May 12, 2016 A Section

Page 1

Spring peeps

Gone hiking

OT drama

Read about caring for baby chicks and lots of planting tips in our spring Home and Garden section.

A Panther coach walks away from a long career and keeps on walking. See Lindholm column, Page 1B.

The Tiger boys’ lax team picked up a welcome victory on Monday in overtime. See Sports, Page 1B.

ADDISON COUNTY

INDEPENDENT Vol. 70 No. 19

Middlebury, Vermont

Thursday, May 12, 2016

48 Pages

ANeSU sets date for vote on school governance

Lawmakers praise medical leave bill, budget resolution Session called low key; reviews mixed By JOHN FLOWERS MIDDLEBURY — The 2016 session of the Vermont Legislature could be remembered just as much for what lawmakers didn’t do, as for what they accomplished, according to a sampling of Addison County legislators. The 2016 session officially concluded very late this past Friday, May 6. It is a session that produced, among other things, a new law requiring employers to offer paid medical leave to workers, new rules on how prescription painkillers can be prescribed, a law that affords more input from communities in the state’s review of solar energy projects, and what Gov. Peter Shumlin called a “balanced budget that for the first time in nearly a decade does not rely on any one-time funds for ongoing state expenses.”

Balloting on unification is slated for November

At the same time, lawmakers expressed frustration at not having more to show for their four months of work. “It was sort of a ‘maintenance year,’ unfortunately,” said Sen. Claire Ayer, D-Addison, who again served as the Senate Majority Whip. “There were not a lot of major new initiatives.” For example, after many hours of debate, the General Assembly could not agree on a plan to legalize possession of small amounts of recreational marijuana — though that impasse was hailed by some local legislators who opposed the controversial measure. “I think it had a lot of problems,” Rep. Betty Nuovo, D-Middlebury, said of the pot legalization bill that passed the Senate but failed in the (See Session, Page 15A)

By GAEN MURPHREE BRISTOL — Residents in the Bristol-area towns in the Addison Northeast Supervisory Union will vote this November on whether to institute a unified union governance structure that would put all schools in the district under one school board and one budget. The ANeSU Act 46 committee announced last Friday that it will hold a vote on a unified union school governance structure for the five-town area. “One of the biggest benefits with the unified union is that it provides the greatest simplification of the governance, which really is part of the main focus of Act 46,” said committee chair Jennifer Stanley of Monkton. “It’s simplifying how we’re governing our schools so that our school administrators have more time and our teachers and everyone has more time to focus on what our kids need. “I think that that was a big driving (See ANeSU, Page 16A)

Dunne outlines formula for economic recovery Gubernatorial hopeful shares priorities By JOHN FLOWERS Dunne, 46, was born MIDDLEBURY — in New Haven, Conn., Hartland Democrat and and was raised in Hartgubernatorial candidate ford, Vt., the son of lawMatt Dunne is pitching yer and civil rights acan economic recovery tivist John Bailey Dunne plan that he said would and Dartmouth College nurture growing busiprofessor Faith Weinnesses, create new jobs, stein Dunne. He was weatherize aging apartelected to the Vermont ment buildings and reHouse at age 22, repduce the state’s carbon resenting Hartford and footprint, all at the same West Windsor for eight time. years. Dunne shared his He was recruited by plan, and positions on the Clinton administraMATT DUNNE other issues ranging tion to serve as director from solar siting to health care, during of AmeriCorps VISTA, a volunteera far-ranging interview at the Addison driven poverty-fighting organization. Independent on Thursday, May 5. (See Matt Dunne, Page 18A)

Bristol teacher to lead Addison Central School

Spring colors BRILLIANT BLUES AND yellows surround the Congregational Church in downtown Middlebury Wednesday morning. Independent photo/Trent Campbell

Lincoln town office moves to temporary new home

LINCOLN TOWN CLERK Sally Ober moves a box in the new clerk’s office located in the Lincoln Library last Tuesday morning. The town will build a new town office by next fall. Independent photo/Trent Campbell

75¢

By GAEN MURPHREE LINCOLN — “It’s like having new roommates,” said Lincoln Town Clerk Sally Ober as she looked around the town office’s snug new home-away-from-home in the Lincoln Library one day last week. Ober, Lincoln Treasurer Lisa Truchon, Lister David Harrison and Zoning Administrator Bob Hall are tucked in, desk to desk, around the library’s Community Room for the next six months while Lincoln constructs a new town office. The old town office at 62 Quaker St. was closed the last week of April while the municipal staff packed up and then reopened in the library space at 222 West River Road on May 2. Among the pleasant surprises for Ober in the office’s temporary digs: “I’m not wearing my long underwear to work. And you can print that.” Ober’s desk in the old building was right near the vault and always cold, she said, but the Lincoln Library is clean, light, warm and cozy. After being open for business in the library only two days, town (See Lincoln, Page 18A)

Orwell to hold revote on school governance By JOHN FLOWERS mont’s Act 46. Those incentives inORWELL — Orwell school offi- clude decreases of 10 cents on the cials are projecting a June revote on local education property tax rate durthe question of whether the commu- ing the first year of the governance nity should join five Rutland County merger, followed by 8 cents in year towns in forming a “Slate Valley two; 6 cents in year three; 4 cents Unified Union School District” that in year four; and finally, 2 cents in would be governed by a single board year five. Orwell would also receive presiding over a global education a “transition facilitation grant” of budget for all of the schools in the $130,000 to assist in the creation of new union. the new district, and This past Friday, the ability to retain its May 6, the Orwell “I realize that we Small Schools Grant town clerk’s office have our work of around $100,000 received a citizens’ cut out for us, but per year. petition seeking a communities am also thankful thatMost revote on the same have not joined school governance for another a unified school disunification question opportunity trict by 2018 will that local residents to meet with be required to do so defeated on April 12 anyway — and the by a 211 to 121 tally. the electorate Vermont Agency of Orwell was the only and answer Education could dicommunity of the six questions.” rect them to join a disto reject unification; — Alyson Eastman trict that might be less the question passed palatable than the one comfortably in the they rejected, ARSU other Addison-Rutland Supervisory officials noted. Union (ARSU) towns of Castleton, The five Rutland County commuWest Haven, Benson, Hubbardton nities in the ARSU would be able to and Fair Haven. pursue unification without Orwell, ARSU officials stressed that only using a “modified” Act 46 process Orwell will field the revote question. that would yield less generous tax If town residents vote “yes” this incentives. time around, Orwell would proceed Ron Ryan, ARSU superintenwith an “accelerated” governance dent, is pleased about the impending unification process that will entitle revote. the community to various financial “I think it’s nice to be able to have (See Orwell, Page 16A) incentives guaranteed through Ver-

By ANDY KIRKALDY ADDISON — The Addison Central School board agreed last week to hire as its next principal a Bristol Elementary School teacher who also coordinates its Afterschool Expanded Learning Program. Travis Park, who in 2007 earned his bachelor’s degree in elementary education from Utah Valley State College and in 2011 received his master’s in education administration from New England College, will this summer replace Matthew DeBlois. DeBlois was recently hired as the new Vergennes Union Elementary School principal. In hiring Park, the Addison Central board accepted the recommendation of both Addison Northwest Supervisory Union Superintendent JoAn Canning and the school’s principal search committee. Canning said the opening drew (See Travis Park, Page 16A)

By the way Area motorcyclists are invited to join VT 4 Red Knights Motorcycle Club for a ride and bike blessing this Saturday. The sixth annual VT IV Red Knights Bike Blessing will begin at Middlebury Beef Supply on Route 7 South in (See By the way, Page 2A)

Index Obituaries .......................... 6A-7A Classifieds ....................... 6B-10B Service Directory .............. 7B-8B Entertainment ........................ 12A Community Calendar ...... 8A-10A Sports ................................ 1B-4B


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