p.m. $24-94. Info, 296-7000.
words
NOONTIME POETRY READING
SOCIETY: Verse lovers link up to share their work, reflect and write creatively. Pierson Library, Shelburne, noon-1 p.m. Free. Info, 985-5124.
THU.19
business
GROW YOUR BUSINESS: Shelburne BNI hosts a weekly meeting for local professionals to exchange referrals and build meaningful connections. Connect Church, Shelburne, 8:30-10 a.m. Free. Info, 377-3422.
HIRING2DAYVT VIRTUAL
JOB FAIR: Time for a new gig? The Vermont Department of Labor offers a meet and greet with employers from around the state. 11 a.m.-noon. Free. Info, 828-4000.
climate crisis
ERICH OSTERBERG & JONATHAN WINTER: In “A New Approach to a Changing Watershed,” two local professors discuss how natural systems and communities have been affected by climate change and how to make our region more resilient. Montshire Museum of Science, Norwich, 5:30-7 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 649-2200.
community
VERMONT LIBRARY
STORYTELLING: BEST OF 2024: Neighbors share their true, spellbinding and reflective narratives with the community. Host Samara Anderson aims to bring the event to every public library in Vermont. South Burlington Public Library & City Hall, 6-8 p.m. Free. Info, anderson_samara@ yahoo.com.
crafts
KNIT FOR YOUR NEIGHBOR: All ages and abilities knit or crochet hats and scarves for the South Burlington Food Shelf. Materials provided. South Burlington Public Library & City Hall, 2-5 p.m. Free. Info, 846-4140.
KNITTING GROUP: Knitters of all experience levels get together to spin yarns. Latham Library, Thetford, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 785-4361.
WOODWORKING LAB: Visionaries create a project or learn a new skill with the help of mentors and access to tools and equipment in the makerspace. Hannaford Career Center, Middlebury, 5-8 p.m. $7.50. Info, 382-1012. etc.
WINTER CELEBRATION: Town Meeting TV hosts an annual fête for community members to reflect on the year, mingle and network. CCTV Channel 17 Studios, Burlington, 5-7 p.m. Free. Info, 862-3966.
film
See what’s playing at local theaters in the On Screen section.
‘ANTARCTICA 3D’: Never-beforeseen footage brings audience members to the farthest reaches of the coldest, driest, windiest continent on Earth. Northfield Savings Bank 3D Theater: A National Geographic Experience, ECHO Leahy Center for Lake Champlain, Burlington, 10:30 a.m., 12:30, 2:30 & 4:30 p.m. $3-5 plus regular admission, $16.50-20; admission free for members and kids 2 and under. Info, 864-1848.
‘BLUE WHALES: RETURN OF THE GIANTS 3D’: Andy Serkis narrates the journey of a lifetime into the realm of the world’s largest mammals and the scientists who study them. Northfield Savings Bank 3D Theater: A National Geographic Experience, ECHO Leahy Center for Lake Champlain, Burlington, 11:30 a.m., 1:30 & 3:30 p.m. $3-5 plus regular admission, $16.50-20; admission free for members and kids 2 and under. Info, 864-1848.
‘FUNGI: THE WEB OF LIFE 3D’: Sparkling graphics take viewers on a journey into the weird, wide world of mushrooms, which we are only just beginning to understand. Northfield Savings Bank 3D Theater: A National Geographic Experience, ECHO Leahy Center for Lake Champlain, Burlington, noon, 2 & 4 p.m. $3-5 plus regular admission, $16.5020; admission free for members and kids 2 and under. Info, 864-1848.
‘JIM HENSON: IDEA MAN’: Academy Award-winning filmmaker Ron Howard’s 2024 documentary examines the life and work of a puppeteer who revolutionized television. Town Hall Theater, Middlebury, 7-9 p.m. $17. Info, 382-9222.
‘T. REX: GREATEST OF ALL TYRANTS 3D’: Incredible CGI and revelations in tyrannosaur paleontology help to chronicle a remarkable discovery in the badlands of Hell Creek. Northfield Savings Bank 3D Theater: A National Geographic Experience, ECHO Leahy Center for Lake Champlain, Burlington, 11 a.m., 1 & 3 p.m. $3-5 plus regular admission, $16.50-20; admission free for members and kids 2 and under. Info, 864-1848.
games
DUPLICATE BRIDGE GAMES: Snacks and coffee fuel bouts of a classic card game. Burlington Bridge Club, Williston, 12:30-4 p.m. $6. Info, 872-5722.
WEEKLY CHESS FOR FUN: Players of all ability levels face off and learn new strategies. United Community Church, St. Johnsbury, 5:30-9 p.m. Free; donations accepted. Info, lafferty1949@gmail.com.
health & fitness
ART YOGA: Artist Sharon Fennimore combines awareness with a child’s sense of play and curiosity. Waterbury Public Library,
6:30-7:30 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, judi@waterburypubliclibrary. com.
holidays
ARTISAN HOLIDAY MARKET: See WED.18.
‘CELTIC CHRISTMAS WITH CASSIE & MAGGIE’: A Nova Scotian sibling duo performs their twist on classic holiday hymns, ancient carols and an ode to Vixen — Santa’s most mysterious reindeer. Lebanon Opera House, N.H., 7:30 p.m. $22-27. Info, 603-448-0400. THE ETHEREAL CHURCH: HOLIDAY EDITION: Merrymakers enjoy seasonal ambient music and visual effects in a candlelit, meditative space. First Church in Barre, Universalist, 7-8 p.m. Free. Info, 479-0114.
A FESTIVAL OF NINE LESSONS & CAROLS: Patterned after the King’s College Cambridge holiday tradition, the evening includes readings, selections from the choir and organ music. Christ Episcopal Church, Montpelier, 7-9 p.m. Free. Info, 223-3613.
A FOREST OF LIGHTS: Folks stroll through a magical landscape filled with enchanting displays, including a snow shower tower and a whimsical woodland. Vermont Institute of Natural Science, Quechee, 4:30-7 p.m. $813; free for kids 3 and under. Info, 359-5000.
JOHN DOYLE & MICK MCAULEY: Two Celtic music superstars get feet stomping at “An Irish Christmas” concert, showcasing traditional tunes from Ireland and the British Isles. Virtual option available. See calendar spotlight Next Stage Arts, Putney, 7 p.m. $10-25; cash bar. Info, 387-0102. MERRY & BRIGHT ART MARKET: See WED.18.
UGLY CHRISTMAS SWEATER CONTEST: Festive folks don their most creative, hideous or hilarious threads and win prizes while enjoying holiday treats and drinks. Sparkle Barn, Wallingford, 6-8 p.m. Free. Info, 446-2044. ‘THE WICKHAMS: CHRISTMAS AT PEMBERLEY’: Shaker Bridge Theatre mounts a yuletide sequel to Jane Austen’s beloved tale Pride and Prejudice exploring the confines of class and the generosity of forgiveness. Briggs Opera House, White River Junction, 7 p.m. $20-45. Info, 281-6848. WINTER LIGHTS: Buildings and gardens glow with multicolored bulbs in a spectacular display for the holiday season. Shelburne Museum, 4:30-8 p.m. $10-30; free for kids 3 and under. Info, 985-3346.
language
ITALIAN CONVERSATION GROUP: Semi-fluent speakers practice their skills during a conversazione with others. Best for those who can speak at least basic sentences. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, noon-1 p.m. Free. Info, 863-3403.
FAMI LY FU N
Check out these family-friendly events for parents, caregivers and kids of all ages.
• Plan ahead at sevendaysvt.com/family-fun
• Post your event at sevendaysvt.com/postevent.
WED.18
burlington
LEGO TIME: Mini makers ages 4 to 11 design and build original, colorful creations. Fletcher Free Library New North End Branch, Burlington, 11 a.m.-noon. Free. Info, 863-3403.
Spoonful of Sugar
Renowned Disney tribute band the Little Mermen transform New Hampshire’s Lebanon Opera House into the happiest place on Earth. Based in New York City, the traveling group of Broadway-level musicians delivers energetic renditions of nostalgic movie tunes — in full costume. e band’s repertoire spans nearly a century of the silver screen’s musical canon, from Mary Poppins to Encanto, and infuses that iconic Disney sound with rock and pop influences. is seasonal performance conjures an extra pinch of magic with cheerful covers of holiday classics from Home Alone, e Muppet Christmas Carol and e Nightmare Before Christmas
THE LITTLE MERMEN
Johnsbury Athenaeum, 10:15-10:45 a.m. Free. Info, 745-1391.
FRI.20 burlington
‘THE SNOW QUEEN AND THE TROLLS’: See THU.19.
VISIT SANTA!: Festive kiddos pop by the snowflake station to take a magical photo and share their holiday wishes. Church Street Marketplace, Burlington, 4-8 p.m. Free. Info, 863-1648.
chittenden county
Saturday, December 21, 2 p.m., at Lebanon Opera House in New Hampshire. $22-27. Info, 603-448-0400, lebanonoperahouse.org. and resources. South Burlington Public
STEAM SPACE: Kiddos in grades K to 5 explore science, technology, engineering, art and mathematics with fun and engaging activities. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 5:30-6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 863-3403.
TODDLER TIME: Librarians bring out books, rhymes and songs specially selected for young ones 12 to 24 months. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 11-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 863-3403.
chittenden county
HOMESCHOOL SOCIAL: Families meet for a morning of socializing, exploring, and learning about the library’s catalog and resources. South Burlington Public Library & City Hall, 9:30-10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 846-4140.
LEGO BUILDERS: Mini makers explore and create new worlds with stackable blocks. Recommended for ages 6 and up. South Burlington Public Library & City Hall, 3-4:30 p.m. Free. Info, 846-4140.
‘NUTCRACKER’ STORY TIME: Local author AnnMarie Anderson reads her holiday picture book, e Nutcracker, then attendees create a keepsake ornament and nutcracker costume to take home. Pierson Library, Shelburne, 3:15-4:15 p.m. Free. Info, 985-5124.
BABY TIME: Infants and their caregivers enjoy a slow, soothing story featuring songs, rhymes and lap play. South Burlington Public Library & City Hall, 10:30-11 a.m. Free. Info, 846-4140.
GAME ON!: Kids take turns collaborating with or competing against friends using Nintendo Switch on the big screen. Caregivers must be present to supervise children below fifth grade. South Burlington Public Library & City Hall, 5-6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 846-4140.
KIDS PUZZLE SWAP: Participants leave completed kids’ puzzles (24 to 125 pieces only) in a ziplock bag with an image of the finished product, then find something new to take home. South Burlington Public Library & City Hall, 2:30-5 p.m. Free. Info, 846-4140.
PLAYGROUP & STORY TIME: Little ones and their caregivers listen to stories, sing songs and share toys with new friends. Richmond Free Library, 10 a.m.-noon. Free. Info, 434-3036.
mad river valley/ waterbury
TEEN HANGOUT: Middle and high schoolers make friends at a no-pressure meetup. Waterbury Public Library, 3-6 p.m. Free. Info, 244-7036.
THU.19 burlington
BABY & ME CLASS: Parents and their infants ages birth to 1 explore massage, lullabies and gentle movements while discussing the struggles and joys of parenthood. Greater Burlington YMCA, 9:45-10:45 a.m. $10; free for members. Info, 862-9622.
BABY TIME: Pre-walking little ones experience a story time catered to their
infant interests. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 11-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 863-3403.
GROW PRESCHOOL YOGA: Colleen from Grow Prenatal and Family Yoga leads little ones ages 2 to 5 in songs, movement and other fun activities. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 11-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 863-3403.
‘THE SNOW QUEEN AND THE TROLLS’: Families enjoy a vibrant adaptation of a timeless fairy tale, featuring dazzling puppetry, laugh-out-loud comedy and songs. Off Center for the Dramatic Arts, Burlington, 6-8 p.m. $6-25. Info, complicationscompany@gmail.com.
chittenden county
MIDDLE SCHOOL MAKERS: COOKING: Students in grades 4 through 8 make and decorate delicious homemade sugar cookies. South Burlington Public Library & City Hall, 4-5 p.m. Free. Info, 846-4140.
PRESCHOOL MUSIC WITH LINDA BASSICK: e singer and storyteller extraordinaire guides little ones ages birth to 5 in indoor music and movement. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 10:30-11 a.m. Free. Info, 878-4918.
PRESCHOOL PLAY TIME: Pre-K patrons play and socialize after music time. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 11-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 878-4918.
STORY TIME: Little ones ages birth to 5 learn from songs, crafts and picture books. Brownell Library, Essex Junction, 10-10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 878-6956.
barre/montpelier
POKÉMON CLUB: I choose you, Pikachu! Elementary and teenage fans of the franchise — and beginners, too — trade cards and play games. Kellogg-Hubbard Library, Montpelier, 3:30-5 p.m. Free. Info, 223-3338.
DEC. 21 | FAMILY FUN
STORY TIME: Kids and their caregivers meet for stories, songs and bubbles. Kellogg-Hubbard Library, Montpelier, 10:30-11 a.m. Free. Info, 223-3338.
stowe/smuggs
WEE ONES PLAYTIME: Caregivers bring kiddos 3 and younger to a new sensory learning experience each week. Morristown Centennial Library, Morrisville, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 888-3853.
mad river valley/ waterbury
BUSY BEES PLAYGROUP: Blocks, toys, books and songs engage little ones 24 months and younger. Waterbury Public Library, 10-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 244-7036.
northeast kingdom
STORY TIME: Youngsters 5 and under play, sing, hear stories and color. St.
SATURNALIA FOR TEENS & TWEENS: Students in grades 4 to 12 join up for a jovial Roman holiday celebration of light and levity. Brownell Library, Essex Junction, 4:30-6 p.m. Free. Info, 878-6956.
barre/montpelier
LEGO CLUB: Budding builders create geometric structures with snap-together blocks. Kellogg-Hubbard Library, Montpelier, 3:30-5 p.m. Free. Info, 223-3338.
STORY TIME & PLAYGROUP: Participants ages 5 and under enjoy themed science, art and nature activities. Jaquith Public Library, Marshfield, 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 426-3581.
middlebury area
SATURDAY PLAYGROUP: Folks new to town or to parenting connect while their kids make friends. Vergennes Congregational Church, 9:3011 a.m. Free. Info, 877-2435.
rutland/killington
‘DR. SEUSS’ HOW THE GRINCH STOLE CHRISTMAS’: is live-action adaptation of the beloved children’s tale stars Jim Carrey as the reclusive green hermit. Paramount eatre, Rutland, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 775-0903.
upper valley
STORY TIME: Preschoolers take part in tales, tunes and playtime. Latham Library, etford, 11 a.m. Free. Info, 785-4361.
SAT.21 burlington
FAMILY PLAYSHOP: Wee ones ages birth to 5 explore a range of themes and
music
INSIDE PITCH ONLINE
SERIES: ‘THE VOICES OF BACH’S VIOLIN’: Classical musician Soovin Kim demonstrates how the beloved German composer created a rich, multivoiced sound with the stringed instrument.
7 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 846-2175.
LOCALS NIGHT: Oenophiles enjoy the vineyard’s offerings, small bites and live tunes by Vermont musicians in a cozy, intimate setting. Lincoln Peak Vineyard, New Haven, 5:30-7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 388-7368.
québec
‘THE SECRET CHORD: A LEONARD COHEN EXPERIENCE’: See WED.18, 7:30 p.m.
seminars
ESSENTIALS OF CAMERA
OPERATION: An informative evening examines the critical elements of photography and videography, from exposure to depth of field. e Media Factory, Burlington, 6-8 p.m. Free; donations accepted; preregister. Info, 651-9692.
theater
‘BEAUTY AND THE BEAST’: See WED.18, 2 & 7:30 p.m.
words
MORNINGS, MUFFINS & MYSTERIES: Lit lovers link up to discuss the month’s twisty page-turner. St. Albans Free Library, 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 524-1507.
POETRY SALON AND OPEN MIC: Featured poets Elizabeth A.I. Powell and Katharine Whitcomb share their bold new works before opening the floor to others. Pierson Library, Shelburne, 6-8 p.m. Free. Info, 985-5124.
FRI.20
bazaars
BTV WINTER MARKET: Locavores explore an outdoor market featuring a rotating group of 20 local artists, makers and food vendors. Burlington City Hall Park, 2-6 p.m. Free. Info, 865-7166.
etc.
ALPHA FILM SERIES: Community members enjoy a meal, watch a brief video and share their perspectives on faith in an informal, friendly environment. St. John Vianney Parish Hall, South Burlington, 6:15-8:30 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 864-4166.
film
See what’s playing at local theaters in the On Screen section.
‘ANTARCTICA 3D’: See THU.19.
‘BLUE WHALES: RETURN OF THE GIANTS 3D’: See THU.19.
Sham-Rockin’ Good Time
Musical powerhouses John Doyle and Mick McAuley transport listeners to the quaint villages of rural Ireland with “An Irish Christmas” at Next Stage Arts in Putney. e concert highlights holiday tunes from the Emerald and British Isles, as well as originals fit for the festive season. Both Doyle and McAuley acquired global recognition in the mid-1990s with groundbreaking American Irish group Solas — once regarded by the Boston Globe as “the finest Celtic ensemble this country has ever produced.” e two musicians continue their contributions to the genre as solo artists, but their neartelepathic onstage connection makes for an unmissable listening experience.
JOHN DOYLE & MICK MCAULEY
ursday, December 19, 7 p.m., at Next Stage Arts in Putney. $10-25; cash bar; live stream available. Info, 387-0102, nextstagearts.org.
‘FUNGI: THE WEB OF LIFE 3D’: See THU.19.
‘T. REX: GREATEST OF ALL TYRANTS 3D’: See THU.19. food & drink
GIN-TER WONDERLAND: Libation lovers revel in a special cocktail menu filled with holiday cheer, including gingerbread old-fashioneds and Euro-style hot chocolate. Barr Hill, Montpelier, 2-8 p.m. Free. Info, 472-8000.
games
DUPLICATE BRIDGE GAMES: See THU.19, 10 a.m.-1:30 p.m.
MAH-JONGG: Tile traders of all experience levels gather for a game. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 1-3 p.m. Free. Info, 878-4918.
health & fitness
GUIDED MEDITATION
ONLINE: Dorothy Alling Memorial Library invites attendees to relax on their lunch breaks and reconnect with their bodies. Noon-12:30 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, programs@ damlvt.org.
WINTER SOLSTICE MEDITATION: Intention setters gather for an afternoon of ritual celebrating the return of light, accompanied by live harp music. Waterbury Public Library, 4:30 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, judi@ waterburypubliclibrary.com.
holidays
ARTISAN HOLIDAY MARKET: See WED.18.
‘A CHARLIE BROWN CHRISTMAS: LIVE IN CONCERT’: Charles M. Schulz’s animated characters come to life on-stage as they
HOLIDAY DROP-IN: Merrymakers indulge in tasty seasonal treats while enjoying festive tunes by the Kingdom Mountain Dulcimers. St. Johnsbury Athenaeum, 3 p.m. Free. Info, 748-8291.
THE KAT & BRETT HOLIDAY SHOW: Kat Wright and Brett Hughes present their annual extravaganza of honky-tonk holiday cheer. York Street Meeting House, Lyndon, 7 p.m. $35. Info, 748-2600.
MERRY & BRIGHT ART MARKET: See WED.18.
WESTFORD MUSIC SERIES: THE FAIRFAX FLETCHER WESTFORD BAND: Talented locals combine forces to perform a variety of popular, traditional holiday tunes, led by music director Aaron Doane. Westford Common Hall, 7-8 p.m. Free; donations accepted. Info, 734-8177.
‘THE WICKHAMS: CHRISTMAS AT PEMBERLEY’: See THU.19.
WINTER LIGHTS: See THU.19.
WINTER SOLSTICE YULE ADVENTURE DINNER: Foodies fill the shortest day of the year with enchanting holiday magic and a four-course, family-style feast. Adventure Dinner Clubhouse, Colchester, 6-9 p.m. $85. Info, sas@adventuredinner.com.
lgbtq
RPG NIGHT: Members of the LGBTQ community get together weekly for role-playing games such as Dungeons & Dragons and Everway. Rainbow Bridge Community Center, Barre, 5:308:30 p.m. Free. Info, 622-0692.
music
BRUCE SKLAR TRIO: A local ensemble teams up with special guest saxophonist Daniel Ian Smith for an enchanting evening of jazz. BYOB. e Phoenix, Waterbury, 7:30 p.m. $0-40 sliding scale. Info, 355-5440.
LOW LILY: A Brattleboro band brings its signature soundscape of fiddle, folk, bluegrass and Americana to the stage for a special winter solstice celebration. Town Hall eater, Middlebury, 7-9 p.m. $20-30. Info, 382-9222.
search for the true meaning of Christmas. Spruce Peak Performing Arts Center, Stowe Mountain Resort, 7 p.m. $30-65. Info, 760-4634.
‘CHRISTMAS COWBOY’: Film buffs enjoy an exclusive screening with the cast and crew of this 2024 holiday romance flick filmed in Vermont. A Q&A follows. e Opera House at Enosburg Falls, 7 p.m. $10 suggested donation. Info, 933-6171.
‘THE CHRISTMAS STORY’: Bread and Puppet eater’s holiday offering returns to the stage after 35 years of hibernation, with a revised script to reflect the current political climate. See calendar spotlight. Greensboro United Church of Christ, 7 p.m. $15 suggested donation. Info, 586-2059.
A FOREST OF LIGHTS: See THU.19.
a stunningly faithful tribute show. Lebanon Opera House, N.H., 7:30 p.m. $27-47. Info, 603-448-0400.
tech
MORNING TECH HELP: Experts answer questions about phones, laptops, e-readers and other devices in one-on-one sessions. South Burlington Public Library & City Hall, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 846-4140.
PHONE & TECH SUPPORT: Perplexed patrons receive aid from library staff on a first come, first served basis. Fletcher Free Library New North End Branch, Burlington, 10 a.m.-noon. Free. Info, 863-3403.
theater
‘BEAUTY AND THE BEAST’: See WED.18.
SAT.21
bazaars
BTV WINTER MARKET: See FRI.20, noon-6 p.m.
dance
CONTRA DANCE: Dancers of all ages and abilities learn at a gathering that encourages joy, laughter and friendship. Bring clean, soft-soled shoes. See website for callers and bands. Capital City Grange, Berlin, 8-11 p.m. $5-20 sliding scale. Info, 225-8921. etc.
BLOOD DRIVE: Participants part with life-sustaining pints at this American Red Cross donation event. Central Vermont Chamber of Commerce, Berlin, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 800-733-2767.
SISTERHOOD CAMPFIRE: Women and genderqueer folks gather in a safe and inclusive space to build community through
FOMO?
RAVENSWING: Abi Sandy and Crystal Zhu blend Scottish fiddling and New England contra traditions to create unique toe-tapping tunes. Stone’s row, Richmond, 6-8 p.m. Free; donations accepted. Info, mark.sustic@ gmail.com.
TAYLOR HASKINS: A composer, trumpeter and synthesist performs his annual solstice concert of improvised music. e Mill ADK, Westport N.Y., 7-8 p.m. $20. Info, catherine@themilladk.com.
‘WINTER CAROLS’: BarnArts presents an original program of solstice-themed wintry works highlighting local singers and musicians. First Universalist Church and Society, Barnard, 7-8:15 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 234-1645.
YELLOW BRICK JOEL: Listeners experience the sensational talents of David Clark as Billy Joel and Bill Connors as Elton John in
Find even more local events in this newspaper and online: art
Find visual art exhibits and events in the Art section and at sevendaysvt.com/art.
See what’s playing at theaters in the On Screen section.
music + nightlife
Find club dates at local venues in the Music + Nightlife section online at sevendaysvt.com/ music.
Learn more about highlighted listings in the Magnificent 7 on page 11.
= ONLINE EVENT
= GET TICKETS ON SEVENDAYSTICKETS.COM
FAMI LY FU N
rotating activities designed to promote school readiness and foster creativity.
Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 1011:30 a.m. Free. Info, 863-3403.
SING-ALONG WITH LINDA BASSICK: Babies, toddlers and preschoolers sing, dance and wiggle along with Linda. Fletcher Free Library New North End Branch, Burlington, 11-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 863-3403.
‘THE SNOW QUEEN AND THE TROLLS’: See THU.19, 2-4 & 6-8 p.m.
VISIT SANTA!: See FRI.20, 11 a.m.-3 p.m.
chittenden county
TEEN ANIME CLUB: Fans in grades 6 through 12 watch their favorite shows with friends and snacks. Brownell Library, Essex Junction, 3:30-4:30 p.m. Free. Info, 878-6956.
mad river valley/ waterbury
CARRIE KRUCK: A New England author reads her hilarious new picture book, Iggy Who Breathes Fire followed by a very special craft. Inklings Children’s Books, Waitsfield, 10-11 a.m. Free. Info, 496-7280.
rutland/killington
‘A CHRISTMAS STORY’: Families delight in the classic tale of a young boy in 1940s Indiana whose holiday hopes repeatedly fall short. Paramount Theatre, Rutland, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 775-0903.
CARE YOU CAN COUNT
‘THE POLAR EXPRESS’: Tom Hanks voices the conductor of a train bound for the North Pole in this 2004 animated Christmas film. Paramount Theatre, Rutland, 2 p.m. Free. Info, 775-0903.
brattleboro/okemo valley
OKEMO VALLEY HOLIDAY EXPRESS: All aboard! Families experience the magic of the season with an hour-long train ride including hot cocoa, caroling, and a very special visit from Santa and his elves. Chester Depot, 9 a.m.-6 p.m. $25-30; free for kids 2 and under. Info, 228-5830.
outside vermont
THE LITTLE MERMEN: Broadwaycaliber musicians take the stage for a high-energy sing-along performance of Disney’s most iconic tunes. See
calendar spotlight. Lebanon Opera House, N.H., 2 p.m. $22-27. Info, 603-448-0400.
SUN.22 burlington
HOLIDAY TRAIN RIDES: All aboard the Big Blue Express! Kids — and kids at heart — take a trip around the top block’s towering tree. Church Street Marketplace, Burlington, 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Free. Info, 863-1648.
‘THE SNOW QUEEN AND THE TROLLS’: See THU.19, 2-4 p.m.
VISIT SANTA!: See FRI.20, 11 a.m.-3 p.m.
chittenden county
SOCIAL SUNDAYS: Families participate in fun and educational art activities with diverse mediums and themes.
All supplies and instruction provided. Milton Artists’ Guild Art Center & Gallery, 1-3 p.m. Free. Info, 891-2014.
brattleboro/okemo valley
OKEMO VALLEY HOLIDAY EXPRESS: See SAT.21.
TUE.24
chittenden county
STORY TIME: Wee ones ages 5 and under start their day off right with familiar stories, songs, rhymes and finger plays. South Burlington Public Library & City Hall, 10:30-11 a.m. Free. Info, 846-4140. K
journaling, storytelling, gentle music and stargazing. Leddy Park, Burlington, 7-9 p.m. Free. Info, sisterhoodcampfire@gmail.com.
film
See what’s playing at local theaters in the On Screen section.
‘ANTARCTICA 3D’: See THU.19.
‘BLUE WHALES: RETURN OF THE GIANTS 3D’: See THU.19.
‘FUNGI: THE WEB OF LIFE 3D’: See THU.19.
‘T. REX: GREATEST OF ALL TYRANTS 3D’: See THU.19.
WOODSTOCK VERMONT FILM
SERIES: ‘THE COWBOY & THE QUEEN’: Andrea Nevins directs this heartwarming 2023 documentary about Monty Roberts, who revolutionized traditional horse-training methods through kindness — and formed a friendship with a monarch. Billings Farm & Museum, Woodstock, 3 p.m. $12-15. Info, 457-2355.
food & drink
BURLINGTON WINTER FARMERS
MARKET: More than 40 vendors showcase their finest fresh farm produce, meats, unique crafts and baked goods. Burlington Beer, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Free. Info, 560-5904.
CAPITAL CITY WINTER FARMERS
MARKET: Locavores sip cocktails while perusing root veggies, honey, crafts and maple syrup at an off-season showcase of locally grown food. Barr Hill, Montpelier, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Free. Info, 472-8000.
GIN-TER WONDERLAND: See FRI.20, noon-8 p.m.
games
CHESS CLUB: All ages and abilities face off and learn new strategies. South Burlington
FOMO?
Find even more local events in this newspaper and online: art
Find visual art exhibits and events in the Art section and at sevendaysvt.com/art.
film
See what’s playing at theaters in the On Screen section.
music + nightlife
Find club dates at local venues in the Music + Nightlife section online at sevendaysvt.com/ music.
Learn more about highlighted listings in the Magnificent 7 on page 11.
= ONLINE EVENT
= GET TICKETS ON SEVENDAYSTICKETS.COM
Public Library & City Hall, 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Free. Info, 846-4140.
D&D & TTRPG GROUP: Fans of Dungeons & Dragons and other tabletop role-playing games embark on a new adventure with a rotating cast of game masters. Virtual option available. Waterbury Public Library, 1-5 p.m. Free. Info, judi@ waterburypubliclibrary.com.
holidays
ARTISAN HOLIDAY MARKET: See WED.18.
CANDLELIGHT: CHRISTMAS
SPECIAL: Talented local musicians perform stirring holiday hits such as “ e First Noël,” “Deck the Halls” and “O Holy Night.” Ages 8 and up. First Unitarian Universalist Society of Burlington, 7 p.m. $31-50. Info, 862-5630.
‘A CHARLIE BROWN CHRISTMAS: LIVE IN CONCERT’: See FRI.20, 1 & 7:45 p.m.
CHRISTMAS AT THE FARM: Festive folks step back in time for a Victorian holiday experience featuring traditional 19th-century decorations, candle dipping, pie crust making and snow sports. Billings Farm & Museum, Woodstock, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. $12-19. Info, 457-2355.
‘THE CHRISTMAS STORY’: See FRI.20. Old Labor Hall, Barre, 7 p.m.
EMALOU & THE BEAT HOLIDAY SHOW: Studio audience members participate in the live recording of an acoustic trio’s forthcoming holiday album. Tank Recording Studio, Burlington, 5:30-6:30 p.m. and 7-8 p.m. $35. Info, 870-8265.
A FOREST OF LIGHTS: See THU.19.
‘THE GREEN MOUNTAIN NUTCRACKER’: Vermont’s interpretation of the classic Christmas ballet features a 68-member cast of professional and student dancers. Barre Opera House, 7 p.m. $16-32. Info, 476-8188.
HOLIDAY ARTISAN FAIR: Treasure hunters find a wide variety of handmade goods, including pottery, paintings, jewelry and sweet treats. GreenTARA Space, North Hero, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Free. Info, 355-2150.
THE KAT & BRETT HOLIDAY SHOW: See FRI.20. Richmond Free Library, 7-9:30 p.m. $35. Info, 355-0035.
MERRY & BRIGHT ART MARKET: See WED.18.
PROCRASTINATOR’S PARADISE
HOLIDAY MARKET: Lastminute gift hunters flock to an afternoon of shopping, sips and festive tunes. Adventure Dinner Clubhouse, Colchester, 10 a.m.4 p.m. Free. Info, sas@ adventuredinner.com.
‘VERMONT’S OWN NUTCRACKER’: Vermont Ballet eater raises the curtain on the fantastical world within a young girl’s Christmas Eve dream. Flynn Main Stage, Burlington, 2 & 7 p.m. $21.05-51. Info, 863-5966.
‘THE WICKHAMS: CHRISTMAS AT PEMBERLEY’: See THU.19. WINTER LIGHTS: See THU.19.
DEC. 20 & 21 | HOLIDAYS
Political Puppets
After a long hiatus, Glover’s Bread and Puppet eater resurrects its original performance piece “ e Christmas Story” at Greensboro United Church of Christ and Barre’s Old Labor Hall. eater founder Peter Schumann (pictured) conceived of the script back in 1962, and annual iterations graced Northeast stages until the mid-1980s. A ’67 New York Times review described the show as “a dramatization of the first Christmas that combined reverence and impudence exactly as they are combined in the medieval mystery plays.” Current puppeteers used archival photos and videos — plus interviews with original performers — to revive the piece, while simultaneously refreshing it to reflect our current political landscape.
‘THE CHRISTMAS STORY’
Friday, December 20, 7 p.m., at Greensboro United Church of Christ, and Saturday, December 21, 7 p.m., at the Old Labor Hall in Barre. $15 suggested donation. Info, 586-2059, breadandpuppet.org.
music
ONION RIVER CHORUS: Singers enchant listeners with sonorous ballads by Claudio Monteverdi, Josquin des Prez and Edvard Grieg. Unitarian Church of Montpelier, 7:30-9 p.m. $25; free for kids 18 and under. Info, 4773922.
SOCIAL BAND: A local ensemble takes the stage with the Champlain Consort for “Deep Midwinter: Songs from Winter’s Heart,” a joyful seasonal offering featuring lively choral singing and period instruments. United
Church of Hinesburg, 7:30-9 p.m. $18. Info, 355-4216.
‘STORIES FOR A WINTER’S EVE’: Listeners savor the solstice with original Vermont music and stories, featuring the talents of locals Patti Casey, Susannah Blachly, Mark Nash and Kathryn Blume. e Old Meeting House, East Montpelier, 3-5 & 7-9 p.m. $15-50. Info, 229-9593.
outdoors
WINTER SOLSTICE CEREMONY: Neighbors gather with the Green Mountain Druid Order to usher in the turning point of the year. Burlington Earth Clock, Oakledge
STOP THE BLEED TRAINING: Community members acquire the necessary skills to mitigate uncontrolled bleeding in an emergency. Peoples Trust, 1 Franklin Park W., St. Albans, 9:30-11 a.m. Free; preregister. Info, 658-6110. tech
PHONE & TECH SUPPORT: See FRI.20. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington.
theater
‘BEAUTY AND THE BEAST’: See WED.18, 2 & 7:30 p.m.
‘THE GAZA MONOLOGUES’: Southern Vermont for Palestine presents a reading of testimonies written by Gazan youths in 2010. Proceeds benefit ASHTAR eater. New England Youth eatre, Brattleboro, 7-9 p.m. Free; donations accepted. Info, info@sovt4palestine.org.
words
WRITE NOW!: Lit lovers of all experience levels hone their craft in a supportive and critique-free environment. Kellogg-Hubbard Library, Montpelier, 10 a.m.-noon. Free. Info, 223-3338.
WRITERS’ WERTFREI: Authors both fledgling and published share their work in a nonjudgmental environment. Virtual option available. Waterbury Public Library, 10 a.m.-noon. Free; preregister. Info, judi@ waterburypubliclibrary.com.
SUN.22
bazaars
BTV WINTER MARKET: See FRI.20, noon-4 p.m.
WINOOSKI WINTER FARMERS MARKET: Locavores peruse a variety of vendors’ delicious produce, fine art and other homemade goods. Winooski Senior Center, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Free. Info, farmers market@downtownwinooski.org. community
HUMAN CONNECTION CIRCLE: Neighbors share stories from their lives and forge deep bonds. Pickering Room, Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 3-4:30 p.m. Free; preregister; limited space. Info, humanconnectioncircle@ gmail.com.
crafts
Park, 3:30 p.m. Free. Info, 505-8011.
québec
‘THE SECRET CHORD: A LEONARD COHEN EXPERIENCE’: See WED.18, 7:30 p.m.
seminars
MEDIA FACTORY
ORIENTATION: Curious creatives and multimedia enthusiasts get a virtual tour of the facilities and check out available gear. 1-3 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 651-9692.
SPIN-IN SPINNING CIRCLE: Yarn makers get together and get their wheels turning. BYO fiber and spinning device. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 1-4 p.m. Free. Info, 863-3403.
YARN CRAFTERS GROUP: See WED.18, 1-3 p.m.
film
See what’s playing at local theaters in the On Screen section.
‘ANTARCTICA 3D’: See THU.19. ‘BLUE WHALES: RETURN OF THE GIANTS 3D’: See THU.19.
Job of the Week
Climate Action Coordinator
WOODSTOCK VERMONT FILM SERIES: ‘THE COWBOY & THE QUEEN’: See SAT.21.
‘FUNGI: THE WEB OF LIFE 3D’: See THU.19.
WINTER LIGHTS: See THU.19.
lgbtq
BOARD GAME DAY: LGBTQ tabletop fans bring their own favorite games to the party. Rainbow Bridge Community Center, Barre, 1-6 p.m. Free. Info, 622-0692.
A FOREST OF LIGHTS: See THU.19.
MERRY & BRIGHT ART MARKET: See WED.18.
WINTER LIGHTS: See THU.19.
language
‘T. REX: GREATEST OF ALL TYRANTS 3D’: See THU.19.
VNRC is seeking a Climate Action Coordinator to help inspire and advance individual, community, program and policy solutions to climate change – including e orts around e ciency, conservation, renewable energy, transportation, and smart land use practices – as informed by Vermont’s Climate Action Plan. The position also helps manage the Vermont Energy and Climate Action Network (VECAN) – an informal network of all-volunteer community energy committees and partners – and assists our partner organization – Vermont Conservation Voters – to elect climate leaders during election years.
Preferred qualifications include:
• Commitment to protecting Vermont’s environment and making clean energy solutions available to all.
• Interest or experience in building coalitions, including supporting grassroots engagement and working with diverse stakeholders to identify and accomplish shared goals.
• Attention to detail and proven communication, coordination and collaboration skills.
• Self-motivation and an ability to manage multiple projects simultaneously.
• Social media, event planning, graphic design, and media relations experience is a plus
• Applicants should share our commitment to centering equity, environmental justice, diversity, and inclusion in our work
The Climate Action Coordinator is a full-time, hybrid (remote & in-person) position based at our Montpelier o ce. Starting salary is commensurate with experience, with a salary range of $45,000-$52,000 plus a $20,000 benefits stipend.
To apply, email a letter of interest, resume and three references to aconnizzo@vnrc.org.
We will begin reviewing applications on January 6, 2025, and will accept new applications on a rolling basis until the position is filled. Find out more and apply at vnrc.org/join-our-team.
food & drink
GIN-TER WONDERLAND: See FRI.20, noon-7 p.m. games
DUPLICATE BRIDGE GAMES: See THU.19, 1-4:30 p.m.
health & fitness
KARUNA COMMUNITY
MEDITATION: A YEAR TO LIVE (FULLY): Participants practice keeping joy, generosity and gratitude at the forefront of their minds. Jenna’s House, Johnson, 10-11:15 a.m. Free; donations accepted. Info, mollyzapp@ live.com.
NEW LEAF SANGHA
MINDFULNESS PRACTICE: Newcomers and experienced meditators alike stretch their skills in the Plum Village tradition of Thich Nhat Hanh. Hot Yoga Burlington, 6:30-8:15 p.m. Free. Info, newleafsangha@gmail.com.
holidays
ARTISAN HOLIDAY MARKET: See WED.18, noon-4 p.m.
‘A CHARLIE BROWN CHRISTMAS: LIVE IN CONCERT’: See FRI.20, 1 p.m.
CHRISTMAS AT THE FARM: See SAT.21.
COMMUNITY CAROL SING: Neighbors raise their voices at a festive, fun-filled sing-along led by choral director Alan Rowe. A potluck follows. St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church of St. Johnsbury, 3-4:30 p.m. Free; donations accepted. Info, 748-2600. FESTIVE PUB SING: See. WED.18. The Tower Bar & Lounge, Brattleboro, 4-6 p.m.
A FOREST OF LIGHTS: See THU.19.
‘THE GREEN MOUNTAIN NUTCRACKER’: See SAT.21, 2 p.m.
‘IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE’: James Stewart stars in Frank Capra’s 1946 Christmas classic about a man saved from despair by his guardian angel. Paramount Theatre, Rutland, 2 p.m. Free. Info, 775-0903.
MERRY & BRIGHT ART MARKET: See WED.18.
‘MESSIAH’ SING: A holiday tradition since 1984, community members gather to perform selections from George Frideric Handel’s famous oratorio. Music sheets provided. Congregational Church of Middlebury, 2-4 p.m. $5-25 suggested donation. Info, 382-7493.
PROCRASTINATOR’S PARADISE
HOLIDAY MARKET: See SAT.21.
‘VERMONT’S OWN NUTCRACKER’: See SAT.21, 1 & 6:30 p.m.
‘THE WICKHAMS: CHRISTMAS AT PEMBERLEY’: See THU.19, 2:30 p.m.
CRAFT CLUB: Creative queer folks work on their knitting, crocheting and sewing projects. Rainbow Bridge Community Center, Barre, 10 a.m.-noon. Free. Info, 622-0692.
LGBTQ FIBER ARTS GROUP: A knitting, crocheting and weaving session welcomes all ages, gender identities, sexual orientations and skill levels. Presented by Pride Center of Vermont. Noon-1 p.m. Free. Info, laurie@ pridecentervt.org.
music
BLUEGRASS BRUNCH: Longtime local legends Brett Hughes, Pat Melvin, Caleb Elder and Beau Stapleton perform upbeat toe-tappers on the deck. Madbush Falls, Waitsfield, noon2:30 p.m. Free. Info, 496-7575.
MAIRI HARRIS GREWAR & NATHAN HARRIS: An Austrian husband-and-wife piano duo performs dance-inspired duet music, from ballet classics to European folk dances. Town Hall Theater, Middlebury, 4-6 p.m. $20-25. Info, 382-9222.
ONION RIVER CHORUS: See SAT.21, 4-5:30 p.m.
SOCIAL BAND: See SAT.21. Richmond Free Library, 3-4:30 p.m. $18. Info, 355-4216.
québec
‘THE SECRET CHORD: A LEONARD COHEN EXPERIENCE’: See WED.18, 2 & 7:30 p.m.
theater
‘BEAUTY AND THE BEAST’: See WED.18, 2 p.m.
MON.23
crafts
FUSE BEADS CLUB: Aspiring artisans bring ideas or borrow patterns to make beaded creations. Kellogg-Hubbard Library, Montpelier, 3:30-5 p.m. Free. Info, 223-3338.
film
See what’s playing at local theaters in the On Screen section.
‘ANTARCTICA 3D’: See THU.19.
‘BLUE WHALES: RETURN OF THE GIANTS 3D’: See THU.19.
‘FUNGI: THE WEB OF LIFE 3D’: See THU.19.
‘T. REX: GREATEST OF ALL TYRANTS 3D’: See THU.19.
holidays
‘A CHARLIE BROWN CHRISTMAS: LIVE IN CONCERT’: See FRI.20, 1 & 7 p.m.
CHRISTMAS AT THE FARM: See SAT.21.
ENGLISH CONVERSATION CIRCLE: Locals learning English as a second language gather in the Digital Lab to build vocabulary and make friends. South Burlington Public Library & City Hall, noon-1 p.m. Free. Info, 846-4140.
GERMAN LANGUAGE LUNCH: Willkommen! Speakers of all experience levels brush up on conversational skills over bagged lunches. Kellogg-Hubbard Library, Montpelier, noon-1 p.m. Free. Info, 223-3338.
words
READ LIKE A WRITER: Burlington-based New England Readers & Writers hosts a virtual reading group for lit lovers to chat about short stories, both contemporary and classic. 6:30-8 p.m. Free. Info, 372-1132.
TUE.24
holidays
‘A CHARLIE BROWN CHRISTMAS: LIVE IN CONCERT’: See FRI.20, noon & 3 p.m. MERRY & BRIGHT ART MARKET: See WED.18.
language
FRENCH CONVERSATION GROUP: Francophones and language learners meet pour parler la belle langue. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 5-7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 863-3403.
theater
‘BEAUTY AND THE BEAST’: See WED.18, noon & 5 p.m. ➆
FOMO?
Find even more local events in this newspaper and online: art
Find visual art exhibits and events in the Art section and at sevendaysvt.com/art. film
See what’s playing at theaters in the On Screen section. music + nightlife Find club dates at local venues in the Music + Nightlife section online at sevendaysvt.com/ music.
Learn more about highlighted listings in the Magnificent 7 on page 11.
by
classes
THE FOLLOWING CLASS LISTINGS ARE PAID ADVERTISEMENTS. ANNOUNCE YOUR CLASS FOR AS LITTLE AS $16.75/WEEK (INCLUDES SIX PHOTOS AND UNLIMITED DESCRIPTION ONLINE). SUBMIT YOUR CLASS AD AT SEVENDAYSVT.COM/POSTCLASS.
art
ART CLASSES AT WINGSPAN STUDIO: Join Wingspan for creative art classes in drawing and painting this January. Learn with others in an inspiring working art studio in the South End. A drawing class that goes deep into the art of seeing and a painting class with an emphasis on color mixing are sure to warm you this winter! Classes start Jan. 6. Cost: $265. Location: Wingspan Studio, 4A Howard St., Burlington. Info: Wingspan Studio School, Maggie Standley, 233-7676, maggie standley@gmail.com, wingspanstudioeduc.com.
craft
2025 CRAFT WORKSHOPS: In addition to the regular chairmaking and jewelry workshops, this year
we are hosting guest instructors who teach dry stone walling, natural dyes, broom making, Shaker boxes, plant pressing, basket weaving, bowl carving and more. Gift certificates available. e 2025 schedule is now live at ericcannizzaro.com/classes. Location: Handmade Charlotte. Info: Eric Cannizzaro, 360-5281952, ericcannizzaro.com.
culinary
DECEMBER COOKIE-DECORATING
CLASS: Time to get into the holiday spirit with this beginner cookie decorating class! You will learn the basics of royal icing consistency while also utilizing several techniques that will leave you able to create beautiful cookies for your friends and family. Kids are welcome! u., Dec. 19, 6-8 p.m. Cost: $75. Location: Queen City Brewery, 703 B Pine
St., Burlington. Info: 914-610-5275, sevendaystickets.com.
FOCACCIA ART WORKSHOP: We will tackle making focaccia bread dough and decorate it your own way with various herbs and veggies. You’ll go home with your own eight-inch square pan of focaccia art and the recipe to make it again on your own at home. u., Jan. 9, 6-7:30 p.m. Cost: $65. Location: Red Poppy Cakery, 1 Elm St., Waterbury Village Historic District. Info: 203-400-0700, sevendaystickets.com.
REINDEER CAKE DECORATING
WORKSHOP: We will get festive decorating a four-inch reindeer cake! You get to decide between a few holiday flavors. We will make the fondant decorations together and pipe on the reindeer fur and eyes. Our chef will demonstrate the filling of a model cake for the class. Fri., Dec. 20, 6-7:15 p.m. Cost: $75. Location: Red Poppy Cakery, 1 Elm St., Waterbury Village Historic District. Info: 203-400-0700, sevendaystickets.com.
kids
SWIM LESSONS: e Vermont Swim School offers both youth and adult swimmers the opportunity to learn and develop aquatic skills in a nurturing and friendly environment. Lessons take place in the UVM athletic/rec complex, in the Forbush Natatorium. Group, private and semiprivate lessons offered. Sundays. Cost varies.
Location: Forbush Natatorium, 97 Spear St., Burlington. Info: University of Vermont, 656-4483, campus.recreation@uvm.edu, uvmcampusrec.com/sports/ 2017/7/5/lesson-types.aspx.
language
ADULT LIVE SPANISH E-CLASSES: Join us for adult Spanish classes this winter, using Zoom online video conferencing. is is our 19th year! Learn from a native speaker via small group classes or individual instruction. You’ll always be participating and speaking. Beginning to advanced levels. Classes fill up fast. See our website or contact us for details. Group classes begin week of Jan. 13; private instruction avail. anytime. Cost: $325/10 classes, 90+ mins. each, 1/week. Location: online. Info: 585-1025, spanishparavos@gmail.com, spanishwaterburycenter.com.
ALLIANCE FRANÇAISE WINTER
SESSION: e Alliance Française of the Lake Champlain Region offers French classes for adults from beginner through advanced levels. Visit website for class listings. Classes begin Jan. 13, online or in person. Location: Alliance Française, 43 King St., Burlington. Info: Marc Juneau, education@ aflcr.org, aflcr.org.
FRENCH CLASSES: Join us in small, dynamic group classes held in a cozy art studio/small school in Burlington and jump-start
your French journey this winter. Learn with experienced and licensed educator Mme. Maggie. Pronunciation, comprehension, cultural tips shared. Options for kids and adults. Allons-y! Learning has never been this fun or great for the brain! Classes start Jan. 6.
Cost: $180. Location: Wingspan Studio, 4A Howard St., Burlington. Info: Wingspan Studio School, Maggie Standley, 233-7676, maggiestandley@gmail.com, wingspanstudioeduc.com.
martial arts
AIKIDO: THE WAY OF RESILIENCY: Cultivate core power, aerobic fitness and resiliency. e dynamic, circular movements emphasize throws, joint locks and the development of internal energy. Join our community and find resiliency, power and grace. Inclusive training, gender-neutral dressing room/ bathrooms and a safe space for all. Visitors are always welcome to watch a class! Vermont’s only intensive aikido programs. Basic classes 5 days/week; introductory classes begin Jan. 7. Membership rates incl. unlimited classes 6 days/week. Contact us for info about membership rates for adults, youths & families. Location: Aikido of Champlain Valley, 257 Pine St., Burlington. Info: Benjamin Pincus, 951-8900, bpincus@burlingtonaikido.org, burlingtonaikido.org.
music
TAIKO TUESDAYS, DJEMBE
WEDNESDAYS!: Learn to drum with Stuart Paton! Drop-ins welcome. Tue.: Kids & Parents Taiko, 4-5:30 p.m.; Adult Intro Taiko, 5:30-7 p.m.; Accelerated Taiko, 7-8:30 p.m. Wed.: Intermediate Djembe, 5:30-7 p.m.; Beginner Djembe, 7-8:30 p.m. Drums provided. Cost: $92/4 weeks; 90-min. classes; $72 per person for Kids and Parents class. Classes begin Jan. 7. Location: Taiko Studio, 208 Flynn Ave., Burlington. Info: 999-4255, classes@burlingtontaiko.org.
sports
WINTER SOLSTICE WITH YOGA AND ART: Touch into embodied knowing through yoga and art. Illuminate our existing internal resources as we enter the winter months and prepare for the unknowns of the next political landscape. Art supplies and tea are provided. Please try to bring your own mat; reach out if you are in need of yoga materials. Sun., Dec. 22, 1-4 p.m. Location: e Hive on Pine, 420 Pine St., Burlington. Info: sevendaystickets.com.
Humane Society of Chittenden
housing » APARTMENTS, CONDOS & HOMES
on the road » CARS, TRUCKS, MOTORCYCLES
pro services » CHILDCARE, HEALTH/ WELLNESS, PAINTING
buy this stuff »
APPLIANCES, KID STUFF, ELECTRONICS, FURNITURE music »
INSTRUCTION, CASTING, INSTRUMENTS FOR SALE
jobs »
NO SCAMS, ALL LOCAL, POSTINGS DAILY
Banks
AGE/SEX: 11-month-old neutered male
ARRIVAL DATE: September 30, 2024
SUMMARY: Banks is a big, playful puppy with a heart full of love and a spirit that’s eager to thrive! is lovable boy enjoys leisurely strolls through the neighborhood and bounding around in the yard. His energy and zest for life shine through when he’s having fun, and there’s nothing better than seeing his joy as he frolics in the great outdoors. What Banks craves most is a home with adopters who can provide him with structure, positive reinforcement, and the time and patience he needs to adjust. Come meet him and see if he could be the one for you!
DOGS/CATS/KIDS: Banks is seeking a home without feline friends, and we think he will be most successful in a home with teens and adults.
Visit the Humane Society of Chittenden County at 142 Kindness Court, South Burlington, Tuesday through Friday from 1 to 5 p.m. or Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Call 862-0135 or visit hsccvt.org for more info.
DID YOU KNOW?
HSCC can facilitate dog-to-dog introductions! If you’re interested in adopting a dog and you already have one at home, we can introduce your dog to a potential new pal at HSCC to see if they get along before you take them home.
Sponsored by:
CLASSIFIEDS
on the road
CARS/TRUCKS
2012 TOYOTA RAV4
Selling my mom’s 2012 Toyota RAV4. New tires, ready for winter. 95K miles, minor dings on the body, 4WD. $10,000/ OBO. Call 917-494-6263.
Very nice 2-BR town house avail. Feb. 1. $1,600 incl. all utils. On bus route & bike path near Burlington High School. No-charge W/D in building. Pets considered. Priced
below market! Landlords living on premises. NS. Off-street parking. Call Morton Bostock at 802-862-7602 or email morton.bostock@gmail. com.
HOUSEMATES
LIVE CLOSE TO MONTPELIER
Share spacious, country-style home in Middlesex, 9.4 miles from Montpelier, near Mount Hunger. Share large kitchen, laundry room, BA. 1 older resident cat, other pets considered. Looking for assistance w/ light cleaning & outdoor chores. $650/mo. + $100 for plowing, heat, electricity, internet. Visit homesharevermont.org for details.
WELL-APPOINTED HOMESHARE
Share attractive townhouse in S. Burlington w/ active professional in her 50s. Enjoys podcasts, cooking shows, meditation. Spacious BR, 2 shared BA. NS/no pets. W/D. $650 + utils. share. Call 802-863-5625 or visit homesharevermont. org for application.
housing ads: $25 (25 words) legals: 52¢/word buy this stuff: free online
Interview, refs., background checks req. EHO.
services: $12 (25 words) fsbos: $45 (2 weeks, 30 words, photo) jobs: michelle@sevendaysvt.com, 865-1020 x121
your home, commercial & auto locksmith needs!
1-833-237-1233 (AAN CAN)
AGING ROOF? NEW HOMEOWNER? STORM DAMAGE?
CREATIVE
PIERCED & PURIFIED
SALE
Offering body-piercing services w/ 24 years of experience. Body jewelry, gems & minerals, hand-crafted items, metaphysical healing, & more. 59 Clinton St., Plattburgh, N.Y. Call 518-565-9341.
FINANCIAL/LEGAL
DISABILITY BENEFITS
You may qualify for disability benefi ts if you are between 52-63 y/o & under a doctor’s care for a health condition that prevents you from working for a year or more. Call now! 1-877247-6750. (AAN CAN)
HEALTH/ WELLNESS
PERFECT MASSAGE FOR MEN!
Men, I’m Mr. G. It’s all about you relaxing. Very private, 1-on-1 moment. If you feel good, I’m happy. e massage is flawless; the sessions are tailored to your needs! Located in central Vermont just off exit 7. Text only now to 802-522-3932 or email motman@ymail.com.
HOME/GARDEN
24-7 LOCKSMITH
We are there when you need us for home & car lockouts. We’ll get you back up & running quickly! Also, key reproductions, lock installs & repairs, & vehicle fobs. Call us for
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and similar Vermont statutes which make it illegal to advertise any preference, limitations, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, national origin, sexual orientation, age, marital status, handicap, presence of minor children in the family or receipt of public assistance, or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or a discrimination. The newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate, which is in violation of the law. Our
readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. Any home seeker who feels he or she has encountered discrimination should contact:
HUD Office of Fair Housing 10 Causeway St., Boston, MA 02222-1092 (617) 565-5309 — OR — Vermont Human Rights Commission 14-16 Baldwin St. Montpelier, VT 05633-0633 1-800-416-2010 hrc@vermont.gov
You need a local expert provider that proudly stands behind its work. Fast, free estimate. Financing avail. Call 1-888-292-8225. Have the zip code of the property ready when calling! (AAN CAN)
BATH & SHOWER
UPDATES
In as little as 1 day! Affordable prices. No payments for 18 mos. Lifetime warranty & professional installs. Senior & military discounts avail. Call 1-866-370-2939. (AAN CAN)
NEED NEW WINDOWS?
Drafty rooms? Chipped or damaged frames?
Need outside noise reduction? New, energyefficient windows may be the answer! Call for a consultation & free quote today. 1-877248-9944. You will be asked for the zip code of the property when connecting. (AAN CAN)
PEST CONTROL
Protect your home from pests safely & affordably. Roaches, bedbugs, rodents, termites, spiders & other pests. Locally owned & affordable. Call for service or an inspection today! 1-833-237-1199. (AAN CAN)
WATER DAMAGE CLEANUP & RESTORATION
A small amount of water can lead to major damage & mold growth in your home. Our trusted professionals do complete repairs to protect your family & your home’s value! Call 24-7: 1-888-290-2264. Have zip code of service location ready when you call! (AAN CAN)
MOVING/HAULING
MARKOSKI’S MOVE & HAUL
Markoski’s has established a local reputation for being a team of friendly professionals who treat their customers like family. Based out of Chittenden County, we go across Vermont & out of state. Contact Rick at rickmarkoski@gmail. com, & please browse our reviews & jobs on Facebook & Front Porch Forum.
PENSKE TRUCK RENTALS
Clark’s Rentals is your locally owned Penske
print deadline: Mondays at 3:30 p.m. post ads online 24/7 at: sevendaysvt.com/classifieds questions?
truck rental agent, located in central VT at 3122 Airport Rd. in Berlin. Offering local & 1-way rentals. Personal & commercial. We provide Penske-maintained trucks, best in pricing & service. Call Kasey at 802-223-5434 or 24-7 at central: 802-479-7257.
TOP CASH PAID FOR OLD GUITARS 1920-1980 Gibson, Martin, Fender, Gretsch, Epiphone, Guild, Mosrite, Rickenbacker, Prairie State, D’Angelico, Stromber, & Gibson mandolins/banjos. 877-589-0747. (AAN CAN)
MISCELLANEOUS
ACORN STAIRLIFT
Latest model. New condition, used only once. Asking $1,200. Call 802-229-0205.
PETS
TOY YORKIE PUPPY
Female toy Yorkie. Registered, loyal, smart, social, easily trained. Asking $500. Text 315-824-4058.
PAYING
Breitling, Omega, Patek Philippe, Heuer, Daytona, GMT, Submariner & Speedmaster. Call 888-320-1052. (AAN CAN)
QUARTET
Using the enclosed math operations as a guide, fill the grid using the numbers 1 - 6 only once in each row and column.
Complete the following puzzle by using the numbers 1-9 only once in each row, column and 3 x 3 box.
WANT MORE PUZZLES?
Try these online news games from Seven Days at sevendaysvt.com/games.
Put your knowledge of Vermont news to the test.
CALCOKU BY JOSH REYNOLDS
DIFFICULTY THIS WEEK: HHH
Fill the grid using the numbers 1-6, only once in each row and column. The numbers in each heavily outlined “cage” must combine to produce the target number in the top corner, using the mathematical operation indicated. A one-box cage should be filled in with the target number in the top corner. A number can be repeated within a cage as long as it is not the same row or column.
SUDOKU BY JOSH REYNOLDS
DIFFICULTY THIS WEEK: HH
Place a number in the empty boxes in such a way that each row across, each column down and each 9-box square contains all of the numbers one to nine. The same numbers cannot be repeated in a row or column.
ON P.80
See how fast you can solve this weekly 10-word puzzle.
ACT 250 NOTICE
MINOR APPLICATION 4C0357-3 10 V.S.A. §§ 6000 – 6111
Application 4C0357-3 from Whitcomb Woods Apartments Limited Partnership, c/o Cathedral Square, 412 Farrell Street, Suite 100, South Burlington, VT 05403; CSC Partners, Inc., 412 Farrell Street, Suite 100, South Burlington, VT 05403; and Whitcomb Woods Housing Limited Partnership, c/o Cathedral Square, 412 Farrell Street, Suite 100, South Burlington, VT 05403 was received on December 3, 2024 and deemed complete on December 9, 2024. The project is generally described as site improvements and renovations to Whitcomb Woods, a 65-unit independent senior living facility, including a new screened trash enclosure, a new 10’x5’ smoking shelter, replacing the existing light fixtures with new LED and dimmable fixtures, adding two new site lights, replacing an existing storage shed of the same size, installation of underground stormwater chambers, and selective tree removal and replacement. The project is located at 128 West Street in the City of Essex Junction, VT. The application may be viewed on the Natural Resources Board’s website (https://act250.vermont.gov/) by clicking “Act 250 Database” and entering the project number “4C0357-3.”
No hearing will be held and a permit will be issued unless, on or before December 30, 2024, a party notifies the District 4 Commission in writing of an issue requiring a hearing, or the Commission sets the matter for a hearing on its own motion. Any person as defined in 10 V.S.A. § 6085(c)(1) may request a hearing. Any hearing request must be in writing, must state the criteria or sub-criteria at issue, why a hearing is required, and what additional evidence will be presented at the hearing. Any hearing request by an adjoining property owner or other person eligible for party status under 10 V.S.A. § 6085(c)(1)(E) must include a petition for party status under the Act 250 Rules. To request party status and a hearing, fill out the Party Status Petition Form on the Board’s website: https://act250.vermont. gov/documents/party-status-petition-form, and email it to the District 4 Office at: Act250.Essex@ vermont.gov. Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law may not be prepared unless the Commission holds a public hearing.
For more information contact Stephanie H. Monaghan at the address or telephone number below.
Dated this December 10, 2024.
By:Stephanie H. Monaghan
District Coordinator 111 West Street Essex Junction, VT 05452
802-261-1944
stephanie.monaghan@vermont.gov
STATE OF VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT
PROBATE DIVISION CALEDONIA UNIT
DOCKET NO.: 24-PR-0607
In re ESTATE of Alan M. Greenleaf, late of Peacham, Vermont
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
To the creditors of: Alan M. Greenleaf, late of Peacham, Vermont.
I have been appointed to administer this estate. All creditors having claims against the decedent or the estate must present their claims in writing within four (4) months of the date of the first publication of this notice. The claim must be presented to me at the address listed below with a copy sent to the Court. The claim may be barred forever if it is not presented within the four (4) month period.
Dated: September 4, 2024
Signature of Fiduciary: /s/ Holly L. Greenleaf, Executor
Executor/Administrator: Holly L. Greenleaf, c/o Laura E Gorsky, Esq., Attorney for Executor, Richmond, VT 05477
Phone: 802-434-3344
Email: laura@vtgorskylaw.com
Name of Publication: Seven Days
Publication Date: 12/18/2024
Name of Probate Court: Vermont Superior Court, Probate Division, Caledonia Unit
Address of Probate Court: 1126 Main St., Ste 1, St. Johnsbury, VT 05819
NORTHSTAR SELF STORAGE WILL BE HAVING A PUBLIC AND ONLINE SALE/AUCTION FOR THE FOLLOWING STORAGE UNITS ON JANUARY 2, 2025 AT 9:00 AM
Northstar Self Storage will be having a public and online sale/auction on January 2, 2025 at 9am EST at 205 Route 4A West, Castleton, VT 05735 (C140) and online at www.storagetreasures.com at 9:00 am in accordance with VT Title 9 Commerce and Trade Chapter 098: Storage Units 3905. Enforcement of Lien
Unit # Name Contents C140 Christopher Washburn Household Goods
ACT 250 NOTICE
MINOR APPLICATION 4C0436-3D 10 V.S.A. §§ 6000 - 6111
Application 4C0436-3D from Bolton Valley Community Water and Sewer, Bolton Valley Water and Community Development, and BVR, LLC, was received on October 25, 2024 and deemed complete on November 5, 2024.The project is generally described as the refurbishment of the existing wastewater treatment facility, which includes the construction of a new headworks building, a new headworks pump station, new pre-equalization tank, new Sequencing Batch Reactor (SBR) system, new operations building with filtration and UV disinfection equipment, new chemical storage and feed system, laboratory, office, and maintenance area. The existing wastewater treatment facility infrastructure will be demolished and decommissioned. This is an American Rescue Plan Act project. The project is located at 3089 Bolton Valley Access Road in Bolton, Vermont. The application may be viewed on the Natural Resources Board’s website (https://act250.vermont.gov/) by clicking “Act 250 Database” and entering the project number “4C0436-3D.”
On November 14, 2024, the Commission previously issued notice of this application with an incorrect response date. Therefore, the commission hereby provides a revised notice of this application. No hearing will be held and a permit will be issued
unless, on or before January 3, 2025, a party notifies the District 4 Commission in writing of an issue requiring a hearing, or the Commission sets the matter for a hearing on its own motion. Any person as defined in 10 V.S.A. § 6085(c)(1) may request a hearing. Any hearing request must be in writing, must state the criteria or sub-criteria at issue, why a hearing is required, and what additional evidence will be presented at the hearing. Any hearing request by an adjoining property owner or other person eligible for party status under 10 V.S.A. § 6085(c)(1)(E) must include a petition for party status under the Act 250 Rules. To request party status and a hearing, fill out the Party Status Petition Form on the Board’s website: https://act250.vermont. gov/documents/party-status-petition-form, and email it to the District 4 Office at: Act250.Essex@ vermont.gov. Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law may not be prepared unless the Commission holds a public hearing.
For more information contact Kaitlin Hayes at the address or telephone number below.
Dated this December 11, 2024. By: /s/ Kaitlin Hayes
Kaitlin Hayes District Coordinator 111 West Street Essex Junction, VT 05452 (802) 622-4084 kaitlin.hayes@vermont.gov
TOWN OF BOLTON RFP ABSTRACT FOR ASSESSOR SERVICES
The Town of Bolton, Vermont, is seeking proposals for professional Town Assessor services for the period from January 6, 2025, to June 30, 2028, with the possibility of extension. The selected Assessor will be responsible for the inspection and assessment of all new residential and commercial properties, review of property transfers, and defense of the Grand List at grievance hearings, among other duties. Proposals must include a comprehensive list of services, qualifications of personnel, cost estimates, and references. Submissions are due by 3 p.m. on January 3, 2025, and should be delivered to the Bolton Town Office in a sealed envelope marked “Bolton Assessment Services.” The Bolton Select Board will award the contract based on criteria including cost, experience, and proposed schedule. For more information, visit www.BoltonVT. com or contact townadmin@boltonvt.com or at 802-434-5075 ext. 224.
REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS: PROPANE FUEL SERVICES FOR THREE MUNICIPAL BUILDINGS
The Town of Bolton, Vermont, is inviting bids from qualified vendors for providing propane fuel to three municipal buildings for three year contracts. Proposals must include tank rental fees, if applicable, and the cost per gallon of propane. Bids are due by January 3, 2025, and will be opened on January 6, 2025, during the regularly scheduled Select Board meeting. Interested vendors should submit their sealed bids, marked “Propane Fuel,” to the Town of Bolton, 3045 Theodore Roosevelt Highway, Waterbury, VT 05676. The Town reserves the right to reject any and all bids, and to select the bid that best serves its interests. For more information, contact Brian Roberge, Town Administrator, at 802-434-5075 ext. 224 or townadmin@boltonvt. com.
BIDS FOR ONE (1) CLASS 8, 35,000 GVWR MINIMUM TRUCK
The Town of Colchester Department of Public Works (herein called the ‘OWNER’) is accepting bids for one (1) Class 8, 35,000 GVWR minimum truck cab and chassis with dump body and plow equipment constructed and delivered as a complete unit consistent with the technical specifications contained in this request for proposals. BIDS will be received by the OWNER at 781 Blakely Road, Colchester, VT 05446 until January 3, 2025 at 1:00 PM, and then at said office publicly opened and read aloud.
Each BID must be submitted in a sealed envelope, addressed to Ken Nichols, at Department of Public Works, Town of Colchester, 781 Blakely Road, VT 05446. Each sealed envelope containing a BID
must be plainly marked on the outside as BID for Department of Public Works Plow Truck and Equipment.
All BIDS must be made on the required BID form. The OWNER may waive any informalities or minor defects or reject any and all BIDS.
All questions by prospective BIDDERS as to the interpretations of the INFORMATION FOR BIDDERS, Forms of PROPOSAL, or Specifications, must be submitted in writing to the OWNER, at least seven (7) days before the date herein set for the opening of BIDS. Failure of any BIDDER to receive any such ADDENDUM or interpretation shall not relieve such BIDDER from any obligation under its BID as submitted. All ADDENDA so issued shall become part of the CONTRACT DOCUMENTS. Interested BIDDERS should provide contact information to the Town to receive any bid ADDENDA.
For Full Bid & Contract Documents please visit the Town website at: https://www.colchestervt.gov/bids.aspx
PUBLIC HEARING
COLCHESTER DEVELOPMENT REVIEW BOARD
Pursuant to Title 24 VSA, Chapter 117, the Development Review Board will hold a public hearing on January 8, 2025, at 7:00pm to hear the following requests under the Development Regulations. Meeting is open to the public and will be held at 781 Blakely Road.
a) FP-25-03 PREM BHATTARAI: Final Plat application to amend a previous Final Plat approval. Amendment is to modify a previously approved Planned Unit Development in accordance with §9.05-I by reducing the number of proposed dwelling units by two (2), to result in a development consisting of one duplex dwelling unit served by a shared private driveway, municipal water, and an in-ground wastewater system. No other modifications are proposed at this time. Subject property is located at 0 Blum Court, Account #28-079002-0000000.
December 18, 2024
TOWN OF ESSEX
MUNICIPAL BUILDING CLEANING CONTRACT
The Town of Essex invites qualified contractors to prepare a bid for the cleaning of 5 municipal buildings. Bid packets will be made available electronically by contacting Shawn McNamara, Buildings Manager via email at smcnamara@essex. org. Sealed Bids will be received at the Essex Town Public Works Office at 5 Jericho Road or mailed to the Town of Essex Public Works Department, 81 Main Street, Essex Junction, VT 05452, until 10:00 AM on Friday, January 10, 2025. Questions can be directed to Shawn McNamara at (802) 585-5883.
HOWARD CENTER
If you received services from Howard Center and would like a copy of your record, please contact Howard Center’s Health Information Department at 488-6000. In order to protect individuals’ privacy, the agency routinely destroys healthcare records after retaining them for the number of years required by law.
STATE OF VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT FAMILY DIVISION
CHITTENDEN UNIT DOCKET NO. 22-JV-1054
In Re: W.P.
NOTICE OF HEARING
TO: Dalton Kraft, father of W.P., you are hereby notified that a hearing to terminate yourparental rights to W.P. will be held on January 8, 2025 at 8:30 a.m. at the Vermont SuperiorCourt, Chittenden Family Division, at 32 Cherry Street, Suite 200, Burlington, Vermont 05401.You are notified to appear in connection with this case. Failure to appear at this hearing mayresult in termination of your parental rights to W.P. The State is represented by the AttorneyGeneral’s Office. HC 2 North, 280 State Drive, Waterbury, VT 05671-2080.
Date: 12/9/2024
Howard Kalfus: Superior Court Judge
STATE OF VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT
PROBATE DIVISION WASHINGTON UNIT DOCKET NO.: 24-PR-06567
In re ESTATE of Elaine DePrince NOTICE TO CREDITORS
To the creditors of: Elaine DePrince, late of Montpelier, Vermont
I have been appointed to administer this estate. All creditors having claims against the decedent or the estate must present their claims in writing within four (4) months of the date of the first publication of this notice. The claim must be presented to me at the address listed below with a copy sent to the Court. The claim may be barred forever if it is not presented within the four (4) month period.
Dated: December 14, 2024
Signature of Fiduciary: /s/ Adam DePrince
Executor/Administrator: Adam DePrince, 184 Main St., Montpelier, VT 05602
Phone: 720-698-0483
Email: adam.deprince@gmail.com
Name of Publication: Seven Days Publication Date: 12/18/2024
Name of Probate Court: State of VermontWashington Probate Division Address of Probate Court: 65 State Street , Montpelier, VT 05602
CITY OF BURLINGTON
NOTICE OF FIRST AND SECOND PUBLIC HEARINGS ON PROPOSED CHARTER AMENDMENTS FOR MARCH 4, 2025 ANNUAL CITY ELECTION
Pursuant to the requirements of 17 V.S.A. Sec. 2645, the first public hearing concerning proposed amendments to the Burlington City Charter will be held on Monday, January 13th, 2025 during the regularly scheduled City Council meeting which begins at 6:00 p.m. The meeting will be held in Contois Auditorium, 2nd Floor, City Hall, Burlington, Vermont and will also be streamed via Zoom.
When: Jan 13, 2025 06:00 PM Eastern Time (US and Canada)
Please click the link below to join the webinar: https://zoom.us/j/93006307851 Webinar ID: 930 0630 7851
Pursuant to the requirements of 17 V.S.A. Sec. 2645, the second public hearing concerning proposed amendments to the Burlington City Charter will be held on Monday, January 27th, 2025 during the regularly scheduled City Council meeting which begins at 6:00 p.m. The meeting will be held in Contois Auditorium, 2nd Floor, City Hall, Burlington, Vermont and will also be streamed via Zoom.
When: Jan 27, 2025 06:00 PM Eastern Time (US and Canada)
Please click the link below to join the webinar: https://zoom.us/j/93534318165
Webinar ID: 935 3431 8165
These charter amendments are proposed to be voted on at the Tuesday, March 4, 2025 Annual City Election.
1. “Shall the Charter of the City of Burlington, Acts of 1948, No. 298, as amended, be further amended as follows:
§ 48. Enumerated:
The City Council shall have power:
(1) to (63) As written.
(64) (A) Where there is no written rental agreement and notwithstanding 9 V.S.A. § 4467(c), to prohibit, by ordinance, a landlord from terminating a tenancy of rental housing within the City for no cause unless the landlord provides to the tenant written notice of at least 90 days when the tenancy has been less than two years and of at least 120 days when the tenancy has been two years or
more. Notwithstanding 9 V.S.A. § 4467 or any other law, to establish, by ordinance, requirements that residential landlords provide tenants notice prior to termination of residential tenancies, including requirements for the contents and timing of such notices. Such requirements may include special notice requirements for vulnerable populations, including elderly tenants, tenants with disabilities, and low-income tenants.
(B) Unless inconsistent with a written rental agreement or otherwise provided by law, and notwithstanding the provisions of 9 V.S.A. § 4456(d), to require, by ordinance, tenants who wish to terminate a residential tenancy to give actual notice to the landlord at least two rental periods prior to the termination date specified in the notice.
Notwithstanding 9 V.S.A. § 4456(d) or any other law, to establish, by ordinance, requirements that residential tenants provide landlords notice prior to termination of tenancies, including requirements for the contents and timing of such notices.
(65) Notwithstanding any other law, tTo prohibit increases in rent or other changes in lease terms for rental housing within the City without advance written notice. The timing, contents, and manner of giving such notice shall be established by ordinance of at least 90 days. Such ordinance may include special notice requirements for vulnerable populations, including elderly tenants, tenants with disabilities, and low-income tenants.” ?
“Shall the Charter of the City of Burlington, Acts of 1949, No. 298 as amended be further amended to add Article 99. General Weapons Requirements Sec. 510 entitled “Ban on Firearms in Any Establishment with a First Class Liquor License” thereto to read as follows:
Sec. 510. Ban on Firearms in Any Establishment with a First Class Liquor License.
(a) This act expressly supersedes 24 V.S.A. §§ 2291(8) & 2295 and authorizes the City of Burlington to regulate the possession and carrying of firearms in the manner indicated below.
(b) Ban. Within the City of Burlington, no person may carry or possess a firearm, as defined by Section 4016(a)(3) of Chapter 13 of the Vermont Statutes Annotated, in any building or on any real property or parking area under the ownership or control of an establishment licensed to serve alcohol on its premises.
(c) Exceptions. This provision shall not apply to
(1)any federal, state, or local law enforcement officer acting within the scope of that officer’s official duties;
(2) any member of the armed forces of the United States or the Vermont National Guard acting within the scope of that person’s military duties;
(3) any government officer, agent, or employee authorized to carry a weapon and acting within the scope of that officer’s duties;
(4) the owner or operator of such establishment, as long as that person is not prohibited from possessing or carrying that weapon under any other federal, state, or local law.
(d) The penalty for any violation of this section shall be as follows:
(1) Criminal Offense. Any violation of this Article may be considered a criminal offense, which shall be punishable by a fine of no more than $1,000 and/or by imprisonment for not more than ninety (90) days.
(2) Civil Offense. Any violation of this Article may also be considered a civil ordinance violation punishable by a fine of no less than $200 and no more than $500 and civil forfeiture of the weapon as provided below.
(3) Forfeiture. Upon probable cause that a person is in violation of this provision, a law enforcement officer may seize the weapon involved in the violation. The person from whom the weapon is seized, or the owner of the weapon (if different), may appeal the forfeiture of the weapon within thirty (30) days of the seizure to the Vermont Superior Court, Civil Division, pursuant to Chapter 102 of Title 12 of the Vermont Rules of Civil Procedure and Rule 74 of the Vermont Rules of Civil Procedure. In any appeal, the burden of proof shall rest upon the City to establish the violation by a preponderance of the evidence. If the City fails to establish the required burden of proof, the items shall be returned to the person from whom they were seized.
If no appeal is taken within thirty days, or if the City prevails in the superior court proceedings, the items so seized shall become the property of the City of Burlington.”?
“Shall the Charter of the City of Burlington, Acts of 1949, No. 298 as amended be further amended to amend Section 2 to Article 2 as follows:
ARTICLE 2. CITY ELECTION AREAS DEFINED §2. Election boundaries.
(a) City districts described. For the annual meeting of 2024 and all City elections thereafter, the City of Burlington is divided into four electoral districts, constituted as follows:
(1) East District. The East District shall include all that part of said City lying easterly and northerly of the following described boundaries: Beginning at the common boundary between the Cities of Burlington and Winooski in the Winooski River beneath the Central Vermont Railway bridge downstream of the Lower Winooski Falls and Salmon Hole; thence westerly in the centerline of said railroad tracks for 406.6 feet to a point where the centerline of Intervale Road extended northerly intersects said railroad track centerline (approximately -73.2028 longitude, 44.4911 latitude); thence southerly along the extension of the centerline of Intervale Road, crossing Riverside Avenue until the centerline intersects with that of the Archibald Street centerline extended easterly; thence westerly along the Archibald Street centerline until the intersection of the Archibald Street centerline and the North Willard Street centerline; thence southerly along the North Willard Street Centerline until the intersection of the North Willard Street centerline and the Pearl Street Centerline; thence westerly along the Pearl Street centerline until intersecting with the South Winooski Avenue centerline; thence southerly along the South Winooski Avenue centerline until intersecting the Maple Street centerline; thence easterly along the Maple Street centerline for 1573.5 feet to a point where the eastern property boundary of 315 Maple Street extended northerly intersects Maple Street (approximately -73.2064 longitude, 44.4739 latitude); thence southerly along the eastern property boundary of 315 Maple Street for 276.5 feet (approximately -73.2064 longitude, 44.4734 latitude); thence 281.4 feet westerly to a point where the southern property boundary of 315 Maple Street extended westerly intersect with the western boundary of 251 South Willard Street extended northerly (approximately -73.2071 longitude, 44.4733 latitude), thence 723.7 feet 177° southerly to a point where it intersects the southern property boundary of 285 South Willard Street extended westerly (approximately -73.2071 longitude, 44.4719 latitude); thence easterly along the southern boundary of 285 South Willard Street for 696.5 feet until intersecting with the South Willard Street centerline (approximately -73.2051 longitude, 44.472 latitude); thence northerly along the South Willard Street centerline for 220.9 feet (approximately-73.2052 longitude, 44.4724 latitude); thence easterly along the southern property boundary of 262 South Willard Street for 557.6 feet (approximately -73.2037 longitude. 44.4725 latitude); thence northerly along the eastern property boundary of 262 South Willard Street for 89.6 feet to a point where the Juniper Terrace centerline extended westerly intersects the eastern property boundary of 262 South Willard Street (approximately 73.2037 longitude, 44.4726 latitude); thence following the Juniper Terrace centerline easterly until intersecting with the Summit Street centerline (approximately-73.2021 longitude, 44.4727 latitude); thence northerly along the Summit Street centerline until reaching the centerline of Main Street thence following the Main Street centerline easterly 2339.6 feet (approximately -73.1964 longitude, 44.4753 latitude); thence southwesterly 214° for 136.1 feet (approximately -73.1966 longitude, 44.4751 latitude); thence southeasterly 98.2 feet (approximately -73.1964 longitude, 44.4749 latitude); thence southwesterly by 213° for 770 feet (approximately -73.1975 longitude, 44.4737 latitude); thence southeasterly by 123° for 477.4 feet until intersecting with the University Heights centerline (approximately -73.1964 longitude, 44.4732 latitude); thence southerly along the centerline of University Heights Road 1221.65 feet until intersecting with the PFG Road centerline, thence westerly by 79° until intersecting with the common boundary between the Cities of Burlington and South Burlington.
Legal Notices
(2) Central District. The Central District shall include all that part of the City bounded as follows: On the east, beginning at the common boundary between the City of Burlington and Town of Colchester in the Winooski River at a point intersecting with the centerline of Institute Road extended northeasterly (approximately -73.2147 longitude, 44.5089 latitude); thence southerly along the common boundary between the City of Burlington and Town of Colchester in the Winooski River to a point beneath the Central Vermont Railway bridge downstream of the Lower Winooski Falls and Salmon Hole; thence westerly along the East District northern boundary for 406.6 feet to its intersection with the westerly boundary of the East District; thence southerly along the westerly boundary of the East District to its intersection with the centerline of Archibald Street, then southerly along the East District western boundary to the intersection with the centerline of Pearl Street; thence westerly along the northern boundary of the East District to the intersection with the centerline of South Winooski Avenue; thence southerly along the western boundary of the East District to the centerline of Maple Street; thence westerly along the centerline of Maple Street until its intersection with the centerline of South Champlain street; thence northerly along the South Champlain Street centerline until its intersection with the centerline of King Street; on the south along the centerline of King Street extended westerly to Lake Champlain; on the west by Lake Champlain; on the north, beginning at the intersection of the common property boundary between 87 North Avenue and 9 Lakeview Terrace extended westerly to Lake Champlain (approximately -73.2252 longitude, 44.4832 latitude); thence northeasterly along the extended property boundary between 87 North Avenue and 9 Lakeview Terrace to its intersection with the centerline of the Central Vermont Railway railroad track (approximately -73.2239 longitude, 44.4837 latitude); thence northerly and easterly along the centerline of the Central Vermont Railway railroad track, crossing North Avenue and the Burlington Beltline, to its intersection with the centerline of Spring Street extended northwesterly (approximately -73.2183 longitude, 44.4912 latitude); thence northwesterly along the extension of the centerline of Spring Street to its intersection with the centerline of Institute Road extended northeasterly (approximately -73.2281 longitude, 44.4995 latitude); thence northeasterly along the extension of the centerline of Institute Road extended to its intersection with the common boundary between the City of Burlington and Town of Colchester in the Winooski River (approximately -73.2139 longitude, 44.5077 latitude).
(3) South District. The South District shall include all that part of the City south of the southern boundaries of the East and Central Districts.
(4) North District. The North District shall include all that part of the City north of the northern boundary of the Central District.
(b) Wards described. Each of the City of Burlington’s four electoral districts set forth in subsection (a) of this section hereby comprises two wards, each of which is constituted as follows:
(1) East District—Ward 1 and Ward 8.
(A) The East District is divided into two wards by the following boundary: Beginning at the center of the intersection of Brooks Avenue and South Willard Street; thence easterly along the Brooks Avenue centerline until intersecting with the centerline of North Prospect Street; thence southerly along the centerline of North prospect Street to the intersection of the centerline of Colchester Avenue to the intersection of the centerline of Mary Fletcher Drive; thence southerly along the centerline of Mary Fletcher Drive for 331.58 feet (approximately -73.196 longitude, 44.4802 latitude); thence southerly along the western side and easterly along the southern side of the UVM Medical Center building for 1854.5 feet until a point at the center of the intersection of Beaumont Avenue and Mary Fletcher Drive (approximately -73.1932 longitude, 44.4788 latitude); thence south along the Beaumont
PLACE AN AFFORDABLE NOTICE AT: SEVENDAYSVT.COM/LEGAL-NOTICES OR CALL 802-865-1020, EXT. 142.
Avenue centerline to the intersection of Carrigan Drive; thence following Carrigan Drive westerly for 199.1 feet (approximately -73.1932 longitude, 55.5756 latitude); thence travelling southwesterly for 821.3 feet along the UVM service road on the eastern border of the southeastern wing of the UVM Jeffords Hall until a point at the intersection of the service road and the centerline of University Heights extended northeasterly (approximately -73.1947 longitude, 44.4751 latitude); thence southwesterly along the centerline of University Heights 977.3 feet (approximately -73.1962 longitude, 44.4735 latitude); thence continuing southeasterly along the centerline of the driveway bounding the western side of the UVM Living/Learning Commons for 404.3 feet (approximately -73.1952 longitude, 44.4731 latitude); thence continuing south along the eastern side of UVM’s University Heights dorms until intersecting with PFG Road; thence continuing easterly along the western extension of the PFG Road centerline for 601.2 feet until intersecting with the common boundary between the Cities of Burlington and South Burlington.
(B) Ward 1 lies to the north and east of the boundary described in subdivision (A) of this subdivision (1), and Ward 8 lies to the south and west.
(2) Central District—Ward 2 and Ward 3.
(A) The Central District is divided into two wards by the following boundary: Beginning at the intersection of the common property boundary between 85 North Avenue and 9 Lakeview Terrace extended westerly to Lake Champlain (approximately -73.2252 longitude, -44.4832 latitude); thence northeasterly along the extended property boundary between 87 North Avenue and 9 Lakeview Terrace to its intersection with the centerline of the Central Vermont Railway railroad track (approximately -73.224 longitude, 44.4837 latitude); thence southeasterly along the centerline of the Central Vermont Railway railroad track to a point intersecting with the northwestern property boundary of 300 Lake Street extended southwesterly (approximately -73.2234 longitude, 44.4832 latitude); thence northeasterly to a point at the intersection of the northwestern property boundary of 300 Lake Street extended northeasterly with the centerline of Depot Street (approximately -73.2223 longitude, 44.4837 latitude); thence northerly along the centerline of Depot Street to the intersection with the centerline of Lakeview Terrace; thence easterly along the centerline of Lakeview Terrace extended westerly until intersecting with the centerline of North Avenue; thence northerly along the centerline of North Avenue to its intersection with the centerline of North Street; thence easterly along the centerline of North Street until intersecting with the North Union Street centerline; thence southerly following the North Union Street centerline until intersecting with the Loomis Street centerline; thence easterly along the Loomis Street centerline to the intersection of the centerlines of Loomis Street and South Willard Avenue.
(B) Ward 2 lies to the north of the boundary described in subdivision (A) of this subdivision (2), and Ward 3 lies to the south.
(3) South District—Ward 5 and Ward 6.
(A) The South District is divided into two wards by the following boundary: Beginning at the intersection of the centerlines of Maple Street and Church Street; thence southerly along the centerline of Church Street to the intersection with the centerline of Adams Street; thence westerly along the centerline of Adams Street to the intersection with the centerline of Saint Paul Street; thence southerly along the Saint Paul Street centerline to its intersection with the centerline of Shelburne Street; thence southerly along the centerline of Shelburne Street to its intersection with the centerline of Flynn Avenue; thence easterly along the centerline of Flynn Avenue extended easterly to the common boundary between the Cities of Burlington and South Burlington.
(B) Ward 5 lies to the west of the boundary described in subdivision (A) of this subdivision (3), and Ward 6 lies to the east.
(4) North District—Ward 4 and Ward 7.
(A) The North District is divided into two wards by the following boundary: Beginning at the centerline of Institute Road extended southwesterly to Lake Champlain; thence northeasterly to the intersection of Institute Road with the centerline of North Avenue; thence northerly along the centerline of North Avenue to its intersection with the centerline of Fairfield Drive; thence westerly along the centerline of Fairfield Drive to its intersection with the western property boundary of 39 Westward Drive extended southerly (approximately -73.2685 longitude, 44.5257 latitude); thence northerly along the western property boundary of 39 Westward Drive, until intersecting with the centerline of Westward Drive; thence southwesterly along the centerline of Westward Drive to the intersection with the Northshore Drive centerline; thence northerly along the Northshore Drive centerline until intersecting with the Clair Pointe Road centerline (point); thence westerly along the southern property boundary of the Claire Pointe condominium development (approximately -73.2686 longitude, 44.5286 latitude), and then extended to Lake Champlain.
(B) Ward 4 lies to the west of the boundary described in subdivision (A) of this subdivision (4), and Ward 7 lies to the east.
(5) Ward map reference. Reference is also made to a map entitled “Ward Redistricting, 8 Wards — 4 Districts, 12 Councilors, Approved Map (December 2 V1.3), Map Date: December 8, 2022 ” located in the Burlington Chief Administrative Officer’s office in further aid of the description of the wards set forth in this subsection.
The election area boundaries established in 2023 pursuant to Act M-7 shall remain in effect until changed by the City Council which is hereby authorized to make changes from time to time to the boundaries of the election areas in order to provide an equal division of population among them in accordance with data produced by the U.S. Census Bureau. Election areas changes shall not be made more frequently than once in five years. Such changes shall be approved by the voters at an annual or special meeting of the City and shall become effective immediately upon approval unless a later date is established therein.”?
* Material underlined added
** Material struck out deleted
The official copy of the proposed charter amendments will be posted in the Clerk Treasurer’s office and on the City’s website for public viewing by January 3rd, 2025. Should any revisions be made to the proposed charter change amendments, they will be posted by February 12th, 2025.
CITY OF BURLINGTON IN THE YEAR TWO THOUSAND TWENTY-FOUR
AN ORDINANCE IN RELATION TO AMENDING B.C.O. §§ 1-9 & 21-29 RE: DEFACEMENT OF PROPERTY AND ORDINANCE VIOLATIONS TARGETING INDIVIDUALS ON THE BASES OF PROTECTED CLASSIFICATIONS ORDINANCE 7.6
Sponsor: Ordinance Committee
Public Hearing Dates:
First reading: October 28, 2024
Referred to:
Rules suspended and placed in all stages of passage: 12/09/24
Second reading:
Action:
Date:
Signed by Mayor: 12/13/24
Published: 12/18/24
Effective: 01/08/25
Public Hearing Dates:
It is hereby Ordained by the City Council of the City of Burlington as follows:
That Chapter 1 of the Code of Ordinances of the City of Burlington be and hereby is amended by amending Sec. 9, thereof to read as follows:
Paragraphs (a) to (d), as written.
(e) Public nuisances. Any property within the city found to be maintained in violation of any provisions of this code or which in any other way endangers the health, safety and welfare of the
residents of the city ,and any violation of any provision of this code that interferes with a public right, including air, noise, or water pollution, the emissions of noxious odors, or damage to public property in violation of section 21-29, is hereby declared to be a public nuisance and may be ordered abated in any manner provided by law.
Charter reference, as written.
State law reference—Authority of municipality to define public nuisance and to provide for penalty for violation of any ordinance, 24 V.S.A. § 2291 (14) and (15).
And further that Chapter 21, Article I of the Code of Ordinances of the City of Burlington be and hereby is amended by amending Sec. 29, thereof to read as follows:
Paragraphs (a) to (d), as written.
(e) To encourage and facilitate enforcement, the city shall maintain and advertise an electronic mail address or similar electronic means by which members of the public may provide photographs, video footage, or other information to the police department about violations of this section and the identities of responsible parties. Such system shall entail direct electronic communication with the police department and not the posting of information online and readily available to the public.
*Material stricken out deleted.
**Material underlined added.
er/Ordinances 2024/Amending BCO 1-9 & 21-29 re defacement et al.12/09/24
BURLINGTON PLANNING COMMISSION PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE
Burlington Comprehensive Development Ordinance Amendment ZA-25-04 Performing Arts Centers in the Enterprise-Light Manufacturing District ZA-25-05 Champlain College Bed Caps
Pursuant to 24 V.S.A. §4441 and §4444, notice is hereby given of a public hearing by the Burlington Planning Commission to hear comments on the following proposed amendments to the City of Burlington’s Comprehensive Development Ordinance (CDO). The public hearing will take place during the Planning Commission meeting on Tuesday, January 14th, 2025, with the hearing starting at Time Certain 6:45pm. You may access the hearing/meeting as follows:
The meeting will be held in the Sharon Bushor Conference Room at City Hall (149 Church Street) and online via Zoom
To join virtually from a Computer, please click this URL to join, and enter the Webinar ID if prompted: Link: https://zoom.us/j/97941883790?pwd=bGZB NzNyV1liL3p5NkhIL2dqUFIzdz09
Passcode: 658929
Webinar ID: 979 4188 3790
Passcode (if needed): 658929
To join virtually by phone, dial this number and enter the Webinar ID when prompted: Number: +1 312 626 6799
Webinar ID: 979 4188 3790
Pursuant to the requirements of 24 V.S.A. §4444(b):
Statement of purpose:
The purpose of the proposed amendments are as follows:
• ZA-25-04: This amendment eliminates the limit on square footage for Performing Arts Centers in the E-LM district in order to facilitate the establishment of larger PACs in this artsbased district.
• ZA-25-05: This amendment eliminates the Maximum Residential Beds standards in Sec. 4.5.2(g) 4 in order to facilitate on-campus residential conversion and development for Champlain College students.
Geographic areas affected: This amendment applies to the following areas of the city:
• ZA-25-04: The Enterprise – Light Manufacturing District, specifically those properties in the ELM with frontage on Pine Street
• ZA-24-05: The Institutional Core Campus –Champlain College overlay
List of section headings affected: The proposed amendments modify the following sections of the Burlington Comprehensive Development Ordinance:
• ZA-25-04: Amends Appendix A- Use Table.
• ZA-24-02: Amends Article 4, Sec. 4.5.2 Institutional Core Campus Overlay Districts
The full text of the Burlington Comprehensive Development Ordinance is available online at www.burlingtonvt.gov/DPI/CDO. The proposed amendment can be reviewed in hard copy posted on the first floor of City Hall, 149 Church Street, Burlington or online at https://www.burlingtonvt. gov/DPI/CDO/Amendments
The City of Burlington will not tolerate unlawful harassment or discrimination on the basis of political or religious affiliation, race, color, national origin, place of birth, ancestry, age, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, marital status, veteran status, disability, HIV positive status, crime victim status or genetic information. The City is also committed to providing proper access to services, facilities, and employment opportunities. For accessibility information or alternative formats, please contact the City Planning department or 711 if you are hearing or speech impaired.
VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT CHITTENDEN UNIT
CIVIL DIVISION CASE NO. 24-CV-05287
IN RE: ABANDONED MOBILE HOME OF CHERYL KENNEDY
VERIFIED COMPLAINT
NOW COMES Westbury Homeowners Association, Inc., (hereafter “Plaintiff’) by and through counsel Steven J. Kantor, and hereby makes this complaint:
1. Plaintiff, a Vermont non-profit corporation with a principal business located in Colchester, County of Chittenden, State of Vermont, is the record owner of a mobile home park known as Westbury Park, located in the Town of Colchester, Vermont.
2. Cheryl Kennedy (“Kennedy”) is the sole record owner of a certain mobile home in the Park, described as a 1991 Redman FB 3/2, 14x70, Serial Number 12221779 and located at 74 Shannon Road in Westbury Park in Colchester, Vermont. See Exhibit A -attached Bill of Sale.
3. Kennedy is deceased. Her date of death is October 1, 2022. See Exhibit B - attached obituary.
4. No petition to open a probate estate has been filed for Kennedy per the Chittenden County Probate Court.
4. Kennedy leased a lot in Westbury Park under the terms of a written uniform Mobile Home Lot Lease.
5. The last known resident at the mobile home was Jordan Delage, grandson of Cheryl Kennedy, who vacated and abandoned the home on or before November 30, 2024. The mobile home is abandoned and unoccupied.
6. The following liens and encumbrances appear of record with respect to the mobile home:
a. Delinquent Property Taxes to the Town of Colchester, Vermont in the amount of $2,658.51.
7. The mobile home is uninhabitable. Scott Michaud, Property Manager and duly authorized agent for the Plaintiff, will testify under oath as to the poor and unlivable condition of this mobile home at the abandonment hearing.
8. Mobile home lot rent is current, but mobile home storage fees continue to accrue at the rate of $565 per month. Court costs, publication costs, and attorney fees from this action continue to accrue.
9. Plaintiff sent written notice by certified mail to the Town of Colchester on November 22, 2024 of Plaintiff’s intent to commence this action as required by the statute. See Exhibit C - attached letter to Town.
WHEREFORE, Plaintiff respectfully requests that the Honorable Court enter an order as follows:
1. Declare that the mobile home has been abandoned; and
2. Declare that the mobile home is unfit for human habitation pursuant to 10 V.S.A. §6249(i);
3. Transfer the mobile home to the Plaintiff without a public auction so that it may be removed and disposed of accordingly;
4. Order pursuant to 10 V.S.A. 6249(i) that the mobile home and any security deposit paid be conveyed to Plaintiff in “as is” condition and free and clear of (1) all liens, (2) all property taxes,
Show and tell. View and post up to 6 photos per ad online.
penalties and interest, and (3) all other encumbrances of record.
DATED AT Burlington, this 13th day of December, 2024.
WESTBURY HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION, INC.
/s/ Steven J. Kantor, Esq.
Doremus Kantor & Zullo 346 Shelburne Road, Suite 603 P.O. Box445 Burlington, VT 05402-0445 (802) 863-9603
Attorney for Westbury Homeowners Association, Inc.
DATED AT Williston, Vermont this 4th day of December, 2024.
/s/ Scott Michaud Scott Michaud, Duly Authorized Agent of Westbury Homeowners Association, Inc.
STATE OF VERMONT CHITTENDEN COUNTY
At Williston, in said County and State, this 4th day of December, 2024, personally appeared Scott Michaud, Duly Authorized Agent of Westbury Homeowners Association, Inc., and he swore to the truth of the foregoing. Before me,
/s/ Melanie Rodney Notary Public Print Name: Melanie Rodney Commission Expires: 1/31/2025 Commission No.: 157.0010388
VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT CHITTENDEN UNIT CIVIL DIVISION CASE NO. 24-CV-05287
VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT
Chittenden Unit 175 Main Street Burlington VT 05401 802-863-3467 www.vermontjudiciary.org
Date: December 13, 2024
NOTICE OF HEARING
Westbury Homeowners Association, Inc. v. Cheryl Kennedy
This is to notify you to appear at the Court named above in connection with the above-named case on:
DATE: January 06, 2025 TIME: 4:00 PM
DURATION: 15 Minutes
HEARING RE: Motion Hearing – Abandoned Mobile Home
A hearing on Westbury Homeowners Association, Inc.’s verified complaint to declare abandoned the mobile home of Cheryl Kennedy, located at the Westbury Park, 74 Shannon Road (1991 Redman FB 3/2, 14x70, Serial# 12221779) in Colchester, Vermont to authorize the transfer without a public auction, so it may be removed and disposed of, has been set for Monday January 6, 2025 @ 4:00PM.
Electronically signed Friday, December 13, 2024 pursuant to V.R.E.F. 9(d)
Nancy L. Bean
Judicial Assistant – Chittenden Civil Division Vermont Superior Court 175 Main Street Burlington, Vermont 05401
Any individual with a disability requiring assistance accessing the services, programs, and/or activities at the Courthouse should contact the Clerk’s office at the above address for further assistance.
REMOTE PARTICIPATION INSTRUCTIONS
Join a Webex Hearing: https://vtcourts.Webex.com
Webex Meeting ID Number (access code): 129 647 6521
Webex Meeting Password: CIVIL2
Smartphone App: Download the “Cisco Webex Meetings” app. Tap “Join Meeting” and enter the Meeting ID and Password above. Phone: Dial 1-802-636-1108 and enter the Meeting ID and Password above when prompted, followed by the pound (#) key. FOR MORE INFORMATION VISIT: www.vermontjudiciary.org/remote
Fur-ever
Seven
Days Pet Memorials
Mongo
1974-2024
King of the Kitchen
Mongo nous a quitté pour un monde meilleur.
Mongo, African amazing grey parrot son. He joined our family in Cabot in his twenties. Petit Mong spoke English et Québécois. We shared the love of music. He adored singing the Stones’ “Miss You.” Favorite food to eat and shout: “Popcorn.” He imitated to a T the sizzling of the oil, kernels and shaking of the pot on the stove. Another: “Grapes, grapes, grapes, hey, WOW.”
His wittiness dazzled us. He loved picking on our dogs and cats for the past 30 years, toying with their names.
He hated thunderstorms and once lamented, “Come on, cut it out.”
Mongo laughed often and was empathetic. Enjoyed shouting, “Hole in one,” tantalizing the family golfer. His vocabulary was surprising and amusing. In sync with the moment, Mongo loved fully and completely.
Gratitude to Dr. Bradley of ORAH and Dr. Adair of Essex Veterinary Center and their staffs. Hoping Mongo’s story inspires you to put a cat-proof bird feeder outside. Winter is brutal to our songbirds.
— Love you always, Dave & Hélène
Do you want to memorialize your pet in the pages of Seven Days? Visit sevendaysvt.com/petmemorials to submit your remembrance.
All sizes include a photo and your tribute. Short $30, Medium $50, Long $95
Print deadline: ursdays at 5 p.m. | Questions? petmemorials@sevendaysvt.com
ATTENTION RECRUITERS:
POST YOUR JOBS AT: JOBS.SEVENDAYSVT.COM/POST-A-JOB PRINT DEADLINE: NOON ON MONDAYS (INCLUDING HOLIDAYS) FOR RATES & INFO: MICHELLE BROWN, 802-865-1020 X121, MICHELLE@SEVENDAYSVT.COM
YOUR TRUSTED LOCAL SOURCE. JOBS.SEVENDAYSVT.COM
Development Director
Burlington City Arts (BCA) is seeking an experienced development director to join our dynamic arts leadership team. This position is responsible for managing and coordinating development activities for BCA programs that serve the greater Burlington cultural community. In addition to designing and implementing the annual development plan, the Development Director works closely with the Executive Director to advance BCA’s major gift, capital and planned giving programs. The position is directly supported by an Assistant Development Director and Development and Administrative Coordinator.
The ideal candidate will be passionate about the arts and BCA’s mission, a fast learner, have a track record of success in multiple fundraising categories, have experience managing staff to meet development goals, enjoy creating new community relationships, have excellent written and oral skills, and be experienced using donor database systems. Knowledge and background in the arts is a plus, but the most important characteristic of a successful candidate is desire to build a healthy, vibrant community through BCA’s mission.
The position offers excellent benefits and the opportunity to join a committed and collaborative team in a supportive work environment.
Go to burlingtoncityarts.org/join-bca to apply
We are hiring!
We are Vermont’s unified public media organization (formerly VPR and Vermont PBS), serving the community with trusted journalism, quality entertainment, and diverse educational programming.
• News Director
• Account Manager, Business Sponsorships
• Broadcast Engineer, Transmitter
We believe a strong organization includes employees from a range of backgrounds with different skills, experience & passions.
More openings and to apply: vermontpublic.org/careers
Vermont Public is a proud equal opportunity employer.
Interested in joining a creative and dynamic team to uplift and celebrate Montpelier, VT? Montpelier Alive is a growing organization, tackling exciting revitalization projects and has been a leading partner to the City of Montpelier in flood recovery. Most recently recognized for unique bridge illumination projects, and innovative community events, Montpelier Alive is well positioned to help put Montpelier on the map for visitors near and far!
Full-time Communications and Marketing Manager
The Communications and Marketing Manager, with oversight from Montpelier Alive’s Executive Director will be responsible for assisting with marketing related tasks for Montpelier Alive, including writing and proofing content, website management, social media management and implementation, coordination of all advertising, communications with all stake holders, and more. This position requires some regular o ce hours on site in Montpelier, and onboarding will begin in mid-January.
Part-time Events Coordinator
The Event Coordinator Position is 10 hours/week on average, with the bulk of the hours centered around events. Some onsite work is necessary. The Event Coordinator is responsible for all aspects of logistical planning, with creative collaboration along with Montpelier Alive’s sta . The position begins in mid-January, leading up to Restaurant Week, Cabin Fever Weekend, and July 3rd Celebration planning.
For full job descriptions, please visit www.montpelieralive.com/sta -and-board
VERMONT
We are an independent medical laboratory in South Burlington actively recruiting for office staff and a lab aid or histologist. Full or part time work. We will train the right person. If you are drawn to office, laboratory, or medical office employment and feel you may well very much enjoy learning the skills needed to work in our lab setting, we will train -this is a hands-on, detail oriented job ideally for a person with science background and interest. Hep B vaccine is required.
Full or part time job is possible and after school/ afternoon hours could work for our lab.
HISTOTECHNOLOGIST AND/OR LABORATORY OFFICE WORKER
South Burlington, Vermont 05403
Seeking certified histotechnologist and or laboratory aid or office worker for a specialized independent medical laboratory. The successful candidate does not need to be fully trained but must be talented, reliable, competent and trustworthy. Attention to detail is required. Multitasking is helpful. Certification would be ideal. Our lab is not in the basement of a large hospital. We have large windows with lots of sunshine and a small personal atmosphere.
Competitive pay and benefits.
If you would like to apply and are capable, motivated and interested please email us at sevendaysvt.garment739@passmail.net We look forward to meeting you!
•MANDARIN•
We’re seeking to hire servers and bartenders to join our hardworking and energetic team. If you’re interested in the opportunity, drop off a resume in person, or email to: lawrence@mandarinvt.com
Director of Major Gifts
Age Well is seeking a Director of Major Gifts to strengthen and expand its fundraising efforts in support of new strategic priorities and in preparation for a multimilliondollar comprehensive campaign. Reporting to the Chief Advancement Officer, the Director will develop a strategic plan for major and planned giving programs to maximize philanthropic potential to engage and inspire donors to invest in Age Well and deepen their commitment to our aging community. Key to success in this role will be building relationships with new prospects and strengthening relationships with existing donors to maximize philanthropic support. Send resumes to: hr@agewellvt.org
HUMAN RESOURCES MANAGER
Hunger Mountain Co-op in Montpelier, Vermont, is seeking an experienced HR Manager for our customer-focused team providing natural, organic, and local products in a member-owned cooperative food store. Our co-op offers the opportunity to join an outstanding, mission-driven management team and enjoy competitive pay and benefits.
Key Responsibilities:
Leadership and Strategy
Fundraising Development
Donor Management and Stewardship
Partnership and Outreach
Join us in creating positive change across Vermont Visit vermontcf org/careers to learn
Hunger Mountain Co-op is for everyone. Diversity, inclusion, and a culture where everybody can contribute matters to us. We aim to create a welcoming environment for all. The Co-op does not discriminate based on race, color, religion, national origin, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, ancestry, place of birth, age, crime victim status, physical or mental condition.
TO LEARN MORE ABOUT THIS OPPORTUNITY AND APPLY, PLEASE SCAN THE QR CODE
Case Administrator/
Courtroom Deputy Clerk
4t-HungerMtCoOp1218and1225.indd 1
organizational and interpersonal
Join the Flynn & be part of a team striving to make the community better through the arts. All backgrounds encouraged to apply.
SECURITY MANAGER
Full-time, Exempt, Benefits Eligible
excellent analytical, clerical, operational computer skills capable of functioning in a dynamic, teamoriewnted environment. The duty station is Burlington, Vermont. Full federal benefits apply. Complete job description and formal application requirements are found in the official Position Announcement available from court locations in Burlington and Rutland and the court’s web site: WWW.VTD.USCOURTS.GOV EOE
WWW.VTD.USCOURTS.GOV
4t-USDistCourtofVT1218and2524.indd 1
GEAR UP Outreach Counselor
environment. The duty station is Burlington, Vermont. Full federal benefits apply. Complete job description and formal application requirements are found in the official Position Announcement available from any U.S. District Court office (Burlington and Rutland) or the court’s website.
EOE
Are you dedicated to supporting young people in achieving their dreams? Do you want to work for an organization that values your work-life balance and well-being? How about summers off? Consider joining the VSAC team! You’ll join a team of highly committed, collaborative, and supportive colleagues who are dedicated to student success.
We are currently recruiting for a GEAR UP Outreach Counselor in Richford Middle and High Schools: This position works with middle through first year after high school students and their families to provide education, career, and financial aid information and counseling in support of postsecondary education goals. This position will also support students through the transition process from high school into and through their first year of postsecondary education.
Visit VSAC.org/Careers for full job description and to apply today.
IT MANAGER - FULL-TIME Exempt, Benefits Eligible
PRODUCTION MANAGER
Full-time, Exempt, Benefits Eligible
CUSTOMER SERVICE BOX OFFICE
Part-time, Union, Benefits
For complete job descriptions and to apply, visit: flynnvt.org/ About-Us/Employment-and-Internship-Opportunities. Email materials to: HResources@flynnvt.org No phone calls, please. E.O.E.
Central Clinical Educator (CCE)
Northeastern Vermont Regional Hospital (NVRH) in St. Johnsbury is looking for a Central Clinical Educator (CCE) to help us elevate our nursing education. We want to hear from you if you’re passionate about mentoring and supporting healthcare professionals.
What You’ll Do: Manage our mandatory education programs and nursing orientation. Ensure compliance with training requirements. What We’re Looking For: An RN graduate (BSN required/MSN preferred) with at least 3 years of nursing experience. We offer competitive pay and excellent benefits, such as student loan repayment, and generous paid time off. If you’re ready to make a meaningful impact in your community, apply today! We can’t wait to welcome you to our team!
www.nvrh.org/careers.
ATTENTION RECRUITERS:
and per diem options available.
For more information visit copleyvt.org/careers or contact Kaitlyn Shannon, Recruiter, at 802-888-8144 or kshannon@chsi.org.
Director of Nursing
Are you a nurse looking for a position that brings joy and fulfillment both personally and professionally? The Converse Home, a nonprofit Assisted Living Community located in downtown Burlington, is seeking a Director of Nursing (DON). As the longest-running assisted living community in Vermont, The Converse Home is renowned for its warm, welcoming, and home-like atmosphere. This is a rare opportunity to join a compassionate and supportive team in an exceptional community.
Qualifications:
• Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) required; Master of Science in Nursing (MSN) preferred.
• Valid Vermont Registered Nurse (RN) license and a valid driver’s license.
• Strong background in Med-Surg and chronic long term care nursing, healthcare operations management, with a solid understanding of skilled nursing standards of care and Vermont state assisted living regulations.
• Exceptional communication, organizational, and leadership skills, with a compassionate approach to the nursing team, department staff, residents, and families.
• Flexibility to travel occasionally and adapt to occasional weekend or after-hours needs.
Salary and Benefits:
• Salary range: $95,000–$115,000.
• Competitive benefits package, including medical, dental, eye, life insurance, retirement, and paid vacation.
To learn more and apply, visit www.conversehome.com or send your resume and letter of interest to kristen@ conversehome.com.
SENIOR COMMUNICATIONS COORDINATOR – WATERBURY
The Health Department seeks an experienced and passionate communications professional to support our Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Immunizations, and Public Health Laboratory programs. Examples of work: leading communications campaigns, developing communication plans, and writing content for various platforms. Must be skilled at translating technical information into plain language. Hybrid work schedule at our Waterbury office at least one day a week and for other meetings as required. For more information, contact Julie Corwin at AHS.VDHPublicCommunication@vermont.gov. Location: Waterbury. Department: Health. Status: Full Time. Job ID #50843. Application Deadline: January 7, 2025.
FAIR AND IMPARTIAL POLICING INSTRUCTOR – PITTSFORD
Do you enjoy training professionals and are you interested in facilitating transformative, systemic change? We are seeking a new member of our motivated and forward-thinking team. The VCJC is seeking an individual who is excited by a challenge and ready to play a key role in guiding the law enforcement Fair and Impartial Policing program in Vermont. As a VCJC Fair and Impartial Policing Instructor, you’ll design and manage the FIP training program, race data collection, training, and analysis. For more information, contact Lisa Ryan at lisa.ryan@vermont.gov. Department: Vermont Criminal Justice Council. Location: Pittsford. Status: Full Time. Job ID #51368. Application Deadline: December 29, 2024.
Director of Communications
The Vermont Center for Ecostudies seeks a Director of Communications to lead a purposeful and creative communications program. The successful applicant will collaborate with conservation biologists and development professionals to foster science-based stewardship of biodiversity in the Northeast. Key qualifications include outstanding writing and editing skills, ability to co-create and execute strategy, and knowledge of best practices in science communications and fundraising.
Annual Fund Manager
VCE also seeks an Annual Fund Manager to strengthen a growing and effective annual giving program. The successful applicant will help develop fundraising strategy and stewardship programs for annual fund donors. Key qualifications include strong communication skills, ability to collaborate and work independently, and recent experience in nonprofit development.
AUTO AUCTION ASSISTANT (Williston, Vermont) Looking for a responsible, motivated, self-starter for busy Williston auto auction facility. Position works with the general manager and the office manager completing tasks both inside/ outdoors. Rate is $17-$20/Hour Email: info@thcauction.com Thomas Hirchak Company is an at will employer. See more jobs at: THCAuction.com CAREER OPPORTUNITY
Caregiver for Senior Male Veteran
Part-time caregiver needed for a senior male in South Burlington, VT. Flexible hours (10-15/week), $25/ hour. Responsibilities include assisting with ADLs, transportation, housekeeping, laundry, meal prep, medication reminders & companionship. Previous caregiving experience preferred. Contact: kpodkpod2024@ gmail.com.
Executive Director
Are you a strong and visionary leader with a track record of success, who happens to love animals? We are seeking a leader to provide administrative, operational, and fiscal oversight at Addison County's only humane society. The successful candidate will have budget and staff management experience, excellent communication skills, and a talent for developing strategies that support nonprofit success. An interest and understanding of animal welfare and non-profit administration is preferred. See full job description at: bit.ly/ HomewardBoundED
To apply, please send your resume and cover letter to: director@homeward boundanimals.org.
Join our team to help support UVM Center on Rural Addiction’s (CORA) mission to expand substance use disorder treatment capacity in rural communities by providing consultation, resources, training, and evidence-based technical assistance.
As a CORA Outreach Specialist, you will facilitate outreach efforts to engage clinicians and partners in rural communities. Support planning and implementation of CORA's Clinical & Translational Core community services, educational projects, and community enrichment initiatives. Develop and adapt evidence-based informational resources and curriculum components. Administer evaluations of clinical educational offerings. Promote UVM CORA Continuing Medical Education (CME) credits.
Familiarity and/or experience with evidence-based treatments for substance use disorders or other chronic health conditions desirable. Experience in research and/or working with multiple and diverse providers and partners (e.g., substance use disorder treatment, mental health services) and experience planning and/or supporting academic or educational events is highly desirable.
Learn more about us at www.uvmcora.org
INVEST IN YOURSELF
Our apprenticeship program is a paid opportunity to become a phlebotomist with no experience required. APPLY NOW www.iaahitec.org/phlebotomy
REGISTRATION DEADLINE Wednesday, January 8th, 2025
$2,000 SIGN ON BONUS
Program Manager: Energy and Forest Business Accelerators
Join our team to support sustainable economic development by managing DeltaClimeVT, our energy business accelerator and a new forest business accelerator. Both programs provide startup support, business planning, mentorship, and access to capital for climate economy and forest economy entrepreneurs.
FT salary between $70-75k, great benefits, casual but professional hybrid work environment, and an organizational culture where people feel valued, are energized, and can support forward-thinking solutions to our food system and climate challenges.
VSJF is an E.O.E. committed to diversity, equity, inclusion and a strong sense of belonging in the workplace.
PLEASE READ full job description here: vsjf.org/about-vsjfvermont/job-openings
Send cover letter & resume to jobs@vsjf.org by 5pm 1/13/25 4t-VTSustainableJobsFund121124
Phlebotomy Apprenticeship Program
• Guaranteed paid employment on day one of training
• Direct patient care
• Team environment
• Full Benefits
• Dedicated support during the 5-week program
• Paid Certified Phlebotomy Technician Exam
External candidates are eligible for a one-time sign on bonus paid over 3 installments. Amounts reflect gross pay, prior to applicable tax withholdings and deductions required by law. Current University of Vermont Health Network employees are excluded and additional terms and conditions apply. Questions? Call or Email 802-872-0660 lida.hope@vthitec.org
Director of Residential Facilities
Job Summary:
The Director of Residential Facilities is responsible for the maintenance and upkeep of the residential property portfolio. The role supports critical property management operations, overseeing all planned, preventive, corrective, routine, and emergency maintenance performed at residential properties managed by Redstone, including:
• Develops and oversees annual preventive maintenance programs and determines long- and short-range capital improvement and maintenance repair needs.
• Oversees work control processes, including work order management and control systems, ensuring efficiency in estimating, planning, scheduling, and organizing work.
• Acts as project manager for various items including renovations, tenant improvements, and all other planned and unplanned capital and operation projects.
• Supervises Residential Asset Manager and Residential Maintenance Manager, providing guidance and technical and managerial assistance.
• Serves as a role model, advocate, and mentor to staff, creating and sustaining an environment that reflects Redstone’s customer service standards.
• Oversee the move-out inspection and turnover process, leading vendors and maintenance team.
Redstone seeks a candidate who consistently exhibits a professional communication style and positive attitude. Exemplary customer service skills are critical. Our preferred candidate will be able to adapt to the changing needs of projects, be a team player, and exhibit self-direction.
Redstone offers a competitive benefits package that includes: medical, vision, and dental insurance plan; 401K match; 3 weeks paid vacation to start (can earn up to 5 weeks); paid sick leave; paternity and maternity leave; twelve paid holidays and a paid day off on your birthday. The position is eligible for discretionary bonuses.
Visit www.redstonevt.com for a full job description and to apply.
Burlington Housing Authority (BHA)
Are you interested in a job that helps your community and makes a difference in people’s lives every day? Consider joining Burlington Housing Authority (BHA) in Burlington, VT to continue BHA’s success in promoting innovative solutions that address housing instability challenges facing our diverse population of low-income families and individuals.
We are currently hiring for the following positions:
Building Operations Technician: Performs general maintenance work in BHA owned and managed properties. This includes building exteriors, common areas, apartments, building systems, fixtures, and grounds. Our Building Operations Techs are required to participate in the on-call rotation, which covers night and weekend emergencies.
Offender
Re-entry
Housing
Specialist: Provides support to men and women under the VT Department of Corrections supervision from prison back to Chittenden County. The ORHS focuses on high-risk men and women who are being released from jail and graduating transitional housing programs and in need of permanent housing. The ORHS provides intensive retention and eviction prevention services and works collaboratively with the Burlington Probation and Parole Office. Additionally, the ORHS works with various case workers, Re-Entry staff and the Administrative Staff from the VT Department of Corrections and the broad network of COSA staff as necessary throughout Chittenden County.
Resident Manager at South Square: Attends to various resident requests, assisting with emergency service, and light cleaning duties. The Resident Manager is required to live on property. The Resident Manager is provided with an apartment and along with free utilities in exchange for being on call after BHA business hours and on weekends.
*BHA serves a diverse population of tenants and partners with a variety of community agencies. To most effectively carry out our vision of delivering safe
and affordable housing to all, we are committed to cultivating a staff that reflects varied lived experiences, viewpoints, and educational histories. Therefore, we strongly encourage candidates from diverse racial, ethnic, and cultural backgrounds, persons with disabilities, LGBTQ individuals, and women to apply. Multilingualism is a plus!
Find more about these career opportunities: burlingtonhousing.org
Our robust benefit package includes premium medical insurance with a health reimbursement account, dental, vision, short & long term disability, 10% employer funded retirement plan, 457 retirement plan, accident insurance, life insurance, cancer & critical illness insurance.
We provide a generous time off policy including 12 days of paid time off and 12 days of sick time in the first year. In addition to the paid time off, BHA recognizes 13 (paid) holidays and 2 (paid) floating cultural holidays.
Interested in this opportunity? Send cover letter/resume to: humanresources@ burlingtonhousing.org
Human Resources
Burlington Housing Authority 65 Main Street, Suite 101 Burlington, VT 05401
BHA is an Equal Opportunity Employer
CVSWMD is Hiring!
Administrative Coordinator
The Central Vermont Solid Waste Management District is seeking a qualified candidate for our new Administrative Coordinator position! Duties include: sharing information regarding waste management and District programs and services; warning, attending, and taking minutes at all Board and Committee meetings; onboarding new Board representatives; maintaining contact information and records; drafting contractual agreements; and ordering office supplies and equipment.
40 hours/week, $26.59 – 34.57 per hour plus generous benefits package
At CVSWMD, we help residents and organizations in our 19 member towns reduce, reuse, recycle, and rethink waste for a more sustainable future. CVSWMD is an equal opportunity employer. Positions will remain open until filled.
Associate Director of Grants & Fundraising for International NGO
PH International (Project Harmony, Inc.) is an international non-profit with 40 years of experience focusing on civic engagement, cross cultural learning, and increased opportunities in the digital age. The U.S. headquarters is located in Waitsfield, VT with projects implemented globally.
PH International is seeking a full-time Associate Director of Grants & Fundraising based in the Vermont office on a hybrid schedule. The successful candidate will have demonstrated experience in writing and coordinating proposals. Lead proposal development efforts by researching topics and partners; prepare proposal packages for submission to donors; expand the individual giving program; and prepare development and funding reports. Working in a fast-paced, deadline-oriented environment, the successful candidate will have opportunities to lead and learn about new technologies and best practices at the cutting edge of citizen engagement, exchange programming, civic education, youth-oriented programs, cross-border initiatives, legal education, and educational reform.
To apply: ph-int.org/about-us/vacancies
Application deadline: January 7, 2025.
fun stuff
“Okay, I have to use the bathroom ... Guys?”
fun stuff
SAGITTARIUS
(NOV. 22-DEC.21)
What is the perfect gift I could offer you this holiday season? I have decided on a large, square black box with nothing inside. There would be a gold ribbon around it bearing the words, “The Fruitful Treasure of Pregnant Emptiness.” With this mysterious blessing, I would be fondly urging you to purge your soul of expectations and assumptions as you cruise into 2025. I would be giving you the message, “May you nurture a freewheeling voracity for novel adventures and fresh experiences.”
ARIES (Mar. 21-Apr. 19): If you worked eight hours per day, seven days a week, it would take you 300 years to count to the number one billion. I don’t recommend you try that. I also discourage you from pursuing any other trivial tasks that have zero power to advance your long-term dreams. In a similar spirit, I will ask you to phase out minor longings that distract you from your major longings. Please, Aries, I also beg you to shed frivolous obsessions that waste energy you should instead devote to passionate fascinations. The counsel I’m offering here is always applicable, of course, but you especially need to heed it in the coming months.
TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20): In 1951, minister and author Norman Vincent Peale was working on a new book. As he wrote, he would regularly read passages to his wife, Ruth. She liked it a lot, but he was far less confident in its worth. After a while, he got so discouraged
he threw the manuscript in the trash. Unbeknownst to him, Ruth retrieved it and stealthily showed it to her husband’s publisher, who loved it. The book went on to sell five million copies. Its title? The Power of Positive Thinking. I hope that in 2025, you will benefit from at least one equivalent to Ruth in your life, Taurus. Two or three would be even better. You need big boosters and fervent supporters. If you don’t have any, go round them up.
GEMINI (May 21-Jun. 20): I love how colorfully the creek next to my house expresses itself. As high tide approaches, it flows south. When low tide is on its way, it flows north. The variety of its colors is infinite, with every shade and blend of green, gray, blue and brown. It’s never the same shape. Its curves and width are constantly shifting. Among the birds that enhance its beauty are mallards, sandpipers, herons, grebes, egrets and cormorants. This magnificent body of water has been a fascinating and delightful teacher for me. One of my wishes for you in 2025, Gemini, is that you will commune regularly with equally inspiring phenomena. I also predict you will do just that. Extra beauty should be on your agenda!
CANCER (Jun. 21-Jul. 22): Just 81 billionaires have commandeered half of the world’s wealth. Even worse, those greedy hoarders are usually taxed the least. That’s hard to believe! How is it even possible that such a travesty has come to pass? I also wonder if many of us non-billionaires have milder versions of these proclivities. Are there a few parts of me that get most of the goodies that my life provides, while other parts of me get scant attention and nourishment? The answer is yes. For example, the part of me that loves to be a creative artist receives much of my enthusiasm, while the part of me that enjoys socializing gets little juice. How about you, Cancerian? I suggest you explore this theme in the coming weeks and months. Take steps to achieve greater parity between the parts of you that get all they need and the parts of you that don’t.
LEO (Jul. 23-Aug. 22): Anthropologist Robin Dunbar theorizes that most of us have limits
to our social connections. Typically, our closest circle includes five loved ones. We may also have 15 good friends, 50 fond allies, 150 meaningful contacts and 1,500 people we know. If you are interested in expanding any of these spheres, Leo, the coming months will be an excellent time to do so. In addition, or as an alternative, you might also choose to focus on deepening the relationships you have with existing companions and confederates.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep. 22): Uncle Tom’s Cabin was the best-selling novel of the 19th century. It was written by a Virgo, Harriet Beecher Stowe. Her story about the enslavement of African Americans in the U.S. was not only popular. It also awakened many people to the intimate horrors of the calamity — and ultimately played a key role in energizing the abolitionist movement. I believe you are potentially capable of achieving your own version of that dual success in the coming months. You could generate accomplishments that are personally gratifying even as they perform a good service for the world.
LIBRA (Sep. 23-Oct. 22): According to my reading of the astrological omens, you will be teased with an abundance of invitations to grow in 2025. You will be encouraged to add to your current skills and expertise. You will be nudged to expand your understanding of what exactly you are doing here on planet Earth. That’s not all, Libra! You will be pushed to dissolve shrunken expectations, transcend limitations and learn many new lessons. Here’s my question: Will you respond with full heart and open mind to all these possibilities? Or will you sometimes neglect and avoid them? I dare you to embrace every challenge that interests you.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Scorpio-born Rudolf Karel was a 20th-century Czech composer who created 17 major works, including symphonies and operas. His work was interrupted when Nazi Germany invaded and occupied his homeland. He joined the Czech resistance but was eventually arrested and confined to Pankrác Prison. There he managed to compose a fairy-tale opera, Three Hairs of the Wise Old Man. No musical instruments
were available in jail, of course, so he worked entirely in his imagination and wrote down the score using toilet paper and charcoal. I firmly believe you will not be incarcerated like Karel in the coming months, Scorpio. But you may have to be extra resourceful and resilient as you find ways to carry out your best work. I have faith that you can do it!
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): One of my paramount wishes for you in 2025 is this: You will deepen your devotion to taking good care of yourself. You will study and learn more about the sweet secrets to keeping yourself in prime mental and physical health. I’m not suggesting you have been remiss about this sacred work in the past. But I am saying that this will be a favorable time to boost your knowledge to new heights about what precisely keeps your body and emotions in top shape. The creative repertoire of self-care that you cultivate in the coming months will serve you well for the rest of your long life.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): To fulfill your life mission, to do what you came here to earth to do, you must carry out many tasks. One of the most important is to offer your love with hearty ingenuity. What are the best ways to do that? Where should you direct your generous care and compassion? And which recipients of your blessings are likely to reciprocate in ways that are meaningful to you? While Jupiter is cruising through Gemini, as it is now and until June 2025, life will send you rich and useful answers to these questions. Be alert!
PISCES (Feb. 19-Mar. 20): Mysteries of the past will be extra responsive to your investigations in 2025. Persistent riddles from your life’s earlier years may be solvable. I encourage you to be aggressive in collecting previously inaccessible legacies. Track down missing heirlooms and family secrets. Just assume that ancestors and dead relatives have more to offer you than ever before. If you have been curious about your genealogy, the coming months will be a good time to explore it. I wish you happy hunting as you search for the blessings of yesteryear — and figure out how use them in the present.
For more than five decades, Meta Strick has been making mixed-media art in the backwoods of Fairfield. e turquoisehaired, almost 83-yearold Strick invites visitors to open houses and workshops at her gallery next to her log cabin home. Seven Days’ Eva Sollberger got a tour and did some collaging.
IT’S AN INTERESTING BUCKET LIST
Respond to these people online: dating.sevendaysvt.com
WOMEN seeking...
INTERESTING, LIVELY, THOUGHTFUL
I’m smart, considerate, generous and with-it, in good shape and not oldfashioned. I’m looking for a man who is smart, kind, attentive, affectionate and well-groomed, for companionship and closeness. Ellie 73, seeking: M, l
ACTIVE HANDY LEFTY
DREAMER
Active person who enjoys travel, hiking, skiing, mountain biking, pickleball. Most often found outdoors being active or caring for animals. The past couple years have been spent renovating a historic home. I have most enjoyed building on the home’s character and transitioning it into a functional, warm, cozy space. Interested in meeting people with similar interests and values.
Built_For_Adventure, 52 seeking: W, l
HEART, SOUL, WATER AND EARTH
Settled, strong, self-sufficient woman seeks life partner. I enjoy my job and also love being outside playing in the dirt. I’m looking for someone who enjoys rambling conversations and long walks, is emotionally intelligent with a good sense of humor and willing to build a solid relationship. Active interests in regenerative agriculture, critters, playing music and chess a plus. Greener, 62, seeking: W, TM, TW, NBP, l
WANT TO RESPOND?
You read Seven Days, these people read Seven Days — you already have at least one thing in common!
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l See photos of this person online.
W = Women
M = Men
TW = Trans women
TM = Trans men
Q = Genderqueer people
NBP = Nonbinary people
NC = Gender nonconformists
Cp = Couples
Gp = Groups
KINDHEARTED AND TRULY HAPPY
I am new to the area and looking for male companionship. Someone to laugh with, go to the movies with, hang out with. I am funny, happy and for the most part quite content with my life. But I am lonely and want to find someone with whom I can connect. Chemistry is more important than looks. Sharilynn 66 seeking: M, l
INDEPENDENT BUT LOYAL
Friendly, sociable. Love solitude and nature but equally enjoy people. Needing balance in a relationship: independence, but seeking companionship. Is finding both a friend and a lover too much to ask? I’m a romantic but don’t require traditional gestures: A note with an offer of late-night cuddles is as good as a bejeweled offering. Seeking the unexpected. Naturewoman, 61, seeking: M
SOFT-SPOKEN, ENJOYS WIT & PUNS
Caring, observant and thoughtful, I enjoy reading, live theater, community events, walking and dining out. Sunshine brightens my day. Seeking a gentlemanly companion to share activities and travel. As a Leo, I bring warmth and loyalty to relationships. Let’s savor life’s simple pleasures together. Pretty_In_Pink, 71, seeking: M, l
KIND, CREATIVE, CURIOUS
Active, humorous, intelligent, respectful woman seeking companionship, emotional connection and intimacy. I enjoy nature, deep conversation, community events. I’m a music lover and social justice is important to me. I like to balance spontaneity and routine, create and explore old and new hobbies and places. Calendula 36, seeking: M, l
RESOURCEFUL, ATHLETIC FEMINIST
I’m a girl who likes tools. Sarcastic take on life. I enjoy repairing and repurposing used goods. I keep busy with mountain biking, rowing, cycling, hiking. I keep sane by meditating and gardening. I’m always modifying recipes for baked goods. I’m a fan of baroque music and historical fiction. Looking for other sporty women to share conversation and adventures. Must be grounded, bright, artistic, kind.
SharpSunshine, 52, seeking: W, l
POSITIVE, DOWN-TO-EARTH, STABLE, COMPASSIONATE
Hey! Just a girl looking for an honest, fellow compassionate person who loves nature and life in Vermont. I’m looking for a connection that evolves into a long-term relationship. Let’s go hiking together, go on spontaneous day adventures, explore new towns, cook delicious dinners together, and go paddleboarding or Nordic skiing. Let’s sit by a fire under starlight. Silenceandstarlight 54 seeking: M, l
ADVENTUROUS OPTIMIST WHO LOVES LIFE
I am looking for a man who can make me laugh, enjoys life’s adventures, and values kindness and stability. Someone whose life complements mine, and I theirs. If you’re interested in good conversations, spontaneous adventure and sharing simple moments, let’s connect!
GirlFromtheNorthCountry 59 seeking: M
CASTING CALL: WHIMSICAL PLAYMATE
Ex-professor-cum-higher-ed administrator by day, community theater nerd by night. Petite woman looking for a costar who is kind, open to new experiences, adventurous, curious, thoughtful, funny and witty. I’ll cook you some amazing Indian food and destroy you in board game competition before we jet off to snorkel the shores of the Big Island. daybor, 44, seeking: M, W, TM, l
HONEST, CARING AND FUN
I enjoy experiencing different things and exploring new places, whether in my backyard or across the country. I am honest, caring, like to laugh, and like to spend time with family and friends. I am socially active and enjoy volunteering and helping others. Would like to laugh and share the joys of life with someone. LaughandEnjoy 62, seeking: M, l
HAPPY AND LAID-BACK
I am hardworking, loving, caring, sensitive and observant. A Christian seeking truth within the spiritual side of life. I am impressed by nature; being outdoors in natural environments restores me. I love meeting people. And I enjoy live music. I am blessed with good health and would like to share my life with the right person. Quietromantic 67 seeking: M, l
READY TO PLAY FOR KEEPS?
Are you ready for adventure? Broadway show, hiking in Sedona, wine in Portugal? And then home to stack wood for winter and stir minestrone soup? Generous, spirited, joyfully feisty, this (previously) redheaded woman will make your life worth living to the fullest. You will never be bored. Seeking kind, intelligent man-friend 55 to 70 with belly laugh who is ready to play for keeps. springpeeper 64, seeking: M, l
MEN seeking...
HEAVY METAL DAD
Security officer at two locations. Busy single full-time dad. Looking for someone with whom to spend what little free time I have. bthibodeau, 45, seeking: W, l
CREATIVE ANALOG OUTDOORSY ANIMAL LOVER
“Passionate and creative” describes me. I love my friends. I love animals. Happy being by myself, but a perfect day would be with friends for a day on the water — stopping for coffee, stopping to pet dogs. Paddling, lunch on shore, campfire, guitars and singing. Appreciate women who are kind and confident in their beautiful curviness. Makeup, weight over-consciousness and shaving not required. Be yourself. LeftTheMatrix 64, seeking: W, l
NERDY SOUTHERNER KEEPIN’ WARM
A recent transplant from the South and now that things have settled down, I’m looking to meet people and explore this beautiful state. I enjoy finding new places to eat and seeing live music. Even though I don’t drink, I don’t care if you do. wtfitscoldhere 42, seeking: W, l
FIT AND SINGLE
Lawyer, cook, oenophile, climber, skier, kayaker, gourmand. Passionate about representing battered/trafficked women for free. I have what I need in life, all I lack is someone — the one other — to share it with. Carnegie Hall followed by the Russian Tea Room or Tyree. Eating ramen in our extreme four-season tent, snorkeling or just sharing that first cup of coffee in the morning. 70yearsYoung 70, seeking: W, l
LIFELONG LEARNER
These are a few of my favorite things: learning, reading, humor, bicycling, deep conversation, humor, building things, fixing things, and last — but not least — humor. Any day I learn something new is a good day. In conversation, my default mode is listening. Listening to someone and truly hearing them is such a simple gift we can give. Kendallrnh 61, seeking: W, l
SEEKING AUTHENTICITY AND CONNECTION
I thrive on collaboration, creativity and making things work. I’m a beginner viola player exploring music’s emotional power and love sailing for balance. When not practicing or on the water, I’m coding and solving problems. Recently out of a long relationship. I’m looking for someone who values deep connections and authenticity, and understands that my kids come first. learningviola, 46, seeking: W, l
BUILDING BLOCKS
Searching for chemistry and attraction, true friendship and companionship, laughter, and love (not necessarily in that order). Tiberius, 61, seeking: W
YOGI, PLANT LOVER, SEEKING
Seeking a connection. I never realized that I have been working my whole life on being the weird uncle with good stories. I am very Instagrammable. Into all the current trends. Chef, baker, former roadie and expert houseplanter. Daily yogi. Looking for something real. Old enough to know better, not old enough to have it all figured out. Seanfoleyr 42, seeking: W, l
CURIOUS, SOCIAL, LAID-BACK
Divorced seven years and ready to move on. I am a 50+ male who passes for early 40s (or so I’m told). I am at a point in my life where I want someone to share experiences of all kinds together. I am curious about life in general but history and nature in particular. Looking for a woman who wants to go out and adventure or stay in and cuddle, depending on the mood. Man_ Seeking_Contact 59, seeking: W, l
CARING, COMPASSIONATE, ENERGETIC, PEACEFUL, STABLE
Hey there. I hope to find a person who is mindful, present in the moment, happy being herself, radiates wholesomeness, has her own personal future plans, is affectionate, expressive, caring, gentle, kind, realizes the joy of living with someone who truly cares, is lifenourishing and priceless. Just ask a child: They know! CEF 77, seeking: W, l
NOTHING TO SEE HERE
Hi, and thanks for checking me out. I’m a happy, balanced, self-reflecting man. Recently relocated to Vermont from New York. I’m seeking a physically active, kind and positive young-atheart woman to do fun things with! rickfreeze, 59 seeking: W, l
OPEN-MINDED, COULD BE FUN
I am polite, considerate, caring and am an easy communicator. I am fun to be with, either at dinner or on the ski slopes. I like to please, and am interested in friends with benefits. SilverKnightFun 72, seeking: W, Cp
Hello. Open-minded guy looking for FWB. Emphasize friends. Not necessarily long-term, but you’ve got to be sure there is a spark if you expect to light a fire. An open-minded couple where everyone gets to play? My pegging queen? A sexy T-girl who wants a daddy? Hit me up! RavensDream58 27 seeking: W, TW, Cp
TRANS WOMEN seeking...
COMMUNITY-MINDED AND INDEFENSIBLY JOYFUL
I love writing, dancing, making music and meaningful action. My favorite conversations are about people’s passions. I like hiking, biking and paddling, but I spend a lot of time happily indoors being social or creative or productive. I’m interested in people of all genders and am seeking a connection that generates joy every day for us both. Sylph 56 seeking: M, W, TM, TW, Q, NC, NBP, l
TRANS MEN seeking...
INDUSTRIOUS, NERDY, PURSUING KNOWLEDGE
Student and professional artist constantly pursuing new hobbies and studies. Looking for friends to tinker and hang with or a partner for more or less the same. Friendly and open-minded but shy to start. Still wears a mask in crowds. grimblegromble 23, seeking: W, TW, l
GENDERQUEER PEOPLE seeking...
GENDERQUEER, SINGER-SONGWRITER, INTERFAITH MINISTER
It’s me, from the “Cherie & Yolanda” show in the ‘90s. Moved to NYC in 2001; met my husband, Glen; together 20 years; now in Vermont after his death. I am a transfemme genderqueer singersongwriter and interfaith minister. Youthful looks and attitude, long gray hair, stocky build, funny, compassionate. Looking for a cisgender man who appreciates the femininity and spirituality in me. RevYolanda 28 seeking: M, l
NONBINARY PEOPLE seeking...
LOOKING FOR OUTDOORSY
I’m very creative and open-minded. Spend my days foraging in the forest and gardening, working at a greenhouse days in the summer. I’m intersex, born with both male and female genitalia. Looking for a man interested in connecting with my female side to date and form a long-term relationship with. Dajag181, 29, seeking: M, l
COUPLES seeking...
KINKY COUPLE SEEKS ADVENTUROUS PLAYMATE
We have explored each other’s boundaries and fulfilled many fantasies along the way. We are looking for new friends to bring into our sexual circle with new possibilities. Help us fulfill our desires for exploration, and we will all learn together through mutual satisfaction. kinkyvermonters 48, seeking: M, W, Cp
FUN COUPLE LOOKING FOR EXPLORATION
We are a secure couple who enjoy the outdoors, good wine, great food, playing with each other, exploring our boundaries and trying new things. We are 47 and 50, looking for a fun couple or bi man to play and explore with us. We are easygoing, and we’d love to meet you and see where our mutual adventures take us. vthappycouple, 51, seeking: M, Cp, Gp
ELIZA THE COLD PLUNGE HOTTIE
We chatted briefly after both emerging from the frigid lake at sunset. You had a big smile that warmed me right up. Want to meet for another dip? When: ursday, October 31, 2024. Where: Texaco Beach. You: Woman. Me: Man. #916211
STANDING IN THE SNACK AISLE
I was standing in the snack aisle holding a coffee. You approached me and said I have a great vibe. I thought you had a great vibe too, but my mind was too slow to say it! Very kind of you to say, and I’d love to chat more. I promise I’ll be more talkative. When: Saturday, December 14, 2024. Where: City Market. You: Woman. Me: Man. #916210
SLAP AND TICKLE
Trying to teach someone a lesson when you have yet to learn yours is entertaining. Domination and manipulation were always the wrong way to go about things. e only way, it seems, to find peace is to first cause chaos. Only after the dust settles will we see who truly led with love and who led with lust and lost. When: Friday, December 6, 2024. Where: everywhere I go. You: Group. Me: Woman. #916209
EXITING THE INDIGO GIRLS CONCERT Green cargo jumpsuit, leather jacket, white Docs. Hair’s dark, curly, Mohawked. While exiting you overheard me talking. We laughed and carried on. en you bumped into another stranger. I exclaimed “Hey, you’re supposed to bump into me!” and you playfully did. en it ended — lost in the crowd.
I’m tall, queer, short brown hair, large glasses, in black jeans and gray coat. When: Monday, December 9, 2024. Where: Flynn eater. You: Nonbinary person. Me: Woman. #916207
DESMOND DAN
If you’ve been spied, go online to contact your admirer!
I saw you in the Desmond Cheese aisle at the Steely Dan store. Hot! When: Tuesday, December 10, 2024. Where: Gnarnia. You: Group. Me: Man. #916208
OLD FRIENDS, ENOSBURG TO SALISBURY
inking of some friends from some years back, whose company I enjoyed very much (about 15 years ago!). I believe the feeling was mutual. I’ve reconnected with one of you and I’d love to get back in touch with the female half of the couple. Ja*na, how are you? Last we talked, I told you I’m up in Montgomery these days. When: Tuesday, December 10, 2024. Where: Enosburg. You: Couple. Me: Man. #916206
KING AT LADY LAMB
You melt me like a bashful puddle. I was working. You, tall with feathery hair, unbuttoned flannel by the right column with your friend(?). Still with that sweetie who was wearing the suit this summer? Your quick, smiley hello made me a swooning schoolboy. Eight years, I’m still wanting to kiss your rosy cheeks and listen to you read me the book about blue. When: ursday, December 5, 2024. Where: Lady Lamb show, Higher Ground. You: Nonbinary person. Me: Genderqueer. #916204
MY HEART BEATS FOR KAZAKHSTAN
Me: a new patient. You: took my blood pressure. It was high for the first time in my life, but I think I know why: I was completely smitten by you! Your face was covered by a mask, but Moses only saw part of God’s face on the mountain, and that didn’t stop him from recognizing something divine, either. When: Tuesday, November 26, 2024. Where: Burlington. You: Woman. Me: Man. #916203
JERICHO COUNTRY STORE
We were buying sandwiches and noticed how kind you were with the gentleman who was with you. We talked about the Jericho museum and Norwich. Might you have any interest in a walk and/or lunch? When: Wednesday, November 13, 2024. Where: Jericho Country Store. You: Woman. Me: Man. #916205
BE HONEST
Seeing you hanging off another man’s arm made me realize how manipulative you are. I showed you the flaws in my armor, just for you to leave me the second I had a bad day. You never respected or cared about me, if you moved on that fast. You are a liar. Be honest and apologize so we can try again. When: Saturday, November 30, 2024. Where: South Hero. You: Woman. Me: Man. #916202
MYTHICAL BIRD?
You’re a vegan, I’m pretty sure. You’re a big fan of the barter system. You drive an orange Subaru, and I think you’re from New York. Maybe you play bass? We’ve never had the chance to really meet. ough we’ve hung out a couple times, I never caught your name. When: ursday, August 15, 2024. Where: Rumney. You: Man. Me: Man. #916200
BOHEMIAN WEDNESDAY
Just a note of appreciation for the two people I met briefly at Bohemian on Wednesday. I was wearing an obnoxious orange hunting jacket and a sweatshirt reading “I love hot moms.” I just wanted to let you know that chatting with the two of you made my day — thanks for your humanity! When: Wednesday, December 4, 2024. Where: Bohemian Bakery, Montpelier. You: Couple. Me: Woman. #916199
GRATITUDE BEGETS
GRATITUDE
I let you into traffic, and you did a rare thing, these days: You gave a wave of thanks. Now will you let me treat you to a luscious libation or decadent dessert of your choosing, within reason (living on a budget)? Gratitude is a wonderful attitude. When: Tuesday, December 3, 2024. Where: Turning left onto E. Allen St. toward Winooski (leaving gas station) around 5 p.m. You: Woman. Me: Man. #916198
De C istmas Pickle,
Rev end,
I’ve been dating a guy for the past three months. We see each other a lot, but it’s still pretty casual. I would like to give him something for Christmas, but I don’t know if that would be weird because maybe it’s too soon. I also don’t want to make it awkward if he doesn’t get me anything. What should I do?
TEAL COAT, WHITE PURSE
You: woman in a dark teal coat with a white purse walking up Church Street. Me: guy driving up College Street. You probably didn’t see me because I was in my car, but I thought you were stunning. Coffee sometime? When: Monday, December 2, 2024. Where: Corner of Church and College. You: Woman. Me: Man. #916197
MYER’S BAGELS
We (couple) saw you (woman) coming out the door. We greeted you by holding the door. Your smile was contagious, and you looked like a Hallmark actress (lol). Happy anksgiving, and hope you have a joyful Christmas. In today’s world, it’s always a joy to see people smiling. Meet for coffee someday? When: Tuesday, December 3, 2024. Where: Myer’s Bagels. You: Woman. Me: Woman. #916196
THE LADY AND THE SAUSAGE
I
first spied you many years ago — whether it was on a playground or at a turkey luncheon is still up for debate. Either way, I have been head over heels in love with you pretty much ever since. I am the luckiest lady in the world to be with you. Happy birthday, Sausage! Yours forever, AG When: Tuesday, December 3, 2024. Where: Mad River Valley. You: Man. Me: Woman. #916195
BAD NIGHT; KIND PERSON
You: checking IDs at JP’s after 10:30ish on Saturday. Asked me if I was OK. Me: entered and exited several times, paced all around downtown, went and sat in City Hall Park, left the bar for good having clearly been crying. I said I probably would be OK, and thanks. Your kindness meant a lot. I’m mostly OK now. When: Saturday, November 9, 2024. Where: JP’s. You: Trans woman. Me: Trans man. #916194
WHAT’S A SOLARA?
ese are the only words I could think to shout at you from across the gas pumps. ank you for educating me on classic Toyota coupes — did you know you’re a handsome devil with an outrageously good-looking smile, and charming banter to boot? How do you sleep at night? I’d sleep better with you next to me! Coffee sometime? When: ursday, November 28, 2024. Where: Orleans Maplefields. You: Man. Me: Woman. #916193
THE PRETTY LOBSTER MAN
He was a seafood clerk. I spotted him across the aisle, standing there, getting a lobster from the tank. He said, “Do you like my happy lobsters in their shiny tank?” I did! When: Wednesday, December 4, 2024. Where: Shaw’s. You: Man. Me: Man. #916201
BPS
I wish I had talked to you more. I’ll marry you in my dreams. Good luck in your new adventure. Maybe I’ll see you again. If I do, I’ll ask you out. I’ll miss seeing you every day. Hopefully our paths will cross again. When: Friday, November 22, 2024. Where: Breakroom. You: Man. Me: Woman. #916192
MISSED TWO CHANCES
Saw you this summer at the Norwich Bookstore; you bought a book about the NYC music scene in the ‘70s. We ran into each other again a couple hours later, on your way back home. I was driving, you were walking, and I realized later I should have offered to drop you off. How was that book? When: Monday, July 15, 2024. Where: Norwich. You: Woman. Me: Woman. #916190
TOSCA AT THE PARAMOUNT
A rainy Tuesday afternoon. Tosca at the Paramount had just ended. I rushed out to get the car for my mom; you were there to pick up yours. “Is it over?” you asked. “All but the curtain calls,” I replied, putting on my raincoat. By the time I got back, you were gone. When: Tuesday, November 26, 2024. Where: e Paramount eater, Rutland. You: Woman. Me: Man. #916189
TURKEY TROT IN WESTFORD
We chatted a bit after finishing the 10K. I liked talking with you. Afterward I regretted I did not suggest we exchange phone numbers so we could enter a race together. When: Saturday, November 23, 2024. Where: Turkey Trot in Westford. You: Woman. Me: Man. #916187
HEALTHY BOUNDARIES
To the home-wrecker from Gardenside — you can have the narcissistic liar, but stay out of my house and off of my turf. When: Saturday, November 16, 2024. Where: my house. You: Man. Me: Man. #916186
e easy solution would be to ask him if he wants to exchange presents, but that kinda takes the fun out of it. If you feel like giving someone a gift, I say don’t second-guess yourself. Doing something nice for someone is never weird — and who doesn’t like getting a present?
Since you’re feeling a little hesitation, avoid getting him anything expensive or extravagant. I’m sure he’d love a Rolex, but even if you can afford it, it’s too early in your relationship for that sort of thing.
would be totally appropriate. Or a small gift that relates to one of his interests or hobbies would show that you’ve been paying attention. Perhaps he’s mentioned a band he really likes or a book he wants to read?
You could opt for a gift that the two of you could use together. Tickets to a show or a gift card to a local restaurant would be more like saying “I got us a date” than “I got you a present.” at could ease any awkwardness if he doesn’t have a gift for you.
Speaking of: If that should happen, it doesn’t necessarily mean he doesn’t care or isn’t thoughtful. It’s quite possible that he’s having the same conundrum as you are. And if that’s the case, hopefully he’ll read this, too.
When it comes to gift giving, the old cliché is true: It’s the thought that counts. A card with a nice note and some treats, like chocolate or cookies,
Good luck and God bless, The Rev end
I’m a 60-y/o SWF seeking a 55-70-y/o SM. Retired, healthy, fit and outdoorsy. ISO a kindred spirit with whom to share Vermont’s trails. I enjoy mountain and gravel biking, cross-country skiing and yearround hiking as well as a good Vermont brew, current events, reading and eating as locally as possible. Self-deprecating sense of humor a plus! #L1816
I’m a SWF, 71 y/o, seeking a white or Black man 50-70 y/o. I want companionship/sex, movies, warmth; I love music. Phone calls only. #L1815
CD into fetish? Tight and shiny clothing? #L1814
Single woman, 59. Wise, mindful. Seeking tight unit with man, friend, love. Country living, gardens, land to play on. Emotionally, intellectually engaged. Lasting chats. Appreciation for past experience. Please be kind, stable and well established. Phone number, please. #L1813
I’m an 80-y/o man in good health. I own a ranch house on Route 110 in Tunbridge, south of fairgrounds. Never married. No children, retired. Like going out to eat and riding around. Looking for a nice lady for a long-term relationship. #L1810
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PUBLISH YOUR MESSAGE ON THIS PAGE!
1 Submit your FREE message at sevendaysvt.com/loveletters or use the handy form at right.
We’ll publish as many messages as we can in the Love Letters section above. 2
Interested readers will send you letters in the mail. No internet required! 3
GM looking for a man or men for mutual pleasure. Maybe develop into LTR or FWB. Would like regular or semiregular visits. Fun and adventurous. #L1812
I miss the touch, the flirting, the taste, the smell of a woman. I’m 69, retired and disabled. I also have many facets that make me up. NEK please, thanks. #L1811
I’m an 80-y/o woman seeking a man for companionship and friendship. I am a widow living in Burlington. Love to go out to dinner and movies and have good conversation. #L1809
SWM, bi, seeking guys for fun. Any race. I’m 6’1, 175 pounds. Clean, safe and discreet. Love being a bottom. Respond with a phone number. #L1804
58-y/o enjoys the simple things: walks with my dogs, candlelit evenings, window shopping. I don’t have to have someone to complete me but would love to share the beauty of life with a man who also is ready to dance like nobody’s watching. #L1808
76-y/o male seeking a female. Widower, Burlington resident, gardener, fisherman and writer wants to meet you for dinner, movies, events and conversation. You: old, kind, no issues. Possible friendship, LTR. I don’t watch football. #L1807
Int net-Free Dating!
T-girl? Transgender? CD? Gay? I’m a dom, so looking for subs. anks. #L1799
I’m a sweet, fit, busy 48y/o DILF type seeking a 28- to 68-y/o-ish woman who wants some more affection in her life. Let’s have a great evening together every month and share good memories and joyful anticipation in between. #L1806
I’m a SWM seeking a Black couple, both bi. I’m clean, a nonsmoker and don’t drink. Would like a weekly meet, on weekends. My place is private. I only date Black men and women. Age no problem. Phone. Serious. #L1802
Handsome SWM, young-looking 60, yearning for a woman’s connection and intimacy. Seeking friendly relations with slim-average 45- to 60-y/o, kind, smart, respectful, humorous, playful. Activities indoors and outdoors — dinners, talks, walks, nature, TV, entertainment, day trips, overnights, spontaneity, hobbies, more. #L1803
Describe yourself and who you’re looking for in 40 words below: (OR, ATTACH A SEPARATE PIECE OF PAPER.)
I’m a
AGE + GENDER (OPTIONAL) seeking a
AGE + GENDER (OPTIONAL)
Mid-60s, SWM, 6’, 175 pounds. Looking for a forever romance but just meeting with new friends can work, too! Extremely romantic and passionate! I stay active as I run, hike, bike; play golf, tennis and pickleball; and work out at the Edge. Full of spontaneity and love dancing, travel. I will love you snuggling in my arms always as I shower you with love and romance! #L1801
I’m a 54-y/o male seeking a 50- to 60-y/o female. Looking for an honest person. Sex is less important. I enjoy taking walks, soft rock and movies, in or out. Love to go out to eat. No drugs, no smoking. #L1800
SWM, 69, seeking a SF. I am warm, friendly, clean and respectful, seeking a LTR. Just an ordinary guy looking for same. Phone number, please. #L1798
SWM, 55, seeking Barbie with brains. FWB/NSA relationship and open to a LTR. Younger or older, for fun play. Please send a picture and contact info. I’m looking for one woman for a special time together. #L1797
Required confidential info: NAME ADDRESS
(MORE)
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