April 21, 2016 section C
local high school
SPORTS Spring sports!
addison independent presents
Local Foods
Whitewater
Check out the season prospects for all four local high school team in our special section.
See where your food comes from and read our comprehensive list of local growers in a special pull-out.
Paddlers headed to Lincoln this past weekend for a race down the New Haven River. See Page 1B.
ADDISON COUNTY
INDEPENDENT Vol. 70 No. 16
Middlebury, Vermont
◆
Thursday, April 21, 2016 ◆ 94 Pages
75¢
Bristol seeks $1.1M for new water main By GAEN MURPHREE BRISTOL — The 110-year-old water main along West Street in Bristol is overdue for replacement, according to selectboard members and engineers they hired. At a public hearing on Monday evening, they explained why Bristol residents should approve a $1,115,020 bond to replace a large portion of the West Street line and extend the town water system to Lovers Lane. A vote by Australian ballot will be held May 10. “The West Street line is in very poor condition,” said Jamie Simpson of Green Mountain Engineering, who presented plans for the system replacement and extension. “It has given the town many issues as far as leaks and breaks and is due for an
upgrade as it was installed around 1905. So it’s six-inch cast iron and it’s got some holes in it and some issues.” Green Mountain Engineering was hired by the town in December 2013 to evaluate and prioritize the town’s water distribution lines most in need of replacement. The study looked at age, condition, population served and fire prevention, among other factors. The study “identified West Street as one of the highest-ranking projects for consideration for improvement due to leaks, breakages and overall poor condition.” At Monday’s meeting in Holley Hall, Selectman John “Peeker” Heffernan described one repair of a “radial crack” on the West Street line as (See Bristol, Page 16A)
Cidery ready to move to Kennedy Brothers By ANDY KIRKALDY will be reached shortly. VERGENNES — Shoreham hard “We’re hoping to finalize the lease cider maker Shacksbury Cider and here in the next week or two,” Davis the owners of the Kensaid. “And once that nedy Brothers Markethappens we’re going place building have “We were looking to move forward with applied for a zoning for a place where renovating the old permit that would al- there is a story, creamery and buildlow the three-year-old with some history. ing out a facility with cider company to set We like that a tasting room and evup its brewing, boterything.” about Kennedy tling, warehousing and Feuerstein, who coBrothers, that it’s shipping operations, signed the conditional plus offices and a tast- had a long history use zoning application ing room, in the Ver- in town, and the with Davis, echoed gennes landmark. Davis’ point of view. fact it’s been a Shacksbury co- creamery before, “I expect we’re founder Colin Davis going to come to an we thought that and Kennedy Brothagreement,” he said. ers co-owner Robert was cool.” “I’m certainly hope— Colin Davis ful we’ll make it come Feuerstein said some details of a long-term through.” lease for the long-vacant, three-story The permit they seek will be to renorthern end of the 41,724-square- store manufacturing to the first floor foot building remain to be worked of Kennedy Brothers’ white “Creamout, but both believe an agreement (See Vergennes, Page 13A)
New Haven must skip vote on VGL; will rely on survey By GAEN MURPHREE NEW HAVEN — New Haven residents’ call for a direct vote on the proposed Vermont Green Line power converter station may be thwarted by a technicality. That technicality — which could delay for two months a townwide vote on the power project that could
bring millions of tax dollars to the town — prompted the selectboard to opt for a nonbinding survey on the question. At an emergency meeting Tuesday morning, the New Haven selectboard voted to hold a townwide survey in response to the question: “Shall the (See New Haven, Page 16A)
SENA VONCUJOVI, CENTER, is joined by fellow Middlebury College students, Christian Johansen (left), Pele Voncujovi (behind) and Vikram Kaleka at the beginning of a voodoo ceremony in Havana, Cuba, earlier this month. Senna, who was raised in the African spiritual practice of voodoo, or vodu, went to Cuba to learn more about the related Cuban religious practice called santería.
Photo credit: Asher Brown
Voodoo
Brothers seek respect for African spiritual practice By DAVID FUCHS from what you think. HAVANA, Cuba — Two weeks ago The brothers, raised in West Africa, in a cool, tiled room in Havana, Cuba, have been practicing voodoo for years. Sena Voncujovi handed me a chicken. While Pele is still only a practitioner, As instructed, I held it from behind, Sena made the decision to become a thumb and forefinger slipped under fully-fledged babalawo, or voodoo its wings. I thanked it, whispered my priest, four years ago. While they don’t struggles into its left ear and my wish- sacrifice animals here in Vermont, the es into its right one, before two are currently working to passing it back to Sena, who “Back raise awareness about their calmly pressed a knife to its home, the tradition and demonstrate to throat and offered its life to practice people at home and abroad Eleguá, the spirit guardian how it can be compatible with of the crossroads. A moment (of voodoo) a modern, cosmopolitan lifeis not a later, his younger brother Pele style. snapped a photo for Insta- religion. It’s To prepare for their presengram. more like a tation this Saturday at the colSena and Pele Voncujovi way of life.” lege’s Amka Conference — an are not typical political sci— Sena event dedicated to “awakenence students at Middlebury Voncujovi ing the Middlebury communiCollege, though they are that, ty’s attention regarding issues too. The brothers practice relevant to Africa” — the two an ancient yet ever-evolving form of recently led a trip to Cuba to explore spirituality commonly referred to as the connections between West African voodoo. Yes, voodoo — the “dark art” voodoo and Cuban santería. As part of that Hollywood movies portray with their effort to broadcast more accurate shrunken heads, pins and dolls. information about voodoo to outsiders, However, according to the Voncujo- they brought along a handful of stuvis, the reality of this form of African dents, including myself, to join them. spirituality might be very different (See Voodoo, Page 18A)
MIDDLEBURY COLLEGE JUNIOR Sena Voncujovi works on a paper while sitting in front of a voodoo shrine in his dorm room. Photo credit: Neil Steiner
STEAM camp steers local girls toward science College, town teaming up on program
MIDDLEBURY COLLEGE SENIOR Kae Fink keeps an eye on some “gluep” made by students Clare Molineaux, 12, left, and TC Finn, 11, during a science, technology, engineering, arts and math camp sponsored this week by Middlebury’s parks and recreation department and Middlebury College. Independent photo/Trent Campbell
By JOHN FLOWERS ed jobs currently dominated by men. MIDDLEBURY — Nine MiddleAccording to the U.S. Census Bubury-area girls are spending their reau’s 2009 American Community spring break week studying science, Survey, women make up around 48 math, chemistry and other subjects percent of the U.S. workforce, but that can scare the socks off a lot of only 24 percent of workers in STEM kids. fields. While the number No, they are not on aca- “Chemistry of women majoring in demic probation, in need of science-related fields has never gets been on the rise, many of “extra help.” They are doing it for old; it’s those same women aren’t fun, as part of the new always using their degrees to land MiddSTEAM Camp, STEM-related jobs, noted cool.” a collaboration of the Molly Costanza-Robin— Molly Middlebury Parks & son, associate professor of CostanzaRecreation Department and Chemistry and EnvironRobinson Middlebury College. It was mental Studies at Middlespearheaded by Middlebury bury College. Parks & Recreation Director Terri “They call it the ‘leaky pipeline,’” Arnold, who has been a veritable Costanza-Robinson, a MiddSTEAM dynamo in creating new sports and Camp instructor, said of the postenrichment offerings for area residents. graduation thinning of women in the The camp’s inspiration first came science fields. “We have all of these from an article Arnold read on Sci- women who have made it through ence, Technology, Engineering and college chemistry and then they start Math (STEM) and the importance of finding other fields, or maybe sciintroducing girls to that subject mat- ence isn’t as welcoming to women.” (See Science, Page 17A) ter early to spark an interest in relat-
By the way The graduating class at Lyndon State College has chosen Naila Baloch, associate chaplain at Middlebury College’s Scott Center for Spiritual and Religious Life, to speak at their commencement ceremony on May 15. As the associate chaplain at Middlebury’s (See By the way, Page 13A)
Index Obituaries ................................ 6A Classifieds ....................... 9B-13B Service Directory .......... 10B-11B Entertainment ........................ 12A Community Calendar ...... 8A-10A Sports ................................ 1B-4B