Seven Days, March 6, 2024

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V ER MON T’S INDE P ENDE NT V O IC E MARCH 6-13, 2024 VOL.29 NO.22 SEVENDAYSVT.COM

Getting On An aging population is transforming Vermont’s schools, workplaces and communities BY COLIN FLANDERS, PAGE 24 PART OF “THIS OLD STATE,” A YEARLONG SERIES

MADAM MAYOR

Progressive Emma Mulvaney-Stanak captures Burlington's mayoral seat and will be the first woman to lead the Queen City PAGE 5


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PASS JOINTS NOT JUDGEMENT 65 60 R O U T E 7, N O RT H F E R R IS B U RG H , V E R M O N T • 9T HSTAT E V T.CO M Cannabis has not been analyzed or approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). For use by individuals 21 years of age or 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 significant legal penalties in some jurisdictions and under federal law. It may not be transported outside of the state of Vermont. The effects 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 influence of this product. National Poison Control Center 1-800-222-1222.

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WEEK IN REVIEW

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FEBRUARY 28-MARCH 6, 2024

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COMPILED BY SASHA GOLDSTEIN & MATTHEW ROY

Emma Mulvaney-Stanak at her election-night victory party in Burlington

…BUT A NUMBER

This year, for the first time, 16- and 17-year-olds were allowed to vote in Brattleboro’s municipal elections. They grow up so fast.

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UNLOCKING TRUTH

QUEEN OF THE CITY Progressive Party stalwart Emma Mulvaney-Stanak was elected mayor of Burlington on Tuesday and will be the first woman to hold the leadership post. A former city councilor who currently represents Burlington in the Vermont House of Representatives, Mulvaney-Stanak bested longtime City Councilor Joan Shannon (D-South District) for the seat. Mulvaney-Stanak earned 51.2 percent of the vote on Tuesday night to Shannon’s 45 percent. Independent candidates Chris Haessly and Will Emmons each earned less than 2 percent. After results from Burlington’s Ward 5 neighborhood made her win official, the mayor-elect entered Zero Gravity Brewery to raucous cheers from supporters. “We not only have a woman mayor after 159 years, we have the first openly LGBTQ-plus mayor!” she announced. “And do you know why that matters? I am pretty darn sure that I am the first out, queer mayor in the state of Vermont. And that also matters because I grew up in this state, and I will tell you that representation matters. I did not see a leader like me when I was growing up in central Vermont.” Speaking at a more subdued Democratic election-night party at Halvorson’s Upstreet Café, Shannon congratulated Mulvaney-Stanak. “Our commitment is not just to the campaign but to moving Burlington forward,” she said. “So let’s offer all

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TOWN MEETING DAY

hands on deck to Emma,” she said, referencing her campaign slogan. Mulvaney-Stanak’s victory notched a huge win for Burlington Progressives, who have not captured the mayor’s office since Bob Kiss was elected in 2009. With eight ward races decided on Tuesday, the next council will have six Democrats, five Progressives and one independent. Mulvaney-Stanak will be sworn in on April 1. Concern about homeless encampments, crime and open-air drug use were front and center during the campaign. Mulvaney-Stanak distinguished herself from Shannon’s law-and-order approach by advocating a more nuanced response. Like Shannon, she called for hiring more police. She also talked about addressing the root causes of homelessness and crime. She has pledged to appoint a special assistant for community safety who would convene the members of Howard Center’s Street Outreach Team, city social workers and others to address these issues. She’s also called for a volunteer “community brigade” to pick up litter and cover graffiti. Mulvaney-Stanak lives in the Old North End with her wife and two children. She runs a leadership coaching and consulting business. Read reporter Courtney Lamdin’s ongoing coverage and check out the rest of our Town Meeting Day stories at sevendaysvt.com.

To comply with a 2021 law, the Vermont Department of Corrections has created an internal investigation unit. Time for transparency.

DOLLAR DELUGE

The feds approved disaster relief assistance for Vermont towns that sustained flood damage in December. A truly tough year.

PACING THE FIELD

Vermont runner Elle Purrier St. Pierre won the women’s 3,000-meter race at the World Athletics Indoor Championships. She’s unstoppable!

1. “Decker Towers Tenant Charged With Pepper Spraying a Woman in Stairwell” by Derek Brouwer. In a vigilante effort to keep intruders out, a resident harmed a janitor. 2. “The University of Vermont to Unveil a New Logo” by Anne Wallace Allen. Some observers found the simple green shield underwhelming. 3. “Shtick Season: In Vermont and Beyond, Green Mountain Comedy Has Come of Age” by Seven Days staff. So these Vermont comics get up on stages and hone their craft… 4. “Decker Towers Residents Plead for Help From the Burlington City Council” by Derek Brouwer. Speakers asked for help securing a building that’s been overrun by people who are homeless and use drugs. 5. “A Pandemic-Era Program That Created and Rehabbed Hundreds of Apartments Will Be Extended” by Anne Wallace Allen. Federal funds have run out, but Vermont will keep this effort going.

post of the week @MattDickinson44 Today and tomorrow are when Vermont Town Clerks really earn their money (which isn’t enough). Remember to thank them for serving when Town Meeting and Primary Day are over. #vtprimary #townmeeting #vtpoli FOLLOW US ON X @SEVENDAYSVT OR VISIT SEVENDAYSVT.COM/TWITTER

THAT’S SO VERMONT imal’s personality. So far, Goose has won four rounds of voting in the cat division. The Paw Print, a pet calendar company, also chose Goose to appear as “Mr. September” after seeing his entry. People can vote once a day for free, with additional votes requiring a $1 donation to the

CATTY CONTEST

A Vermont cat is competing in a national contest that will crown “America’s Favorite Pet.” Goose, an orange tabby who lives in South Burlington with owner Alyssa Bohack, is in the middle of a competition that began in January and will end with one cat and one dog named as champions. Anyone can enter, but Bohack thought Goose, one of her six cats, had a legitimate shot at taking the title. “I think his profile picture really gets attention,” Bohack said. “He’s got a little heart-shaped nose.” Colossal Management organizes the annual contest in support of the Progressive Animal Welfare Society, a national rescue group. Entrants upload multiple images of their pet to a voting website and answer a series of questions about the an-

Goose

Progressive Animal Welfare Society. Bohack has been rallying support for her furry friend, whom she started fostering when he was 8 weeks old. The two bonded quickly. “I mean, after six weeks with an orange, fuzzy kitten, how do you not adopt them?” Bohack said. Goose is named after a character in the 1986 movie Top Gun. “He’s my little wingman,” Bohack explained. “Goose follows me from room to room.” The winner will appear on the cover of Modern Cat magazine and receive a $10,000 prize. If the South Burlington kitty is the victor, Bohack said, she’ll donate some of the prize money to the Humane Society of Chittenden County, do some home improvements and, of course, “spoil Goose.” To vote, visit americasfavpet.com/2024/goose-4396.

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MORE HEARTWARMING STORIES, PLEASE

Please, more stories like Melissa Pasanen’s article about David Corey at City Hardware [“‘Mr. Helpful,’” February 21]. It was heartwarming! Scott Hamlin

WINTER GARDEN, FL

FIFTY YEARS LATER

The Lawson’s Finest Liquids ad for Black Is Beautiful beer [February 7], with proceeds to “go to the development and growth of Black brewers nationwide,” brought back an amusing memory. Back in the civil-rights 1960s, I had a mentor who happened to be Procter & Gamble’s Washington, D.C., lobbyist. I said: “I have an idea for you. In addition to the usual pretty white housewives marketing Comet kitchen cleanser on TV, how about putting the same product in a can, labeling it ‘Black Power kitchen cleanser,’ with a label featuring a take-charge Black woman extolling its virtues, and retail it in inner-city Black neighborhoods, all profits contributed to Black economic self-help organizations? It would cost P&G almost nothing, and it would win a lot of favorable publicity for both P&G and Black economic development.” My friend conceded that it was original but perhaps too advanced to persuade P&G management. That was 50 years ago. Best wishes to Lawson’s Finest and the National Black Brewers Association. John McClaughry

KIRBY

WRONG-WAY REPUBLICANS

“This Modern World” was spot on [January 24]. I will never understand how or why so many Americans are so loyal to someone so undeserving of it. I can understand the 147 Republican lawmakers who have demanded and defended Donald Trump; that election integrity is paramount to our very core beliefs. After all, how many of them, the 147, did the same when Trump lost to Hillary Clinton by 3 million votes? Oh, wait, election integrity is a one-way street. I guess as long as the Electoral College votes are properly counted, millions can be denied their choice. For more than three years, these same 147 lawmakers, or most of them,


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have continued to jam our democracy with a seemingly never-ending barrage of complete garbage. As far as I’m concerned, the Republican Party is going in the wrong direction, trying to impeach President Joe Biden for most of his term with absolutely no verifiable proof of any wrongdoing, going after his son, calling him names and, of course, echoing anything Trump says. I can’t think of any group of Americans that has ever proven to be so pathetic. It’s a disgrace. In 1945, World War II ended and leaders across the world swore that never again would a Nazi-type regime terrorize the world. How soon we forget. Mark Maddy MOOERS, NY

STAY AWAY FROM OLD-GROWTH

The article “Taking a Stand” [January 24] describes the Vermont Department of Forests, Parks and Recreation’s proposed plan that includes managing 19,000 acres of state forest in the Worcester Range near Montpelier, allowing logging in half the land and conserving the other half. The big question is: Why permit

logging at all in this old-growth area when we know that old-growth forests are the most effective CO2 vacuums on the planet? Yes, we need lumber, but we should not be cutting down our best assets at absorbing CO2. With about 98 percent of the timber cut in Vermont coming from public land, why do we even need to be encouraging logging in state forests at all? Adding limited state acreage should have little to no impact on the logging industry. Signed in 2023, Act 59 set the goal to conserve 50 percent of all land in Vermont by 2050. With only about half that amount protected now, we need to find ways to put private land under protection. Freeing up more state land for logging would only make that job harder. Act 59 also dictated use of the Vermont Conservation Design document to serve as a guide, and it calls for moving to 9 percent oldgrowth forests, a big leap from the current 1 percent. I call on state Reps. Becca White and Gabrielle Stebbins, cochairs of the Vermont Climate Solutions Caucus, to press the forest department to protect our old-growth forests and conserve state forests. Bob Warrington

BURLINGTON

CORRECTIONS

Last week’s story “The Comedy Factory” misspelled the name of a Vermont comedian now at Second City. She is Catrina Hughes. A cinnamon roll was incorrectly described in the February 21 piece headlined “Going Grey: Drinking Delightful London Fog Lattes at Burlington’s Great Harvest Bread.” It has an enriched, yeasted dough.

‘ONE BAD APPLE’

Thank you so much for this wellresearched article [“The Fight for Decker Towers,” February 14]. I am writing to say that a similar issue, although not so blatant, is taking place in all affordable housing communities for seniors and people with disabilities. Federally assisted apartment living stipulates that a little less than 20 percent of apartments must

WOMEN’S HISTORY MONTH

Hope Lindsay

BURLINGTON

FOLLOW THE MONEY

16t-vcam-weekly.indd 1 1 [Re “Online Sports Betting in Vermont16t-vcamWEEKLY24.indd Will Start in January,” December 12, 2023]: The state has a windfall in tax revenue from online sports betting and cannabis: $20 million wagered in the first three weeks of online gambling. Where is that tax money in the conversation regarding hitting homeowners with a 20 percent property tax hike? There is a similar windfall with regard to cannabis sales and taxes collected. Remember when the Lotto and Megabucks funds were supposed to cover the education fund? Is that being misappropriated? We need answers.

2/21/24 11/2/20 2:59 3:07 PM

Kelli Brown Varela

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contents MARCH 6-13, 2024 VOL.29 NO.22

Getting On

34

FOOD+DRINK 34 It’s Electra’s New Shelburne restaurant from the Leunig’s Bistro & Café team has something for everyone

COLUMNS

SECTIONS

11 Magnificent 7 13 From the Publisher 35 Side Dishes 46 Movie Review 52 Soundbites 56 Album Reviews 85 Ask the Reverend

21 Life Lines 34 Food + Drink 40 Culture 46 On Screen 48 Art 52 Music + Nightlife 58 Calendar 64 Classes 65 Classifieds + Puzzles 81 Fun Stuff 84 Personals

An aging population is transforming Vermont’s schools, workplaces and communities

STUCK IN VERMONT

Changing the Channel Emily’s Home Cooking reinvents TV dinners

In the Zone

The USDA’s updated plant hardiness zone map confirms changes in what Vermonters can grow

Online Thursday

24 COVER DESIGN JOHN JAMES • IMAGE ROB DONNELLY

NEWS+POLITICS 14

ARTS+CULTURE 40

The Decker Dilemma

Poetic Justice

Officials scramble to find security solutions for Burlington’s embattled high-rise

Still Facing DUI Charges, Vekos Returns to Work as Addison County Prosecutor Room to Grow?

Burlington considers zoning changes to encourage more home building

Vermont Lawmakers Choose New Sergeant at Arms Motel Program Users Keep Their Rooms, Despite Lower Rate

Ruth Bader Ginsburg play comes to the Flynn

31 Media Note: Your Freeps Is in the Mail

FEATURES 24 Nordic Nobility

Two Vermont teens take on the Cross-Country Junior National Championships

Tickets Now on Sale for ‘The Sound of Music in Concert’ Cryptic Compendium

Book review: Fifty Beasts to Break Your Heart and Other Stories, GennaRose Nethercott

Hannah Miller is on a quest to write, read SUPPORTED BY: and knit in as many public libraries in Vermont as possible. Eva accompanied Miller (left) and her wife, Lisa Zinn, to the Haskell Free Library & Opera House in Derby Line, Vt., and Stanstead, Québec — a rare library that straddles two nations. Hannah was able to knit at a table in the U.S. with her feet resting in Canada.

Seasonal Rhythms

Scrag Mountain Music concerts embrace natural transitions

We have

Gold Standards

The exhibition “Gilded” wants us to consider that which does not glitter

New Owners of Robert Paul Galleries Look to the Future

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COURTESY OF NTCH AND GELÉE LA

LOOKING FORWARD

MAGNIFICENT

THURSDAY 7

Man and Beast Vermont International Film Foundation airs the ultimate creature feature, The Animal Kingdom, at Burlington’s Main Street Landing Performing Arts Center Film House. In this French fable, a hit at Cannes and the 2023 Cesar Awards, a father and son embark on a desperate quest in a world where humans are inexplicably transforming into animals.

MUST SEE, MUST DO THIS WEEK COMPI L E D BY EM ILY H AM ILTON

SEE CALENDAR LISTING ON PAGE 58

WEDNESDAY 6-FRIDAY 8

BE MORE PACIFIC Over three days of events at Middlebury College, performing arts project Small Island Big Song reunites the distant yet interconnected musical traditions of 16 countries from across the Pacific and Indian oceans. A documentary screening on Wednesday, a panel discussion with the featured artists and cofounder BaoBao Chen on Thursday, and an uplifting live concert on Friday reveal ancient creative traditions from Madagascar to Rapa Nui.

Submit your upcoming events at sevendaysvt.com/postevent.

SEE CALENDAR LISTINGS ON PAGES 58 & 60

THURSDAY 7 & FRIDAY 8

Saint Francis Lit lovers enjoy two intimate appearances by Vievee Francis, poet, Dartmouth College professor and author of The Shared World. After a Thursday night reading of her work at Johnson’s Vermont Studio Center, Francis gives an instructional, inspirational craft talk on Friday for anyone interested in the art of writing. SEE CALENDAR LISTING ON PAGE 60

OPENS THURSDAY 7

Wish You Wood “Rise: Trees, Our Botanical Giants,” the latest group show at the Gallery at Mad River Valley Arts in Waitsfield, is all bark. Twenty-eight artists, working in 2D and 3D formats, celebrate wood as a material and trees as subjects, blurring the boundaries between art and nature. SEE GALLERY LISTING ON PAGE 51

SATURDAY 9

Never Ghana Give You Up Shidaa Projects presents Eat, Drum, Dance! In Celebration of Ghana’s Independence Day at First Church in Barre, Universalist. The festivities include drum and dance performances featuring renowned dancer and choreographer Samuel Maama Marquaye, a traditional jollof rice dinner, and a West African DJ set. SEE CALENDAR LISTING ON PAGE 61

SUNDAY 10

© LUBASTOCK | DREAMSTIME

Board This Way Pride Center of Vermont, Audubon Vermont and other local orgs invite LGBTQ skiers to hit the slopes and make new friends at the annual Pride Ski Day at Craftsbury Outdoor Center. Ski rentals and trail use are complimentary for all participants, and volunteers are available to help newbies navigate. SEE CALENDAR LISTING ON PAGE 62

WEDNESDAY 13

Carry a Neptune Concertgoers get jazzed for the upcoming solar eclipse at Preclipse, a classical trip through the cosmos at Elley-Long Music Center at Saint Michael’s College in Colchester. Vermont Symphonic Winds and Bella Voce Women’s Chorus perform the entirety of Gustav Holst’s “The Planets,” an orchestral suite with one movement for each of the planets (not including Earth or Pluto, sorry). SEE CALENDAR LISTING ON PAGE 63

BROWSE THE FULL CALENDAR, ART SHOWS, AND MUSIC+NIGHTLIFE LISTINGS AT SEVENDAYSVT.COM. SEVEN DAYS MARCH 6-13, 2024

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FROM THE PUBLISHER COURTESY OF CAROLE BETHUEL/IFC FILMS

Senior Moment

The second of two kids and a late-stage baby boomer, I always imagined myself on the younger side of life — like I was Juliette Binoche in getting away with something. But there’s The Taste of Things no denying that, demographically speaking, I’m now officially old. When I turn 64 next month, I’ll be one year away from qualifying for Social Security and Medicare. that their admirable choice to live simply — and, in some For the first time, last Thursday night, I bought three cases, far from services — has placed them in harm’s way. senior citizen tickets at the movies, which Merrill’s Roxy Anticipating hazards related to aging requires selfCinemas in Burlington generously defines as for those age awareness, willingness to imagine worst-case scenarios 62 and up. My dear friend Erin wanted to see The Taste and, frankly, resources. I’m pretty sure facing mortality, of Things, a beautiful and intentionally slow-moving film swallowing your pride and asking for help are not on about the relationship between two gourmets in 1889 anyone’s bucket list. France. We were ready to witness the I learned this from my late mother, simmering love affair between Juliette who never wanted to bother me with Binoche and Benoît Magimel play out her health problems. As a result, among woodstoves and copper pots in almost every one of them turned almost real time — our speed. into an emergency. I’d get a call — or Watching them whisk, though, a voicemail message! — from the required choosing the right theater; retirement community where she after purchasing tickets, I had led our lived in Maryland, saying my mom The Graying of Vermont group into the wrong one. It dawned had just left in ambulance, but with no A YEA R L ONG S ER I ES B Y on us during the previews, which information about what ailed her or were so violent and vertiginous that where she was going. Erin had to cover her eyes. By the time we got situated At what point does your independence becomes in the room that was actually showing the film we someone else’s burden? That’s a question every senior intended to see, it had already started. Fortunately we citizen in Vermont — and the country — should be asking. had only missed a few minutes of Magimel navigating My aging friends and I faced a different dilemma after the corridors of his beautiful but dimly lit country house. the movie at 8:35 p.m. on a Thursday night. We were hungry. Even in the dark, I could see that most of the people in Feeling French, of course, we chose Leunig’s Bistro & Café, the audience looked like us. just a block away. Although he didn’t seem overjoyed to see This week’s cover story confirms it, quantifying the us at that hour, the maître d’ gave us a lovely table by the statewide demographic shift that officials have been window. We savored the food, as Binoche and Magimel warning about for years: By 2030, one in three Vermonters had in The Taste of Things, but had clearly thrown a bit of a will be north of 60 years old. “Getting On” launches a wrench into the restaurant’s closing plan. yearlong series we’re calling “This Old State,” in which By the time we got to dessert, they had started Seven Days investigates how that milestone could impact vacuuming the place. We weren’t ready to wind it up just Vermont’s workforce, emergency services, housing stock yet. and health care delivery systems. Not all the news is bad. We’ve already reported on Paula Routly community nurses serving elders who choose to stay in their rural homes, dance classes for seniors and other If you like Seven Days and can afford creative “solutions” to the challenge. to help pay for it, become a Super Reader! It feels weird to be part of the “problem.” When I Look for the “Give Now” button at the top of moved to Vermont, in 1978, it was still a hippie haven. sevendaysvt.com. Or send a check with your Lots of enterprising, resilient, countercultural young address and contact info to: people had moved up here in the 1960s and ’70s as part SEVEN DAYS, C/O SUPER READERS of the back-to-the-land movement, enough to increase P.O. BOX 1164 the state’s population by a larger percentage than it has BURLINGTON, VT 05402-1164 achieved since. For more information on making a financial These folks, who are 10 to 20 years my senior, are contribution to Seven Days, please contact technically baby boomers, but not the selfish, resourceGillian English: consuming kind that have earned a bad rep; those have flocked to Florida. The elders I admired made Vermont VOICEMAIL: 802-865-1020, EXT. 115 EMAIL: SUPERREADERS@SEVENDAYSVT.COM the funky place it is — read: not New Hampshire. I worry

THIS

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FREEPS GOES USPS

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DEREK BROUWER

news

MORE INSIDE

Cpl. Jeffry Turner in a Decker Towers stairwell

Still Facing DUI Charge, Vekos Returns to Work as Addison County Prosecutor S TO RY & PH O TO B Y DE RE K B RO UW E R derek@sevendaysvt.com Eva Vekos

The Decker Dilemma

Officials scramble to find security solutions for Burlington’s embattled high-rise B Y D E REK BR OUW ER • derek@sevendaysvt.com

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Meanwhile, a combat near-constant TAXING SITUATION new, Weinbergertrespassing by scores of picked majority has people who can’t find assumed control shelter, are addicted to of the housing drugs or both. authority’s board of commissioners, which has begun to cobble together a plan of action that “I feel like Burlington it will soon ask the finally woke up,” tenant city to help fund. As a activist David Foss said first step, the housing after the February 26 NERD ALERT TOO MANY COOKS? HAIL TO THE QUEENS authority hired the council hearing. Chittenden County Yet the most pressing Sheriff ’s Department questions remain unanswered: Who to conduct nightly sweeps of Decker’s is going to pay for the around-the-clock common areas and stairwells. security guards that tenants and housThe surge of interest follows the Seven ing authority leaders agree are needed Days story that depicted the combustible to control entry to Decker? And, if the situation inside Decker, where some people who have sought the warmth of its vulnerable residents are barricading stairwells are forced out, where are they themselves inside their apartments and others have turned to vigilantism to THE DECKER DILEMMA » P.16 Lawmakers grapple with rising ed costs

VOL.29 NO.19 SEVENDAYSVT.COM

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VERMONT’S INDEPENDENT VOICE FEBRUARY 14-21, 2024

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ecent weeks have brought a flurry of attention to the safety debacle at Decker Towers, the Burlington Housing Authority high-rise for elderly and disabled residents. But so far, the 11-story building continues to serve as a de facto homeless shelter and a hub for drug use, leaving some residents afraid to venture from their apartments. Since a February 14 Seven Days cover story depicted the plight of the building’s low-income tenants, city leaders have been scrambling to show their concern and said they’ll work with the housing authority on a plan to improve security. Outgoing Mayor Miro Weinberger visited Decker Towers on February 25 — his birthday — for the first time since residents began raising concerns more than a year ago. Ten of 12 city councilors, too, have toured the building in recent weeks. They also invited Decker residents and housing authority officials to testify during a 90-minute city council hearing last week.

BURLINGTON

The Fight for Decker Towers

Drug users and homeless people have overrun a low-income high-rise. Residents are gearing up to evict them. BY DEREK BROUWER, PAGE 26

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LeMays to host their last drag ball

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Commercial kitchens scarce in ChittCo

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New science wing at Fairbanks

Despite a pending DUI charge, Eva Vekos returned to work on Monday as the elected prosecutor for Addison County — and promptly cut a plea deal in a different DUI case. Vekos announced her return on Sunday afternoon, writing in an email that her paid medical leave, which lasted about two and a half weeks, had allowed her to reflect upon her January arrest. “Being a defendant in a criminal case brings me an unwelcome but important understanding of what the accused experience in our criminal legal system,” Vekos wrote. Vekos is accused of driving impaired to the scene of an active homicide investigation and refusing to submit to sobriety tests requested by Vermont State Police. Vekos stayed on the job for some time, until she unsuccessfully sought to have the case against her dismissed during an initial court appearance in February. During that time, she also sent a sarcastic, condescending email to local law enforcement, VTDigger.org reported. She wrote that she would not attend a training with police chiefs in person because she didn’t “feel safe around law enforcement.” “Its [sic] too bad, I would have loved to teach grammar skills to bring police up to the elementary school level, at least. I found a really great illustrated book to use. It has pictures of dragons and stuff.” In her Sunday message, Vekos apologized for the email, which she described as “insulting, hurtful and unkind.” The state’s attorney expressed “profound respect” for local law enforcement and said she plans to apologize to them in person during a future meeting. “I intend to fully restore my professional and productive working relationship with law enforcement,” Vekos wrote. On her first day back in court, Vekos presented a plea deal with a woman who was charged in late 2022 with a second DUI after driving her car into a ditch. In exchange for pleading guilty, the defendant received a suspended sentence, plus three years of probation. ➆


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ater this month, the Burlington City Council will debate the most substantial rezoning proposal the city has seen in 30 years. If approved, the BTV Neighborhood Code would allow people to build multifamily homes where they’re currently banned — including in their own backyards. Buildings would be allowed to take up a greater portion of a lot and, in some cases, could be taller. Over the next decade, such infill development might create hundreds of homes in Burlington, where the demand for housing outruns the supply and the rental vacancy rate is less than 1 percent. But the proposal is getting pushback from residents who fear that denser development would eat up green space and overcrowd neighborhoods, particularly those already packed with college students. City councilors seem to be listening. Last week, they delayed voting on the proposal after hearing residents’ concerns. Two councilors have introduced amendments to make the changes more palatable. They’ll debate the whole package on March 25, a week before a new mayor and handful of city councilors take office. Outgoing Mayor Miro Weinberger, who championed the Neighborhood Code as part of a 10-point housing plan, hopes the proposal passes. The new zoning, he said, would reverse decades of constrictive housing policy. “Name a Vermont problem, and housing is the solution,” he told Seven Days. “Every neighborhood needs to be part of the solution.” Burlington’s first zoning ordinance, adopted in 1947, allowed any type of housing to be built anywhere. That changed in the 1970s, when most residential streets were effectively limited to single-family homes and duplexes. In the 1990s, regulations became even more restrictive: Many neighborhoods were zoned for low density, and duplexes were banned in

DEVELOPMENT

those areas. Minimum lot sizes got bigger, discouraging dense development. Some of those rules have been repealed, but they’ve had lasting effects. In some neighborhoods, a single home occupies a large lot that has room for additional buildings. City officials say space on existing lots could be filled with housing types that Burlington lacks, including what are known as “missing middle” homes, such as triplexes and townhomes. The Neighborhood Code “upzones” every area of the city — that is, it allows for denser development — including the 70 percent of residential lots that are now zoned for low density: the New North End, a good portion of the South End, and a chunk of what’s known as the Old East End around East Avenue and Chase and Grove streets.

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EVERY NEIGHBORHOOD

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The proposed code would permit buildings to take up 45 percent of a lot in areas zoned for low density, compared to the 35 percent allowed now. In mediumdensity-zoned areas such as parts of the Old North End, allowable lot coverage would increase from 40 to 60 percent. In newly created “residential corridors” — swaths along traffic-heavy Shelburne Street, North Avenue and Pearl Street — a single building could occupy up to 80 percent of its lot, with no limit on the number of units. Many Burlington lots have long, narrow backyards, thanks to strict “rear setback” standards. The new rules would shrink those setbacks, making it possible in some cases to add another ROOM TO GROW?

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news expected to go in a city whose shelters are full? As housing authority and city officials seek to put their recent clashes behind them and instead work cooperatively, the chaos inside Decker continues. B Y K E VI N M C C AL L U M On February 17, Burlington police chased kevin@sevendaysvt.com R a wanted man through the hallways and U E OD Lawmakers selected BR wrestled him into custody after they Agatha Kessler as say he dropped an open-blade knife the Statehouse’s during their pursuit. A few days later, new sergeant at cops arrested a woman on an unrearms by a narrow lated warrant after they discovered margin last Friday. The deputy diAgatha Kessler her sleeping in a laundry room. rector of the Office Last week, a resident named of Professional Brandon Luther, 32, confronted a Regulation narrowly couple of transient people in the buildbeat out Mike Ferrant, ing. An argument ensued, and eventually the current director of legislative operations, for the the two people disappeared into an interior $120,000-a-year post. Kessler received stairwell. Luther followed them, cracked 84 votes to Ferrant’s 82 during a secret open the door to the fifth-floor stairwell ballot election of the Senate and House and released a cloud of the pepper spray of Representatives. that he carries as part of a personal selfKessler will replace Janet Miller, who served in the role for a decade and has defense arsenal. retired. “I heard a scream,” Luther said in an The sergeant at arms is an influeninterview. “I thought maybe I got a junkie.” tial position in the Vermont Statehouse. In fact, an 18-year-old janitor was In addition to ceremonial duties, the standing behind the door. She called the person is responsible for booking meetpolice, and Luther was charged with ing rooms, managing the page program and overseeing the small Capitol Police assault. Luther, who pleaded not guilty, force. said he feels “absolutely fucking horrible” Sen. Russ Ingalls (R-Essex) praised about the incident. Ferrant for his dedication, patience and When Luther unwittingly hurt the calm demeanor in helping lawmakers woman, he was employing a technique deal with everything from computer questions to reimbursement forms. that some Decker residents have quietly Kessler worked in a legislative operaadopted in recent weeks. Residents have tions role until 2017 and has maintained found that by spraying stairwell landings close relationships with veteran with the harmful irritants, they can deter lawmakers and former Statehouse squatters and drug users from using them colleagues. Rep. Diane Lanpher (D-Vergennes) for several hours, Luther explained to praised her “vast experience” in the Seven Days. “It’s a normal thing for us,” Statehouse and state government and he said. Seven Days previously reported her warmth as a person. “Her humility, a homeless woman’s account of being hit kindness and diplomatic nature set her with pepper spray while she was sleeping apart as an outstanding candidate for on a stairwell landing. this important role,” Lanpher said. Kessler, a 41-year-old Barre resident, A more organized version of the will be in charge of running a building “neighborhood watch” that tenants voted steeped in tradition but also one in to create on February 8 has not begun its transition. patrols, resident Cathy Foley said. The A third of the lawmakers are new, group is still developing its “rules of following a historic exodus last session. A new police chief, John Poleway, starts engagement” and arranging a training his job on March 18. And the historic session for would-be patrollers. A volunbuilding, which is effectively a living teer recruitment poster was taped to the museum, requires significant ventilafront doors this week. “Regardless of your tion, accessibility and security upgrades age or physical ability, we can find a spot in coming years. In an interview before the vote, for you!” the poster reads. Kessler said she enjoys working with “We want to do it right,” Foley said. the public and helping solve problems Foley sees the neighborhood watch as a big and small. She previously worked stand-in for a professional security detail closely with Miller, understands the role that housing authority executive director well and is confident she can juggle the Steven Murray has said his agency cannot responsibilities. “If I don’t know the answer to afford on its own. something, I will track down the experts Nevertheless, a little more than a or the people who have the answers,” month ago, the agency hired a private firm, Kessler said. ➆ Censor Security, to conduct sweeps of the

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stairwells and hallways three times each night. Around the same time, Burlington police also pledged to conduct more walkthroughs of the building, during which they kick out people known to be trespassing and arrest those who have active warrants. In late February, the housing authority agreed to pay for seven additional nightly walk-throughs: another three by Censor Security, which have not yet begun, and four by the Chittenden County Sheriff’s Department, which began its patrols on February 28.

I FEEL LIKE BURLINGTON

FINALLY WOKE UP. D AVID F O S S

Sheriff Dan Gamelin said he offered the service, at more than $100 per hour, after learning that the housing authority had begun hiring some private security. One of Gamelin’s deputies already patrols a nearby rail yard where homeless people sometimes sleep in boxcars, and the same deputy has added Decker to his circuit. The walking patrols are helpful, housing authority officials say, but their effects, so far, have been limited and fleeting. People trespassing have learned how to evade officers and guards during their periodic rounds — or they simply leave and reenter the building a few minutes later.

On Tuesday morning, however, when Chittenden County Sheriff ’s Office Cpl. Jeffry Turner conducted his midnight patrol, the stairwells and common areas were unusually quiet. Turner stepped around some drug paraphernalia, clothes and a bottle of urine, but no one was sheltering in the stairwells at the time. Unlike private security guards, Turner can make arrests and issue trespass notices on behalf of the housing authority. When someone loitering in a common area claims to be visiting a tenant, Turner said, he escorts the person to the tenant’s unit to verify whether they are really an invited guest. Turner was cautiously optimistic that, after one week on patrol, fewer people seemed to be using the stairwells overnight. Bolstering the professional patrols was the quickest tangible step that the agency could take, housing authority board chair Jane Knodell said. Knodell, a former city council president, and Weinberger’s two newly appointed board members, Brian Lowe and Kirby Dunn, flexed some muscle during a February 27 meeting of the board. The trio sat together in a basement conference room at the agency’s Main Street headquarters and made clear that the board would work cooperatively with the mayor’s office. They did not move to oust executive director Murray, who has criticized the


HOUSING

Motel Program Users Keep Their Rooms, Despite Lower Rate BY ANNE WALL ACE ALLEN anne@sevendaysvt.com DARIA BISHOP

mayor for not doing more to help the housing authority. Murray previously told Seven Days that Weinberger’s appointments of Lowe and Dunn — and the mayor’s decision not to reappoint longtime board chair Mike Knauer — were made in retaliation for his public criticisms of Burlington police. Knodell, in an interview, said she believes Murray and his management team are up to the task of resolving problems at Decker. But she also said the board needs to provide more “oversight and accountability” of agency leaders than it has in years past. “We needed to become a stronger board within the organization,” Knodell said. Murray and the mayor’s office have been at odds over how to resolve the security problems at Decker. The mayor’s team, led by Community & Economic Development Office director Brian Pine, wants the housing authority to better secure the building, such as by disabling a feature that allows infirm residents to buzz in a visitor without going downstairs. Murray wants more policing services and financial help. The mayor had described Murray’s most recent proposal to his office, which called for two 24-7 security guards at a cost of $600,000 to $800,000 per year without adopting the administration’s ideas, as “kind of absurd.” He is willing to consider some financial support for the housing authority, though his administration has not said how much. The housing authority board is now revising Murray’s initial proposal, giving renewed consideration to the mayor’s suggestions. Knodell, however, agreed that stationary security guards — if not 24-7, at least some of the time — must anchor any funding deal between the housing authority and the city. That could mean the city pays for physical improvements or capital projects, perhaps out of its housing trust fund, relieving pressure on the housing authority budget in the process. One idea that emerged from the February 27 board meeting: renovating the front entry to create a bulletproof booth where a security guard could act as a doorperson. Knodell said the commissioners hope to submit a formal proposal to the mayor following a March 12 board meeting. At the same time, they’re taking a crash course on the housing authority’s complex budget. Fixing Decker, Knodell said, will not be cheap. “We understand there needs to be a very significant increase in investment in the short term,” she said. ➆

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Jenise Perez and her four sons prepared last week to move out of their two rooms at the Days Inn in Colchester after a nine-month stay. They rented a compact SUV to hold their belongings. Like others without housing who have been living in rooms paid for by the State of Vermont, the family worried that their hotel might not allow them to stay as of last Friday, when Vermont lowered the rate it pays motels from $132 per night to $80. Hotel owners initially threatened to pull out of the program. But last Thursday, Perez learned that she’d gotten a reprieve. At the urging of state officials and housing advocates, those owners changed their minds and said the state guests could stay. The Perez family can rely on sheltering at the Days Inn — at least for now. Uncertainty is nothing new to users of the motel program. Created to protect people from exposure to COVID-19 in congregate shelters, it has been the subject of fierce debate. The $132-per-night rate was good money for many of the 70 or so participating motels around the state. Critics of the program say it’s a poor use of taxpayer dollars. State officials have been looking for ways to pare down the number of residents. About 800 people were evicted on June 1, 2023. The remaining residents faced uncertainty after the Agency of Human Services announced in January that it would cut the nightly rate. Many hotel owners said they would rent their rooms to higher-paying conventional travelers. Some put up signs in hotel lobbies warning residents they’d have to move out because of the rate cut — a message seen as one for state officials, too. Last Friday, state officials announced that while some owners had dropped out, enough had stayed in to provide rooms for everybody in the program. The reprieve didn’t take much of the pressure off; for some, it just pushed the move-out date down the road a bit. While some guests might be able to stay until June 30, Perez expected she might still have to leave on March 15 as the program winds down. ➆

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building on the property. In a section of downtown that would be rezoned, buildings could grow from three stories to four. But the change that’s caused the most consternation is one that would allow two separate structures to occupy the same lot — a development pattern now largely banned everywhere in the city. On low- and medium-density lots, current zoning allows for single-family homes and, in some cases, duplexes. Under the proposed Neighborhood Code, two buildings with a max of four units apiece could be built on a low-density lot. Same for a medium-zoned lot, but with 10 total units instead of eight. In other words, even what’s considered low density now would become a whole lot denser. Five neighborhoods would go from the old low density to the new medium density — a “double upzoning” that some residents say goes too far. That includes the Ward 1 neighborhood bounded by Mansfield Avenue and Pearl, North Willard, and Archibald streets, an area heavily populated by University of Vermont students but also a significant number of single-family homes. Homeowners fear that developers would scoop up those properties, raze the homes and build large student apartment buildings, further disrupting the balance of transient undergrads to long-term residents. They argue that their neighborhood is more vulnerable to overcrowding than the other areas that would move from low to medium density, all of them in the South End: Five Sisters, Lakeside, and the areas around Hoover and Clymer streets and South Union to South Willard. Ward 1 residents have voiced their displeasure on Front Porch Forum, in letters to the editor and at city council meetings. They’ve labeled the proposal “frightening,” “draconian” and “dystopian” — characterizations that proponents say amount to NIMBYism. Sharon Bushor, a former longtime city councilor in Ward 1, says squeezing eight-unit buildings into backyards is too much anywhere, not just in her neighborhood. She worries that losing backyards to buildings will worsen stormwater runoff and aggravate climate change. The proposed Neighborhood Code isn’t about the “missing middle,” Bushor said. “This is density at all costs.” City planners disagree. Graphics generated by the department show that most of the lots in the Ward 1 neighborhood

E AV ER ST HE LC CO


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SEVEN DAYS MARCH 6-13, 2024

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news MEDIA

Media Note: Your Freeps Is in the Mail B Y A N N E WAL L AC E ALL E N • anne@sevendaysvt.com

Room to Grow? « P.18 — and in every other area slated for a similar change — already exceed today’s low-density standards. About a third of the lots in the Ward 1 area would still be more densely developed than the new standards would allow. That’s not really “double upzoning,” as some critics assert, Burlington planning director Meagan Tuttle said. “It’s about better aligning zoning with what has existed,” she said. “We were trying to recognize how the Neighborhood Code could be implemented given those existing patterns.”

On April 1, the Burlington Free Press will start mailing its papers to subscribers instead of using contractors to deliver them. The paper’s parent company, Gannett, announced the move last week, citing “ongoing challenges with our newspaper delivery caused by a variety of economic factors.” “The round-the-clock online news cycle has made digital products the first choice for breaking news, and print subscribers are increasingly engaging digitally,” the Free Press said in its own statement. “As such, the Free Press will be putting renewed emphasis on the printed newspaper as a place readers can dive into local news with more impact and context, feel-good community features, sports analysis and commentary — the stories you can’t get anywhere else.” The Free Press statement did not promise subscribers that they would receive Monday’s paper in their mailbox on Monday. Instead, Michael A. Anastasi, vice president of local news for Gannett, was quoted as saying websites and mobile apps “deliver the news of the day.” “We know that by the time our informed readers pick up the paper, they know what happened yesterday — the print newspaper should provide additional context, to help readers better understand their community and the world around them,” he said. Mail delivery in many parts of Vermont has been spotty for years. And on Sundays and federal holidays, there will be no paper at all. “Your newspaper will be delivered the next day there is postal delivery available,” Gannett said in its statement. Seven Days wanted to know how much the change would save the paper and how many jobs would be lost, but Free Press editor Aki Soga deferred all questions to Gannett, which did not answer them. “The transition from carrier to U.S. Postal Service delivery will ensure we can provide a more consistent experience for our valued Free Press subscribers,” a company spokesperson said in a email. “We also encourage readers to visit us regularly on our digital platforms, as well as access our eNewspaper, a digital replica of the newspaper.”

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In recent years, Free Press subscriptions have plummeted as the company has embraced a digital-first model, pushing readers to its website — much of which is behind a paywall. As of September, the paper’s average weekday print circulation was just 3,705 — down 27 percent from the 5,084 it reported in March 2023, according to the Alliance for Audited Media. Over the same time period, Sunday circulation fell from 6,681 to 4,601 — a drop of nearly one-third. Two years ago, the newsroom — which moved to Williston in 2021 — was down to 10 reporters and three editors. The delivery change will probably not mean much for people who follow Vermont news closely, said Kevin Ellis, a former Free Press reporter and longtime lobbyist. Ellis, who now works as a public relations consultant and has a weekly radio show on WDEV, said he’s sad to see the state of an institution that was once a critical component of Vermont’s political world. “When you’re owned by a giant corporation and all you care about is shareholder profit, you can’t care about the public good,” Ellis said. That, he said, shows in the lack of news coverage and is the reason for the drop in readership. “Gannett made its own bed,” he said. The Freeps isn’t the first local newspaper to switch to mail-only delivery. Vermont News & Media, the company that owns the Brattleboro Reformer, Bennington Banner and Manchester Journal, made the move a few years ago. In an interview on Monday, the company’s president and publisher, Jordan Brechenser, said he immediately heard from readers, many of them older, who were unhappy that they no longer had the paper in hand first thing in the morning. After some of the Bennington Banner’s 3,500 subscribers canceled, Brechenser created something he calls “white glove service,” which charges customers $280 per year to have a courier deliver the paper every morning. About 200 Banner customers use that, he said. ➆

IT’S RIDICULOUS THAT WE HAVE THIS SITUATION

WHERE YOU LITERALLY CAN’T BUILD ANYTHING, ANYWHERE. AS H TO N MAC K E NZIE

Nonetheless, councilors have introduced amendments to address the Ward 1 concerns. Outgoing Councilor Zoraya Hightower (P-Ward 1) has proposed slightly reducing the amount of land that buildings could occupy, leaving more room for green space, and cutting the allowable total units from 10 to eight. Councilor Tim Doherty (D-East District) wants the area zoned for low density instead of medium. Councilor Melo Grant (P-Central District), meantime, thinks every neighborhood should be upzoned to medium. Under the current proposal, the wealthier, whiter areas of the city — the Hill Section and New North and South Ends — would be zoned for low density whereas the poorer, more racially diverse Old North End would be zoned for medium. Using medium density as a baseline would not only address equity issues, it would create more housing, Grant said. “Do we want to be a city or not?” she asked. “There are people that are prepared for that, and there are people that are not.” None of the councilors’ amendments would appease Paul Bierman, a Ward 1 resident and UVM environmental science professor. First, he thinks

Burlington should be building up, not out. And he thinks the city needs to rein in the student housing problem before adopting zoning that could worsen it. The city is negotiating a deal with UVM under which the university would build up to 1,500 new student beds on three campus lots. The city, in turn, would modify zoning to make the buildout possible. Councilors have raised concerns about the proposal and haven’t scheduled a vote on it. Bierman says Burlington should take the time to get the rezoning right. “We can have an urban core that is both high density, offers affordable housing to those who need it and still protects our environment,” he said. “There’s no reason to hurry.” Ashton MacKenzie, however, feels a sense of urgency. The New North End resident shares a small townhome with two other people and would consider buying a triplex if one were available — and legal to build. The Neighborhood Code would create more of those housing options, MacKenzie said, freeing up his townhouse for one of the many people who want to live in Burlington but can’t find a place. “There’s so much need for housing in Burlington,” he said. “It’s ridiculous that we have this situation where you literally can’t build anything, anywhere.” Of course, the code’s success would depend on whether people could afford to use it. Developing a new apartment building, especially on a smaller scale, is costly, from the permits to the lumber and labor, both of which are more expensive these days. That’s why Weinberger thinks the change would be more gradual and perhaps not as dramatic as some residents think. He compared the Neighborhood Code to the city’s recent rezoning to encourage the building of accessory dwelling units — tiny homes that people add to their property to rent out or use as “mother-in-law” apartments. Burlington permitted an annual average of three ADUs in the 16 years before the reform passed in 2019. Since then, an average of 13 have popped up each year. Similar reforms in California have been so effective that ADUs now comprise one of every six new housing units permitted in the state. Weinberger thinks the Neighborhood Code could play out in a similar fashion. He predicted, “People are going to figure it out over time.” ➆


lifelines

OBITUARIES, VOWS, CELEBRATIONS

OBITUARIES Alan Giguere

MAY 4, 1953-FEBRUARY 18, 2024 BURLINGTON, VT. Alan Giguere, 70, longtime resident of Burlington, passed away peacefully with his loving family by his side, on Sunday, February 18, 2024, at the McClure Miller Respite House. Alan was born on May 4, 1953, in Burlington, the youngest child of Harry R. Gigure and Jane (Larmie) Gigure. He grew up on Kirby Road in South Burlington and enjoyed his school years, graduating from South Burlington High School in the class of 1971. Alan played football throughout high school and was a member of the 1970 State Championship team. After high school, Alan worked various jobs — which he often recalled with humor — such as selling vacuums door-to-door and appliances at Sears. In August 1974, Alan enlisted in the army and was stationed in Germany for two years. He truly made the most of his service abroad, traveling around the area and sharing many happy memories over the years. He was honorably discharged in 1976 and returned home, where he enrolled at Champlain College and graduated in 1978. He continued his education at Bentley College (now University) in Waltham, Mass., graduating with a BS in accounting in 1980. In 1979 Alan married Julie (Bessette), and they began their 45-year adventure. Best friends and partners, Alan and Julie built a happy life together with their two children, Shelby and Darren. Through all the trials and tribulations life can throw at you, Alan and Julie’s bond stayed strong and true until the very end. Their many adventures included traveling the world, usually aboard a cruise ship, and, recently, spending summers boating on Lake Champlain. Alan was committed

to his family and had a zest for life. Skiing, golfing, playing tennis and winter vacation road trips to Florida were all made possible by Alan’s can-do attitude, and we will be forever grateful to him for our wonderful lives. Alan had a single-minded drive to succeed and a true passion for his construction business. He was a master builder, and there was nothing he could not do. He loved everything about his work and was always the boss on the job, commanding much respect. Alan worked hard and took tremendous pride in his extensive knowledge and experience and passed his techniques on to those who worked for him, including his son, Darren, whom he was extremely pleased to have working with him. Alan enjoyed much success and pride from his work throughout his long career and never once considered stopping, even throughout the four years of his illness. Alan will be dearly missed, and our lives will never be the same without him. Left to cherish his memory are Alan’s loving wife, Julie; his daughter, Shelby Jors, and son-in-law, Charlie; his son, Darren, and daughter-in-law, Kristy; his three grandchildren, Brolin, Josie and Bran Jors; and his in-laws, Suellen Bessette, Brad and Shelley Bessette, Tim Bessette, Jay Bessette, and Jon Bessette. He is also survived by many nieces and nephews, including Honey Saucier and Stacey Thibodeau. Alan was preceded in death by his parents; his sisters, Linda Pelletier and Kathy Scribner; his brother, Danny Giguere; his mother- and father-in-law, Bob and Helen Bessette; and his brother-in-law Bobby Bessette. A celebration of Alan’s life will be held on March 8, 2024, from 5 to 7 p.m., in the atrium at the Doubletree Hotel (former Sheraton), 870 Williston Rd., South Burlington.

IN MEMORIAM Martha Anne Bombardier

1942-2023 While you may not be here to celebrate your birthday, March 8, you are still in our thoughts. We love you and miss you. Roger, Roxy, Lulu & Zoe

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Jeannie Peterson

FEBRUARY 18, 1940-FEBRUARY 19, 2024 CARDIFF-BY-THE SEA, CALIF. Jeannie Peterson was born in 1940 in Suttons Bay, Mich., and died on February 19, 2024, in Cardiff by the Sea, Calif. Jeannie earned her undergraduate degree and a master of science in journalism from Northwestern University. After working as a travel writer, she moved to Sweden and served as editor of Ambio: A Journal of the Human Environment from 1972 to 1983. She initiated the publication of a special double issue of Ambio, published in 1982, and a book in 1984 called The Aftermath: The Human and Ecological Consequences of Nuclear War, published in England by Pergamon Press and in the U.S. by Pantheon Books. She invited scientist Paul Crutzen to contribute an article to that issue, which explored the atmospheric consequences of nuclear war. His coauthored Ambio article provided the impetus for the “nuclear winter” theory, later developed by other scientists such as Carl Sagan. The Ambio issue/ book originated and explored the idea that there might be no winner in a nuclear war because of the probably disastrous aftereffects of climatic cooling caused by soot that would circulate the atmosphere and potentially block the warmth from the sun, with devastating effects around the northern hemisphere. The general secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, Mikhail Gorbachev, who met with then-U.S. president Ronald Reagan, afterward stated that the nuclear winter effect had a decisive impact on his decision to embark on a peaceful, nonnuclear relationship between the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. Jeannie went on to serve as director of the Public Information Center for the Consequences of Nuclear War in Washington, D.C., in 1984. In 2022, Jeannie was among eight Future of Life Award winners for reducing the risk of nuclear war by catalyzing and popularizing the science of nuclear winter. From 1986 to 2001, Jeannie worked for various organizations with the United Nations, including as country director with the United Nations Population Fund in Manila; head of the United Nations Protection Force’s political offices in Belgrade and Croatia; with the United Nations Transitional Administration for Eastern Slavonia, Baranja and Western Sirmium; and

with the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe Mission to Croatia. In Vermont, Jeannie was a supporter and active participant in many Champlain Islands organizations and events and a great addition to the islands community. She was an active and engaged member of the Vermont Council on World Affairs and brought an awareness and understanding of the world to us all. Thanks to Jeannie and her work at the United Nations, our islands community was introduced to many creative people from around the world. She had a small business in art photography, photographing the everchanging elements of sky, wind and water. Her work was exhibited at the Island Arts Gallery in South Hero, the North Hero Community Hall, the Brian Memorial Gallery in Stowe, the Forchgott Sourdiffe Gallery in Shelburne and the Champlain Valley Exposition in Essex Junction. In early 2000, Jeannie joined the Island Arts board of directors, a county organization supporting the arts through performance, education and sponsorships. She invited members of “Artist Way” to visit her house in Cyprus and hosted an unforgettable immersion in history, art and culture. At her recommendation, Island Arts visited the North House Folk School and the Art Colony in Grand Marais, Minn. The visit inspired the birth of the Island Arts Academy. In 2012, before leaving Vermont for California, Jeannie gifted Island Arts her beautiful photographs of Lake Champlain. A selection — her legacy to the people of the Champlain Islands — will be exhibited this summer as a celebration of her life here in Vermont. She is survived by her brothers Mark Peterson and Paul Peterson; Mark’s wife, Mary; and Mark’s children, Sara Geierstanger and Nate Peterson. She was preceded in death by her mother, Ellen (Glommen) Johnson; father, Paulus Peterson; brother Einer Peterson; and sister, Nathalie Ensrud. With her gentle grace, Jeannie was admired and respected by all. She was an unpretentious, accomplished and brilliant woman and a generous, caring and funloving friend. Gifts in Jeannie Peterson’s memory can be made to Island Arts and mailed to PO Box 108, North Hero, VT 05474, or made online at islandarts.org to support the arts and benefit the Champlain Islands communities. SEVEN DAYS MARCH 6-13, 2024

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lifelines

OBITUARIES, VOWS, CELEBRATIONS

OBITUARIES Robert Rodgers MAY 24, 1944FEBRUARY 20, 2024 NEW HAVEN, VT.

Robert Howard Rodgers, 79, of New Haven, Vt., passed away suddenly at home on February 20, 2024. Due to his mother’s military service, he was born in Alexandria, La., on May 24, 1944, a fact most embarrassing to this ninth-generation Vermonter. Robert grew up on the family farm in New Haven, where he learned carpentry, plumbing, and how to design and repair almost anything. He also learned where the bloodroot, Dutchman’s-breeches and morels grew; where the brook turned into a small waterfall; and where the best hills were for sledding. Robert attended Beeman Academy before continuing to Phillips Exeter Academy. He later graduated magna cum laude from Harvard College in 1966, where he was also elected to the national honor society Phi Beta Kappa. He completed his academic training

in 1970 with a PhD from Harvard University. Thus credentialed, Robert went on to a distinguished academic career as a professor of classics. He began teaching at the University of California, Berkeley, where he met the love of his life, Barbara Saylor, whom he married in New Haven in 1973. While northern California had its charms, such as sunny weather and wine country a short drive away, Vermont was home. When Barbara received a job offer to teach at the University of Vermont, Robert was ecstatic to return to his childhood home and raise two children, Eleanor and Cyrus. Robert joined Barbara in the classics department of the University of Vermont, retiring in 2017 from his role as the Lyman-Roberts Professor of Classical Languages and Literature. His interests ran far beyond the classics; Robert was also drawn to local history and genealogy. Over the years, he acquired numerous awards and fellowships and published a great number of books

Will Lewis

JULY 27, 1970-FEBRUARY 26, 2024 SOUTH BURLINGTON, VT. Will Lewis passed away unexpectedly at the age of 54 on Monday, February 26, 2024, at the University of Vermont Medical Center. Will was born in Vermont on July 27, 1970, but moved as a young child with his mother to the beautiful island of Bequia, located in the Caribbean. Many years later, he returned to his birth state to attend UVM. Will left UVM upon learning that his mother had died. Now on his own and needing to make his own way, Will worked first as a landscaper for several years. He then found employment at Lightning Couriers, where he worked for the past 30 years, until recently starting his own delivery business. Though Will rarely spoke about himself, his regular customers may be surprised to learn that Will loved spending time in nature and had hiked the Appalachian Trail. He had an amazing

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and articles in the classics, genealogy and history. His publications include a history of New Haven (New Haven in Vermont, 1761-1983), a family history and three books on probate records in Middlesex County, Mass. His professional scholarly pursuits were wide-ranging but included Roman aqueducts and agriculture; understanding the rural agrarian life from centuries past was no doubt of interest to a man who grew up on a farm and saw the nature of farming in Vermont evolve over the course of his lifetime. Robert was deeply devoted to service, public and professional alike. He served as New Haven town auditor for over a decade, town historian for nearly two decades and longtime officer of the New Haven Evergreen Cemetery Association. He served on school boards from 1986 to 1994, was an officer in the church beginning in 1981, and actively participated in countless historical societies and nonprofits. He peerreviewed papers for prestigious classical journals; held many committee positions at the University of Vermont; and served as external tenure evaluator for a number of well-known universities, treasurer for the Classical Association of New England and trustee of the New England Historic Genealogical Society.

green thumb and loved tending a garden when space permitted — or making containers to grow his vegetables and flowers when no space was available. He was a gentle soul who loved animals, especially dogs. Will had a special relationship with his little terrier companion, Buddy, who accompanied him almost everywhere in the car while Will was on his rounds making deliveries. Will found peace and happiness for many years with his partner, Theresa Ladue, who predeceased him in 2018. He is survived by Theresa’s three sons: Mike Sumner, with whom he shared a special friendship; A.J. Sumner; and Kenny Sumner; along with many friends he made through his work over the years. In addition to Theresa, he is also predeceased by his mother and his beloved dog, Buddy. Funeral services will not be held; however, if you so choose, please consider a donation in Will Lewis’ name to the Humane Society of Chittenden County (hsccvt.org).

Following his retirement in 2017, Robert was able to devote himself more fully to his pastimes — primarily carpentry. He had a true gift for design aesthetics, which shines through in details large and small, in the finish work he completed in the family house, and in the barn erected in 2020. The barn contained both of Robert’s favorite architectural elements — a cupola and horse windows. It also boasts a springbok weathervane, an homage to his granddaughter Maya. Maya was born in 2020 in Stellenbosch, South Africa. Being born far away and moving to New Haven as a newborn is something this 11th-generation Vermonter shares with Robert. She is as enamored of her grandfather as he was of her. She was the absolute light of his life and brought him endless joy in his final years (when she wasn’t jumping on him or pulling his hair). Knowing that his granddaughter would grow up in the same house and chasing butterflies, hunting wildflowers and sledding on the land that meant so much to him was a comfort and a joy. He was a lifelong student of history and genealogy. Family, sense of place, quality of work and serving institutions he cared about were important to Robert. So, too, was good food and wine, along with pure

Michael Traynor

JULY 11, 1956-FEBRUARY 18, 2024 COLCHESTER, VT. Michael Gerard Traynor, 67, of Colchester, Vt., passed away on Sunday, February 18, 2024, at his residence. Born on July 11, 1956, in County West Meath, Ireland, he was the son of Robert Joseph Traynor and Ann Margaret (Walsh) Traynor, originally of Union, N.J., and later Whitingham, Vt. Michael was a 1974 graduate of Whitingham High School and then served his country as a member of the U.S. Army from 1974 through 1976. Following his discharge from the service, Michael began his career as a welder and in 1980 joined UA Local 698 (as a pipe fitter) in Burlington, Vt. He was a member of the union for 43 years, working assignments all over the United States and specializing in nuclear welding. He retired in 2018.

Vermont maple syrup. He never met a dog or a pig he didn’t love or a bird that he did. His unique personality came across in many ways; he had a quirky humor that peeked out on occasion. Whenever he happened upon an interesting name or phrase, he would save it for later use. Luckily for his children, such names were bestowed on pets, such as Tesselgrave (a mistaken recollection of the name Tesselschade) and Huptia Zosa (which means “upside down, alive” in Greek). Robert is survived by his wife, Barbara Saylor Rodgers, of New Haven; son, Cyrus Rodgers of Burlington, Vt.; daughter, Eleanor de Villiers, her husband, Richard de Villiers, and Robert’s granddaughter, Maya de Villiers, all of New Haven; as well as many other close friends, extended family members, and numerous devoted and affectionate former students. In keeping with Robert’s wishes, there will not be any public services. A celebration of life is planned for May 24, 2024, his 80th birthday. His family requests that anyone so inclined share written stories of Robert — funny, poignant or memorable — to make into a keepsake for his granddaughter. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to the New Haven Congregational Church.

Following his retirement, Michael worked as a Colchester School District driver for the Colchester School Corporation and often talked about how much he enjoyed transporting the children. Michael was preceded in death by his parents, Robert J. and Ann M. Traynor. He is survived by his son, Ryan Ploof; brother, Robert G. (Doremy) Traynor; sisters, Mary A. Traynor (Marvin) Gates and Rose M. Traynor; and many nieces and nephews, but most especially Kira Traynor, who held a special place in his heart. Cremation is planned with no service to be held at this time. A celebration of life and burial will be held at a later date. Stephen C. Gregory and Son Cremation in South Burlington has been entrusted with the care of these arrangements and can be contacted for further information at gregorycremation.com.


Valere Dion MARCH 7, 1935MARCH 1, 2024 ENGLEWOOD, FLA.

Valere Roger Dion, 88, of Englewood, Fla., passed away on March 1, 2024, at his home with his loving wife, Kay Aldrich Dion, at his side. A small service will be held at Roberson Funeral Home, 2151 Tamiami Trail, Port Charlotte, FL, on Thursday, March 7, 2024. That would have been his 89th birthday. Visiting hours will be from 2 to 4 p.m. There will be a service held in Vermont on a later date. Valere was born in Winooski, Vt., on his grandfather’s farm on March 7, 1935, to Roland (Fay) and Philip Dion. He graduated from Cathedral High School in 1954. He joined the U.S. Navy in 1955 and served active duty on the USS Antietam for two years. Valere was in the U.S. Naval Reserve for six years. He married Helene Limoge in 1960, and they raised their five children in Burlington. He joined the Burlington Fire Department, where he served for 30 years as a fire marshal and later retired as the chief of personnel. He met the love of his life, Kay Aldrich, and they were married on February 14, 1986. Val and Kay had 38 wonderful years together. Valere was predeceased by his parents; his sons Thomas Pierre and Stephen Paul; his sister-in-law Sally Dion;

and his brother-in-law, Ray Beauchemin. Valere is survived by his wife, Kay; son Matthew Dion; daughter Melissa Dion and her husband, Ken Carter; daughter Nicole Bauman and her husband, Todd Bauman; and his siblings, Jeannine Beauchemin, Roland and Julie Dion, and Raymond Dion. Valere had four stepdaughters, June Alvarez (Juan), Susie Miller, Stacey Miller and Ann Shimmel (Don). Val also had several grandchildren, stepgrandchildren, great-grandchildren and great-great-grandchildren. In addition, he had many nieces and nephews. Valere enjoyed camping. Val and Kay traveled the United States and Canada, enjoying the outdoors and French Canadian music. Although proficient with many instruments, the fiddle was his passion. He played with numerous musicians and was a judge at many fiddlers’ contests.

Want to memorialize a loved one? We’re here to help. Our obituary and in memoriam services are affordable, accessible and handled with personal care. Share your loved one’s story with the local community in Lifelines.

IN MEMORIAM Joy Combs 1951-2024

Celebration of Life and Remembrances: Saturday, March 16, 2024, 11 a.m. Joy Combs, loving wife of 48 years to Sandy Combs of Shelburne, Vt., passed unexpectedly on February 13, 2024. Joy’s Celebration of Life and Remembrances will be held on Saturday, March 16, 2024, 11 a.m., at Stephen C. Gregory and Son Cremation Service, 472 Meadowland Drive, South Burlington, VT. Joy’s full obituary can be found at tinyurl.com/joycombsobituary.

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SEVEN DAYS MARCH 6-13, 2024

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Getting On

An aging population is transforming Vermont’s schools, workplaces and communities

ROB DONNELLY

B Y CO L IN F L AND E R S • colin@sevendaysvt.com

ardwick residents want to force a neighboring town to close its cherished but tiny elementary school. In Orwell, the owner of Buxton’s Store is struggling to hire kitchen staff. Senior housing complexes in Burlington have yearslong waiting lists. And at Vermont’s largest hospital, dozens of older people languish in beds because there’s no place to move them. Vermont is aging rapidly. Its median age has jumped from 37 to 43 in just two decades, making it the third-oldest state, behind only Maine and then New Hampshire. The number of Vermonters 65 and older has nearly doubled over that same period. They now outnumber children and, by 2030, will comprise close to 25 percent of the population. These demographic shifts, while long fodder for political speeches, have never captured the public’s attention, their implications vague and seemingly distant amid more immediate crises. But the effects of aging on this small state have become impossible to ignore — and will only become more consequential in coming decades. 24

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THIS

OLD

STATE

The Graying of Vermont A YEARLONG SERIES BY

ABOUT THIS SERIES Seven Days will report throughout 2024 about the implications of Vermont’s aging population. This is the inaugural story. Got a tip or feedback? Write to us at thisoldstate@sevendaysvt.com.

More people are dying than are being born, a gulf that has widened in the eight years since Vermont first crossed that tipping point. The state’s population is projected to shrink in the coming decades as those of most other states grow, which will have profound impacts on every aspect of life. Vermont’s population can be visualized as an hourglass, with the biggest bulges reflecting college students, more than half of whom go on to leave the state after graduation, and the retirement-age baby boomer generation. Between them is a narrower waistband representing people of working age. Fewer young people in the workforce will make it harder to replace retiring workers and could imperil the overall growth and competitiveness of the state’s economy. That will put the squeeze on state finances at a time when more seniors need support. The full dimensions of this situation and the challenges that result could take years, if not decades, to reveal themselves. But the shifts are already being felt. For example, Vermonters are facing wrenching decisions over how much residents are willing to pay to maintain local public schools with shrinking student bodies. The shift will also have deeply personal ramifications. More elderly people will live alone, often in rural areas in houses ill-equipped for residents with flagging physical abilities, and more families will face difficult decisions about how to care for relatives. It wasn’t long ago that Vermont’s demographic outlook appeared quite different. A key destination of the back-to-the-land movement, the state was once growing faster than the rest of the country, with some 70,000 people settling here in the 1960s and ’70s. A subsequent baby boomlet contributed to a consistent period of growth. But the trend didn’t last. Vermont’s migration gains tapered off around the turn of the century as the allure of rural life waned and an economic downturn sent young people flocking to cities. Meanwhile, fertility rates, which began falling as women gained more access to education and contraception, dropped further as anxieties mounted over climate change and the financial burden of raising a child. Vermont’s rural areas have been harder hit by this one-two punch, laying the groundwork for a stark rural-urban divide when it comes to the effects of an aging population. While Vermont has gained some 40,000 people since 2000, the vast majority have settled in


Aging in Rural Places

As an avid snowmobiler in the 1970s, Robert Spaulding would ride past a small cabin in the backwoods of Corinth and think to himself: I’d like to own that place one day. Two decades later, he opened the Washington World, a weekly newspaper in Berlin, and saw the property was for sale. My dream came true, he thought. He bought the cabin, fixed it up and, after his divorce in 2011, moved in. Now 76, Spaulding is finding it harder to maintain his slice of paradise. Weed-whacking his sloping lawn is more of a chore after four hip surgeries. The 40-pound bags of wood pellets seem to be growing heavier. And the dirt road that leads to the camp has become so muddy recently that he’s decided to stay at his son’s home in Barre this week, lest the road become inaccessible. “Age has got me to the point that I can’t take care of everything I got,” he said.

JEB WALLACE-BRODEUR

the northwestern part of the state — mainly, the greater Burlington area. Only Chittenden and Franklin counties recorded more births than deaths in 2021. Meanwhile, Bennington and Orleans counties reported twice as many deaths. Some towns, such as Ira and Norton, now go years without welcoming a new baby. Foreseeing this, state leaders have spent years trying to lure more people, especially young families, into Vermont. But that has done little to slow the trend. Beyond a one-year jump during the pandemic, when rural Vermont became a popular alternative to large cities, the state’s population has plateaued over the past decade. Last year, after accounting for deaths and people who left the state, Vermont gained a net of only 92 people. Vermont isn’t the only place grappling with these changes. Countries in Europe and Asia have been confronting shrinking, aging societies for years. The United States as a whole is also experiencing a declining birth rate. But while other regions have offset those losses with a massive influx of immigrants, New England has not. Vermont and a handful of its neighbors will thus be navigating this demographic future without a road map of tested strategies. Our experience will inform the rest of the nation.

Most seniors want to age in place, meaning outside of an eldercare facility, surrounded by family and friends. But in Vermont, suitable arrangements can be hard to find. The state’s housing stock is among the nation’s oldest, meaning many homes will need major upgrades to

Chittenden, Franklin and Grand Isle counties — has a waiting list of two to five years. The organization could double its current portfolio of 1,100 units and still barely meet the existing need, to say nothing of tomorrow’s. Among those on the waiting list are some 200 people who own single-

THE EFFECTS OF AGING ON THIS SMALL STATE HAVE BECOME IMPOSSIBLE TO IGNORE —

AND WILL ONLY BECOME MORE CONSEQUENTIAL IN COMING DECADES. be considered age-friendly: ramps, shower bars, wider doorways to accommodate wheelchairs. Seniors on fixed incomes may struggle to afford these fixes, and contractors can be difficult to find. Vermont’s lack of affordable senior housing leaves few options for people who no longer want to worry about maintaining their homes. Cathedral Square — which owns and manages affordable housing for older adults in

family homes in Chittenden County. Getting them into new housing would free up their homes for others — young families, perhaps. “A lot of people are stuck,” said Greg Marchildon, director of AARP Vermont. Green Mountain State geography poses its own challenges. Country life may have its allure, but rural seniors can struggle to get around. Vermont has a lot of dirt roads, and driving

skills can ebb with age. Those who make the difficult decision to give up their car keys find few reliable transportation options. “They look around and say, ‘Well, how am I going to get to the store? How am I going to go see my friends? How am I going to see my grandchildren? How am I going to get to a doctor’s appointment?’” Marchildon said. Isolation is a big risk for rural seniors, especially those without family nearby. A quarter of Vermont’s 65-and-older set lives alone. Some are housebound and rely on the help of others to get by. Nonprofits strive to bring social connection to seniors through programs such as Meals on Wheels. As a volunteer with the Northeast Kingdom Council on Aging, Jeannine Richards, 77, spends time with vulnerable seniors on a weekly basis. Some, she said, simply want to play cards or watch TV. Others need to be roused from bed at 2 in the afternoon. “When we interact with these people, we get the full breadth of the human condition,” she said. GETTING ON

Eleanor Ahlers of Hyde Park grocery shopping with the help of Joan Greene of Lamoille Neighbors

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Andy Buxton running the front counter at Buxton’s Store in Orwell

PHOTOS: OLIVER PARINI

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Among those trying to make the best of their twilight years is Eleanor Ahlers, a 94-year-old who raised five children in Vermont; only two still live in the state. “When we sat down at a table for the holidays, we had maybe 30 or 35 people,” she said. “Now we’re lucky to have five.” She, too, left for a time, living in a Massachusetts town where everything she needed was within walking distance. She now lives on her own in a mobile home in Hyde Park. Ahlers manages to get out quite often, despite no longer driving. She goes out to eat with her daughter, who lives in Morrisville. She recently participated in a creative writing class and attends potlucks at a local park. With the help of a volunteerdriven nonprofit known as Lamoille Neighbors, she also still does her own shopping. Every Wednesday, someone picks her up and takes her to the store. Her goal: to stay out of a nursing home. “I’m fighting the fight,” she said. 26

SEVEN DAYS MARCH 6-13, 2024

No Experience Needed

Andy Buxton grew up in his grandparents’ general store in Orwell. He cut meat, stocked shelves and catered to a cast of colorful customers, including some who would bring in broken appliances in the beds of their pickup trucks for his grandfather to fix. So when a businessman who purchased the store from his grandparents wanted out several years ago, Buxton jumped at the chance to buy back and revive the family biz. He borrowed $100,000 to build a commercial kitchen and crafted a menu of “fancy-ish” foods, from flatbread pizza to baked fish to roast beef sandwiches. He also bought a $30,000 ice cream shack. The upgrades were a hit in the small, rural Addison County burg, especially among the wave of second-home owners who moved there during the pandemic. What Buxton hadn’t anticipated was how difficult it would be to keep it all running. For the past two years, he’s been desperately trying to hire cashiers and deli workers, with little success. He eventually had to cut back hours and shutter the kitchen.

IT USED TO BE A RITE OF PASSAGE

FOR ANY YOUNG PERSON IN THE VILLAGE TO WORK AT BUXTON’S. AND Y BUX TO N

“It used to be a rite of passage for any young person in the village to work at Buxton’s,” he said ruefully. The little store is one of many Vermont businesses affected by a chronic labor shortage that shows no signs of abating. Vermont’s unemployment rate of 2.2 percent is among the lowest in the country. Employers had more than 17,000 open jobs in December — more than twice the number of people estimated to be actively searching for work. Many of these open jobs are in

sectors vital to the state’s future: construction workers to build new housing, health care workers to care for the elderly. A lack of workers also strains restaurants, bookshops and country stores that dot Vermont’s landscape — signature places unlikely to return once they’re gone. The tight labor market has benefited workers, forcing companies to raise wages and benefits to compete for employees. Vermont’s lowest wage earners experienced a 4 percent increase in pay over the past few years, even after accounting for inflation, according to the Public Assets Institute, a Vermont think tank. But the tight labor market has also made it harder for companies to grow. Citing a labor shortage at its cut-and-wrap facility, Cabot Creamery recently had to temporarily discontinue some of its products, including its hefty three-pound blocks of cheese. (They’ve since returned to shelves.) In Rutland, a wave of retirements has forced the 70-year-old manufacturing company Carris Reels to shift production to its out-of-state plants occasionally. As they scramble for workers,


companies are increasingly looking to train people they might have otherwise overlooked in the past: those with criminal histories, in recovery from drug addiction or lacking experience. Companies once looked for workers with at least minimal experience, said Tyler Davis, vice president of enterprise sales for ETS, a recruitment firm that works with manufacturing companies in Franklin and Chittenden counties. Now, anyone with “a basic familiarity with hand tools and a reliable car” can get a job. The shrinking workforce could impact Vermont’s bottom line. More than half of the state’s general fund comes from taxes on personal income, which typically falls when people retire. If the jobs that baby boomers leave can’t be backfilled, that could lead to a gap in state revenue, making it harder to

Old Schools

More than 100 kids once attended Lakeview Elementary School in Greensboro. Now, all seven of its grades could fit in a single classroom. Enrollment is so low that, when crafting Valentine’s Day cards for a local nursing home last month, students had to make extras; the 30 elderly residents outnumbered the 27 card makers. Many Greensboro voters don’t want to lose their school, despite its dwindling enrollment. But residents in neighboring Hardwick, a town in the same district with its own elementary school, recently circulated a petition to force a vote on whether to keep Lakeview open. It’s just too expensive, they argued. Nowhere has Vermont’s demographic shift been felt more than in its public school system. Enrollment has shrunk by more than 30,000 students

Buxton’s Store in Orwell

cover the growing costs of state-funded benefits such as Medicaid and pensions. Covering those costs with less money coming in would require the state to either raise taxes or cut spending. The longer the labor shortage lasts, the harder it will be for businesses such as Buxton’s to stick it out. “I planned to be here until I’m 65, 70, and pass on the legacy,” said Buxton, who’s 43. “Now, I don’t know.” Last week, during a lull in the lunch rush, a local resident walked in with his young daughter, who had won “student of the month” at Orwell Village School. The reward, courtesy of Buxton’s, was a free ice cream cone. But the shop owner had bad news: “Sadly, our ice cream shack is gone,” he told the girl. Unable to staff the machine, he had sold it. She chose a premade dessert from the cooler.

over the past three decades. The precipitous decline, coupled with sharply rising costs, is reviving conversations about whether the state simply has too many small schools. “We have a foot in the past and a foot in the future,” Jeff Francis, executive director of the Vermont Superintendents Association, said in a legislative hearing last month. “We’ve really wanted to hang on to small schools as the center of every community and, at the same time, make sure that we have robust opportunities for every child in the state.” Vermont has been trying for more than a decade to rein in the cost of education. A landmark law known as Act 46 enacted in 2015 aimed to reduce administrative costs through school consolidations. Dozens of districts have GETTING ON

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Adrianne Scucces pushing a wheelchair at the home in Barre Town where she cares for her 97-year-old mother

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merged since, but the cost of teaching Vermont kids remains among the highest in the nation — and is rising still. School districts have proposed budgets this winter that would raise Vermont’s education spending by some $230 million, resulting in an estimated 19 percent average property tax increase statewide. Adding to the financial stakes, many schools were built in the ’50s and ’60s to accommodate the baby boom and now face growing maintenance needs. A new report estimates that just bringing Vermont’s school buildings up to par over the next two decades could cost $6 billion. The bleak financial picture is pressuring districts to become more efficient. One of the quickest ways to do that is to close schools. The Agency of Education, for its part, has no public position on how many schools Vermont needs, saying such decisions are up to individual districts. But expecting the volunteers who sit on school boards to take on difficult closure decisions on their own “isn’t fair,” Rep. Peter Conlon (D-Cornwall) said. Conlon, chair of the House Education Committee, served on his local school board when it proposed closing one of its elementary schools a few years ago — unsuccessfully, it

SEVEN DAYS MARCH 6-13, 2024

turned out. Unless state officials and lawmakers take a bigger role in those discussions, Conlon sees only two likely outcomes. “Either we accept our school system across Vermont the way it is — expensive and not necessarily always providing the best opportunity for kids,” he said, “or we go the difficult

WE HEAR FROM LOTS AND LOTS OF PEOPLE WHO DON’T HAVE NEARLY ENOUGH SERVICES

TO BE ABLE TO SAFELY BE IN THEIR HOMES. K AIL I K UIP E R

route of towns and school districts wrestling with [these questions on their own], often pitting neighbor against neighbor, community against community.” In Greensboro, David Kelley is one of many residents who want to keep the elementary school open despite its low enrollment — no matter what voters in Hardwick think. Why else would families consider moving into town? Of closing a school, he said: “You’re writing your town’s epitaph, in a way.”

Sharing the Caring

If Vermont’s health care system came in today for its annual physical, an array of worrisome symptoms would be apparent. Overstretched ambulance crews unable to keep up with rising call volumes. Hospitals and nursing homes spending millions on temporary workers just to keep their doors open. Long wait times for appointments. Soaring costs. This, too, is a workforce story. Vermont does not have nearly enough doctors, nurses, EMTs and home health aides. The shortage worsened during the pandemic as health care workers burned out and left for other fields. Those still in the trenches are only getting older. Half of Vermont’s nurses are over 48 years old. One in three primary care doctors is over 60. Vermont’s aging population will further pressure the system. That could make it harder for the state to fulfill the promise that it seeks to give its older residents: choices in how they want to age. Seven out of 10 people will require long-term care at some point in their lives, according to federal estimates. For some, that means a home aide will come by to help them complete their daily activities: getting out of bed, dressing, eating, bathing. Others with chronic health conditions might need a nurse who can administer medication and perform physical therapies.

Vermont has tried to build this system in an effort to keep people out of long-term care facilities. But home health agencies say the cost of doing business greatly exceeds what government insurance programs are willing to pay. Sara King, CEO of the VNA & Hospice of the Southwest Region, told lawmakers last month that her agency ran a $2.3 million deficit last year, largely because its revenue comes from those government plans. “All of us home health agencies in the state are losing money,” she said. “And it’s really not sustainable.” A recent state-commissioned report found that none of Vermont’s home health agencies is meeting all of its targeted hours, and some haven’t fulfilled even 75 percent. “We hear from lots and lots of people who don’t have nearly enough services to be able to safely be in their homes,” said Kaili Kuiper, an attorney with Vermont Legal Aid who serves as the state’s long-term care ombudsman. “We want people to be able to have a choice on how they’re going to live their lives in their later years,” she added, “but that choice is being taken away because it’s so hard to stay in your home.” People who decide they can no longer live on their own run into their own set of challenges. Long-term care is expensive: The average cost of a room at an assistedliving facility in Vermont runs about $5,000 a month, with some charging upwards of $10,000. Medicare does not cover those stays over long periods, and Medicaid, the state-run program, is only available to those who are low-income, forcing people to effectively bankrupt themselves to qualify. Vermont’s patchwork of long-term care facilities is also greatly understaffed. Nursing homes have been relying on armies of travel workers, and a third have received emergency state funding over the past few years. “We’re really in a triage situation right now,” said Helen Labun, executive director of the Vermont Health Care Association, an industry trade organization. As homes get overwhelmed, the quality of care suffers. Kuiper said the longest-serving member of her team has reported a worrisome increase in the number of wound-care deficiencies at Vermont nursing homes. Short-staffed homes are also more GETTING ON

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How did we become

Vermont’s median age is 43.2 — the third oldest in the country, behind Maine’s and New Hampshire’s. The population continues to grow older, and by 2030, one in three Vermonters will be older than 60.

THIS OLD STATE? COUNTY BY COUNTY

BIRTH AND DEATH RATES

Vermont’s population is aging more quickly in places such as Essex County. This shows recent growth in the percentage of residents age 65-plus.

Vermont crossed the more-deaths-than-births threshold in 2015

2010 14

8000

2022

12.2

14.8

19.3

7000

17.1

22.4 18.6 22.6

14.5 13.9

6000

15.9

15.3

20.9 21.7

17.7

Births

26.9

23.6

13.3 11.3

Deaths 5000

23.5 4000 2000

16.6

23.6

17.8

2015: Deaths overtake births for the first time

2005

2010

2015

2020

24.6

11-15 16-20 21-25

18.8 16.1

OLDEST TOWNS (by median age)

WORKFORCE

24.2

The share of working-age Vermonters, ages 25 to 64, was about 54.5 percent in 2010 but dropped to 51.1 percent in 2020 and then fell again in 2022 to 50.5 percent.

23.7

25+

YOUNGEST TOWNS

Total Population -1,000s

(by median age)

700

GRANBY........................ 65.2

MARLBORO ................... 23.8

600

MAIDSTONE ................. 65

BURLINGTON ................ 27.4

500

MOUNT TABOR ............. 63.3

JOHNSON ...................... 29.8

LANDGROVE.................. 61.7

MIDDLEBURY ................ 30.1

BRUNSWICK ................. 60.3

NORTHFIELD ................. 30.7

WOODFORD ................... 59.8

HANCOCK ...................... 31.4

LEMINGTON .................. 59.6

WINOOSKI ..................... 32.3

NORTH HERO ................ 59.6

STRATTON .................... 33.6

WALTHAM ..................... 58.5

PUTNEY ......................... 34.9

GOSHEN ......................... 58.4

CAMBRIDGE .................. 35.3

LOOK UP ANY TOWN IN THE STATE AT sevendaysvt. com/agingstats, or just scan this handy QR code.

As of 2021, roughly 135,000 people 65 and older lived in Vermont. Of that group:

ages 0-24

ages 25-64

ages 65+

2000

2010

2022

400 300 200 100 0

1980

1990

SOURCES: U.S. CENSUS BUREAU, VERMONT DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, VERMONT AGENCY OF HUMAN SERVICES

81%

owned their own homes

26%

lived alone

21%

were in the workforce

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likely to discharge difficult patients against their will. Some older Vermonters wind up blackballed from every nursing home in the state, according to the Office of Public Guardian, and an increasing number of people are now landing out of state, hours away from family. Capacity is its own issue. Vermont has lost access to some 500 nursing home and assisted-living beds in recent years because of closures and staffing shortages. That has made it harder for hospitals to discharge patients. One day in January, the University of Vermont Medical Center had 83 such patients, representing more than a quarter of its medical beds. “Some will wait days, weeks, months — or, shockingly, more than an entire year — for the right care setting with the right supports,” wrote Stephen Leffler, the hospital’s president and chief operating officer, and Christine Werneke, the president and COO of the UVM Health Network’s Home Health & Hospice agency, in a press release last week. The backlog has “devastating” ripple effects, they wrote, leading to overcrowding and longer wait times at the emergency department. They called on the state and federal government to increase funding for the long-term care system. As it becomes harder to find or afford care, a greater burden will fall to families. Some 30,000 Vermonters are already providing care to a spouse or relative living with Alzheimer’s or another dementia-related illness, a responsibility that has profound ramifications, from financial hardship to declines in their own physical and mental health. This informal network provides about 36 million hours of unpaid care annually, according to state estimates, for a value of more than $700 million. Adrianne Scucces, 71, has been providing care nonstop for the past few years — first for her partner, Tom, who died from ALS last year, and now for her 97-year-old mother, who moved in with her after a health scare. While her mother is still sharp mentally, able to beat Scucces to the answers when they watch “Wheel of Fortune,” the elderly woman needs help with daily activities such as getting dressed and bathing. Scucces is managing on her own so far. “I know when I’m pushed to the edge from previous experience,” she said. But even if she wanted respite, she’s not sure where to find it. A neighbor who helped out with Tom is now tied up with her own familial caregiving duties. 30

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JEB WALLACE-BRODEUR

Getting On «

Eleanor Ahlers of Hyde Park going grocery shopping with the help of Joan Greene of Lamoille Neighbors

there’s reason to think Vermont could attract more newcomers in the years ahead. It has been viewed as a potential climate haven, and while last summer’s record floods dampened that image, Vermont is still more attractive than many other places. The pandemic-era rise of remote work and the investment in rural internet is also allowing more people to consider Calling All small-town life. S AR A K ING Flatlanders? Recent state efforts, such as the expansion of Kevin Chu has an ambitious plan to reverse Vermont’s childcare subsidies and the now-expired Worker Relocation Grant Program, have demographic slide: growing the state’s also tried to make Vermont a more attracpopulation. A lot. tive landing place for families. Chu is the executive director of the Chu thinks Vermont could also do a Vermont Futures Project, a nonprofit supported by the Vermont Chamber of better job of retaining its young people. Only about 45 percent of Vermont’s Commerce that has spent the past two college graduates stick around after years spreading a pro-growth message. graduation, among the lowest rates in The goal: boost Vermont’s population by the nation. For starters, Vermont needs some 200,000 by 2035, just over a decade to change the “self-sabotaging” narrative away. that people need to leave to be successful, That’s a tall order for a state whose population has grown by less than 50,000 Chu said. “I can understand why that story since the turn of the millennium. But

Caring for her mother has led Scucces to think more deeply about her own future as she gets older. With no children, she worries about what will happen to her when she can no longer take care of herself. It’s a conversation she’s had with other caregivers, she said. “All of us in that position are wondering, Who’s going to do this for us?”

ALL OF US HOME HEALTH AGENCIES IN THE STATE ARE LOSING MONEY.

AND IT’S REALLY NOT SUSTAINABLE.

emerged again a decade ago when there were more people looking for work than work available,” he said, “but the narrative hasn’t evolved to match the conditions of the state.” Some factors, particularly housing, do limit Vermont’s ability to grow. Employers say applicants routinely turn down job offers after fruitless house searches. And testifying before the legislature last week, the directors of Vermont’s two refugee resettlement programs said the rising cost of housing has made it hard to secure long-term placements for their new arrivals. That has forced them to reduce the number of people they’re placing this year. In some areas, such as Burlington, established new Americans have found opportunities working in the eldercare sector. State government is now pouring hundreds of millions of dollars into housing construction. But the capacity needed to meet Chu’s vision is years off. As Vermont looks for ways to influence its demographic shifts, efforts are under way to help adapt to the realities of a fast-aging state. Last month, after a two-year process that featured input from dozens of senior groups and advocates, state officials published the Age Strong VT Plan, a 60-page report that serves as a road map for how Vermont can become more age-friendly. The plan lays out a long list of objectives that mainly revolve around keeping seniors more active, healthy and financially secure. And it offers specific strategies for how the state can achieve these goals, with the help of communities, businesses and families. For example, the plan proposes expanding digital-literacy programs for people over 55 to boost the number of older Vermonters in the workforce. It also calls for expanded capacity in the long-term care system and more funding for home health services. Jane Catton, CEO of Age Well Vermont, contributed to the plan and described it as a good starting point. But knowing what to do and doing it are two different things. “There’s a lot of investment that has to go into our state to make us ready for the next five, 10, 20, 30 years ahead,” she said. Waiting for the day that these gradual, tectonic shifts begin to impact the lives of ordinary people will be “too little, too late,” Catton said. In many areas, however, that day has already arrived. ➆ Rachel Hellman contributed reporting from Orwell.


JEB WALLACE-BRODEUR

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Tabor Greenberg

T

abor Greenberg’s parents named him after a mountain, and he was on skis at 2 years old; Amelia Circosta didn’t see cross-country skis until she was nearly 7. Greenberg grew up in an athletic family and excelled at sports; Circosta has been homeschooled by parents with little sports experience. Yet the two Vermont teenagers share one key trait: They win. Greenberg, 17, and Circosta, 16, are the state’s best Nordic skiers in their age groups and potentially among the future standouts for U.S. teams. Circosta lives in Greensboro and skis for the nearby Craftsbury Ski Club. Greenberg, born and raised in Moretown, competes for Waitsfield’s Green Mountain Valley School. Both have qualified for the upcoming U.S. Ski & Snowboard Cross-Country Junior National Championships, to be held March 11 through 16 at Mount Van Hoevenberg in Lake Placid, N.Y. “Van Ho,” as the skiers call it, was the site of the Nordic races in the 1980 Winter Olympics. Greenberg is a returning champion, having won two races last year in Fairbanks, Alaska. The Junior Nationals are the gateway to bigger U.S. and international competitions. Doing well at Van Ho is an important step toward World Cup races and the Olympics, still several years away. Standout U.S. Ski Team veterans Ben Ogden and Brian Bushey, both Vermonters, excelled at this Nordic rite of passage, competing in 2017 and 2022, respectively. Justin Beckwith, competition director of the New England Nordic Ski Association, said Greenberg “is on a steep trajectory” and is probably the top under-18 male athlete in the region. Circosta won’t turn 17 until September but has been racing against older female athletes and beating them. Both competitors have already raced internationally with the U.S. Ski Team this season: Greenberg took part in the Winter Youth Olympic Games in Gangwon, South Korea, where he brought home a bronze medal in the sprint competition, and Circosta raced in the U18 Nordic Nations Championships in Falun, Sweden, finishing seventh in the 10-kilometer classic. That’s a strong result for someone competing against older athletes from Scandinavia and Europe, Beckwith noted. On a January day, Circosta skied away from the Craftsbury Outdoor Center, followed closely by her boyfriend, David Northcott. With seemingly little effort, she skated into a training run. She is petite but powerful, with a muscular lower body honed by hundreds of hours on a bicycle. Circosta spent her early childhood in Boulder, Colo. An indication of her 32

SEVEN DAYS MARCH 6-13, 2024

Nordic Nobility

Two Vermont teens take on the Cross-Country Junior National Championships BY S TE VE GO L D S TE IN

competitiveness — what her mother, Renee, calls Amelia’s “race face” — came at a tender age. “When she was about 3 or 4 years old, she came up with this game where whoever laughs first loses,” Renee recalled. “She would never lose. She had these little pigtails and chubby cheeks, and she’s starting to stare, and her face would go to stone. I could never win.” In 2013, when Amelia was 6, her parents packed up her and her older brother, Leo, and moved to Greensboro. Renee and her husband, Gary, wanted to be closer to family in Massachusetts, but there was also an ulterior motive: They wanted to make life a bit harder for their kids. Yes. You read that right. Life in Boulder was chill and undemanding, Renee said. She and Gary yearned for their kids to be challenged, to

work on the land, to see where their food came from. “We wanted to build their characters,” she said, “and not just let them flit around in the bubble that was Boulder.” The family quickly sussed out that when you live in Greensboro, you ski. “We got here, and we’re like, ‘Well, there’s a lot of snow,’” Amelia said with a chuckle. “We understood that winters were long and there was an incredible [ski] facility here. And everyone told us it was a good way to meet people.” Renee and Gary, both nonskiers, decided to go with the snow and enrolled Amelia and Leo at the Craftsbury ski center. Since their kids were homeschooled, they could spend significant time there. What the Circostas lacked in expertise, they made up for in enthusiasm. “I was shocked,” Renee admitted. “How did we ever become a ski family?”

When Amelia joined the ski team at age 9, Craftsbury coach Anna Schulz noticed her right away, and not just because of her penchant for head-to-toe purple outfits. Her passion for skiing and training was palpable. “It wasn’t clear until she got a little bit older just how motivated and competitive she would be,” said Schulz, who’s been Circosta’s coach for the past six years. “She’s very low drama and good at objectively evaluating her performance. And that’s certainly tied to mental toughness.” Circosta referred to this trait as the ability “to suffer.” “Even if you have, like, the physical capabilities to go faster, if you can’t deal with the discomfort, that’s going to limit you,” she said. She smiled, adding, “I’m pretty confident with how much I can push through the pain.” In fact, Circosta lives with compartment syndrome, a painful condition that affects her legs. Massage helps, but so does that mental toughness. Schulz also cited Circosta’s ability to get over a setback. After excellent training last fall, including attending an elite camp in Utah, Circosta had a “mediocre” result at the team’s annual Thanksgiving timed trial, Schulz said, adding that “the coaches were worried she might be doubting herself.” Then they read what Circosta had written in her training log: “Not the MOST optimistic start to the season but it could only have made me better, not worse.” Despite their different beginnings in the sport, Greenberg similarly credits his success in Nordic skiing to a determined mindset. Being named for Mount Tabor, a 3,000-foot peak in Rutland County, might also help — though it took him a while to grow into the name. “Tabor was just a small little whippersnapper when I first saw him; I think he was in sixth grade,” said Colin Rodgers, Nordic program director at Green Mountain Valley School, where Greenberg is now a senior. “But he was super tenacious, and he definitely learned to be gritty when he was younger, and he’s brought that to his athleticism. It’s been fun to watch.” Greenberg was on skis as a toddler. His mother, Laurie, ran ultramarathons, and his dad, Reid, was a competitive Alpine skier into college, when an injury forced him to switch to cross-country. He later served as his son’s first coach. At the Youth Olympic Games in January, Greenberg affirmed his status as one of the top under-18 Nordic skiers in the country. He won the bronze medal in the skate sprint. “I was super excited,” Greenberg said. “I’m really better at distance than sprints,


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Amelia Circosta

so it was really cool I made it on the podium.” Rodgers added: “He’s really competitive with a lot of athletes that are substantially older.” There’s that steely resolve again: “There’s a lot of times when you’re cold and tired, wet,” Greenberg said. “So having good mental fortitude is definitely important.” Rodgers got a preview of Greenberg’s toughness and stamina when, at age 14, he joined other team members for a 100-mile

A COMPETITOR FROM THE 2024 JUNIOR NATIONALS AT LAKE PLACID COULD BE

A WORLD CUP STANDOUT IN A FEW YEARS’ TIME. J U S TI N BECKW IT H

bike ride. The other riders finished the loop and returned to school, but the “whippersnapper” went AWOL, eventually calling Rodgers from the top of the Appalachian Gap pass on Route 17. That little detour translated to an additional eight miles up a steep road that averages more than an 8 percent grade and maxes out at 14.3 percent — comparable to the steepest mountain stages of the Tour de France. Greenberg had a major breakthrough last year, when Rodgers took a group of under-18 skiers to Finland to race in the

Scandinavian Cup. It was Greenberg’s first taste of international competition. “He whupped up on the Norwegians, the Swedes, the Finns, the Estonians there,” Rodgers said. “I had seen some impressive skiing by Tabor, but that’s when we knew he was, like, truly international caliber.” While Circosta is enjoying her skiing success, she’s not planning to make it her profession. When she’s not ski training, she spends 40 to 50 hours a week studying. So, she said, echoing Tom Petty, the future is wide open. “Whatever I end up doing, I’m not going to be sitting at a desk in an office,” she said. “I’ve got to be outside.” Greenberg, meanwhile, will ski for the University of Vermont this fall and plans to race for many years to come. “I like the Junior Worlds and those kinds of international junior races, so I’d like to qualify for those and get top 10s or eventually even podium,” Greenberg said. “Further down the line, the ultimate goal is to be racing World Cups at that level.” That attitude makes Beckwith downright giddy. “It’s a testament to our arrival as a Nordic nation,” he said. “It would not be improbable that a competitor from the 2024 Junior Nationals at Lake Placid could be a World Cup standout in a few years’ time.” ➆

INFO U.S. Ski & Snowboard 2024 Cross-Country Junior National Championships, March 11 to 16, at Mount Van Hoevenberg in Lake Placid, N.Y. mtvanhoevenberg.com

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It’s Electra’s

New Shelburne restaurant from the Leunig’s Bistro & Café team has something for everyone B Y JOR D AN BAR RY • jbarry@sevendaysvt.com

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hen Leunig’s Bistro & Café chef-owner Donnell Collins announced her latest project, she told Seven Days that Electra’s Restaurant was named after a friend’s cat, not Shelburne Museum founder Electra Havemeyer Webb. The 110-seat restaurant in the circa-1796 Shelburne Inn may be unaffiliated with the nearby museum’s founder, but its elegance would fit in among Webb’s collections. The restaurant’s space once housed the Bearded Frog, which closed in 2022 after nearly 16 years. Collins, general manager Jake Loyer and their team did an extensive renovation and created an upscale atmosphere with white tablecloths, velvet and leather banquettes, a luxe fireplace in the main dining room, and a lounge with a shiny new bar. The former bar is now a third dining area available for private events, which Collins plans to decorate with antiques from her own collection. The chef has worked at Leunig’s for 22 years and became the sole owner in early 2020. Even with multiple restaurants on her plate, she was quick to dispel rumors that Leunig’s is on the market, saying she has no plans to sell. Regulars of Leunig’s and Petit Bijou in Burlington and Le Marché Café in Shelburne will recognize Collins’ French influence at Electra’s — and even a dish or two. But the overall approach at the new restaurant, which opened in November, is something different inspired by the location: Collins calls it “new American-colonial.” “This building means a lot to Shelburne, and people have told me so many stories about it,” said Collins, who lives around the corner. “It was one of the first built in town. I knew we had to stick to that time period.” On the menu, that approach means lots of slow braising and game meat such as elk, pheasant and wild boar, Collins explained. The “new American” part of “new American-colonial” also gives the chef a bit of freedom. At Leunig’s, customers expect classic French dishes. At Electra’s, she’s able to play with different flavors and embrace the unique style of cooking she’s developed over her 30-year career. On February 27, the restaurant launched a new menu. Collins said she must have been cold while designing it in her unheated office, because “this round has a lot of spice to it,” including a new jackfruit tamale dish with Hatch green chiles. IT’S ELECTRA’S

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sevendaysvt.com/enews Capital City Farmers Market at 133 State Street

Flood Recovery Work Threatens Capital City Farmers Market’s Summer Location Montpelier’s CAPITAL CITY FARMERS MARKET has relocated five times since 2019. A flood recovery project in the upper parking lot at 133 State Street may have it on the move again. In November, market manager KERI RYAN confirmed with the Vermont Department of Buildings and General Services that the 45-year-old market could return to the lower lot at that address, where it moved in September 2020. The market’s membership then voted to continue in that location for the 2024 summer season, which runs Saturdays from May through October, Ryan said. On Monday, February 26, Ryan received an email from BGS saying the department would “need to offer [the market] an alternative location for this summer” due to flood recovery work at the Vermont Department of Taxes building. Calls and emails in support of the market prompted hearings on the situation in the Senate Committee on Agriculture last week. BGS Deputy Commissioner DAVID DIBIASE offered several other options for the market on Thursday; on Friday, market representatives presented testimony.

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Last year’s emergency post-flood location, the green at Vermont College of Fine Arts, wasn’t optimal for parking, loading, accessibility or drawing tourists, Ryan told Seven Days. The market’s previous home at 2 Taylor Street, which BGS initially recommended in its email, was “the worst location the market has ever had,” Ryan said. “We understand that none of us expected a flood,” she continued. “But there’s no reason that the market cannot — and should not — be considered when making plans for [133 State Street].” In the committee meeting last Friday, DiBiase said the department is “in a tough position with what we have going on here in the complex. The recovery effort is going to be a long-duration event,” which may include yet-to-bescheduled work this summer, when the legislature is out of session. Many of the market’s vendors themselves weathered damage from the floods, market board president HANNAH BLACKMER of FIELD STONE FARM in Northfield testified, and “they rely on a SIDE DISHES

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VT Dinner with beef tartiflette and berry-apple crisp

SMALL PLEASURES

Changing the Channel Emily’s Home Cooking reinvents TV dinners B Y J O RD AN BARRY • jbarry@sevendaysvt.com

When TV dinners were invented in the 1950s, similar offering from Pie Junkie in Oklahoma the Swanson company coined its name in order City, which she saw on Instagram. To make to tap into the popularity of the television, her version at scale, she needed commercial newly a status symbol in American kitchen space and specialized equipment homes. that most clients don’t keep in their But when it comes to cupboards. food marketing in 2024, In December, Eden settled “VT” may have more of a into the recently built-out magical ring to it than kitchen below Stowe Street “TV.” That was Emily Café in Waterbury, which Eden’s thinking behind became available when Paprika the name of her recently Catering moved out. It’s a launched VT Dinners, commute from her home in which can go from freezer Winooski, but “the good vibes” Emily Eden to oven to tray table just of the Stowe Street team and like Swanson’s Salisbury the bright, windowed kitchen steak. Much like TV has are worth the drive, she said. evolved from rabbit She immediately started ears to streaming on offering Monday Meals, less of INFO demand, these modern a commitment than a full order Learn more at emilyshomecook convenience meals have of her seasonal freezer menu. ing.com. To order VT Dinners, gotten a significant She launched the first batch in email emily@emilyshome update: Vermont-grown February, and VT Dinners are cooking.com or send a DM on ingredients. Instagram: @emilyshomecooking. now available for single orders Each VT Dinner ($15) or via subscription ($120 features side-by-side for eight meals per month, with savory and sweet dishes, such as cheddardelivery available), with pickup in Waterbury potato pot pie with maple-apple pie, or glutenand Winooski. free beef tartiflette with berry-apple crisp I’m a sucker for pot pie, and both the chicken — though you can also swap out the dessert for and cheddar-potato dinners satisfy my craving a side of roasted veggies. The two-course meals for flaky pastry atop gooey, veggie-packed are made from “fruits and roots from Vermont filling. The other two offerings — based on farms and orchards,” Eden explained, along with tartiflette, a potato-filled casserole from the local protein such as Misty Knoll Farms chicken French Alps — are topped with indulgent and Boyden Farm beef. scalloped potatoes. The hot dessert in the foil Since 2013, Eden, 41, has mostly worked as container’s other compartment makes the treat a personal chef, whipping up reheatable meals complete. to stock clients’ freezers through her business, As a kid, I ate the occasional TV dinner in my Emily’s Home Cooking. grandmother’s living room. While “Jeopardy!” Working from clients’ homes let Eden played, I’d wait impatiently for steam to circumvent the usual paths to owning a food dissipate from the microwaved meatloaf, or I’d business. She didn’t need to build her own burn my fingers on a piping hot brownie. These production space or climb the ladder at a busy days, I’m perhaps a tad less impatient and a tad restaurant such as Leunig’s Bistro & Café in better at “Jeopardy!,” but I feel the same surge Burlington, where she previously worked as a of anticipation as my VT Dinners cook in the prep cook. oven — and they’re a heck of a lot better than a “It’s a gamble to start a restaurant, and Hungry-Man. ➆ I didn’t have the personality to schmooze investors,” she said with a laugh. “I’m kind of Small Pleasures is an occasional column an anti-capitalist, and especially back then, I that features delicious and distinctive couldn’t hold it in very well.” Vermont-made food or drinks that pack a But for more than five years, she’s had this punch. Send us your favorite little bites or sips new product in mind — initially inspired by a with big payoff at food@sevendaysvt.com.

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SEVEN DAYS MARCH 6-13, 2024

Fries, chorizo and mussels, and wedge salad at the bar

It’s Electra’s « P.34 “I’m originally from Los Angeles, Calif., so those flavors really mean comfort and family to me,” she said. “It’s been fun, and it takes me back to being a young child and being able to have a free mind.” Collins’ playfulness jumped out at me on my first visit to Electra’s in mid-February, before the new menu took effect. In place of the simple calamari fritti served at Leunig’s, I found a calamari appetizer tossed with masa and poblano rings, served with a chile de árbol sauce ($18). Instead of snails, Electra’s served a traditional many-holed escargot dish filled with a wild mushroom mixture topped with melted cheese ($16). Both starters are still available, give or take a few ingredients. My dining companions and I snacked on the wellfried calamari while we enjoyed a round of cocktails, but we found the “escargots” lacking in salt and left a good bit on the plate. The best dish of our appetizer round was the Wagyu tartare ($26): beef from Full Moon Wagyu in Panton tossed with truffle aioli, tangy cornichons, capers and parsley, then topped with a quail egg and served with duck-fat-fried kettle chips. The dish was well seasoned, and its uniform chop showed off the kitchen team’s excellent knife skills. “I’d come back for the tartare and a martini,” said one of my two friends, who works in restaurants. “Maybe with some fries and oysters at the bar. That’s the industry pro move,” she added. Electra’s has a big menu and something for everyone, which is both a good thing and a bad thing. Entrées range from filet mignon to a vegan artichoke and mushroom gnocchi, and there are both a kids’ menu and a $55 fruits de mer seafood tower. Drink offerings include a solid list of nonalcoholic beverages and mocktails, an amaro flight, and a whopping 24 wines by the glass. Feeling fancy? Opt for caviar service, or add

grilled beef tenderloin and a lobster tail to your plate. That packed menu — which one friend called “as long as one at a Cheesecake Factory” — can be overwhelming. But it’s also a sign of a restaurant trying to meet the needs of a diverse community: couples out for a date night, friends catching up at the bar, and groups celebrating special occasions at eight- and 10-top tables. For the latter demographic, Electra’s variety and well-lit, quiet atmosphere fill a void in Shelburne. As my friends and I ate in the lounge area, we discussed how this would be the perfect postgraduation restaurant, a place to bring parents visiting from out of town. Electra’s also seemed to be a hit with kids; several tables nearby were filled with young families. That’s important to Collins, whose two daughters grew up in her restaurants. “I feel like there was a generation where it was more about quick and easy dinners, instead of bringing your child out to a restaurant,” she said. “We want to be a place where you can teach them how to order and what fork to use. You never know — they might have dinner with the president one day.” The service at Electra’s is fittingly formal, with uniformed servers in aprons and ties, yet friendly and warm. Staff are attentive to fine-dining details, stopping by to fold a napkin when a diner gets up to use the restroom and wrapping the top of a wine bottle with a cloth before putting it in an ice bucket. On my first visit, it was the more mundane details that were forgotten: Drinks took a while to arrive, and our


food+drink crème brûlée ($11) — not too sweet or eggy, with a crackable crust — and the cherry elk rack ($42), once our knives arrived. f with e e Find, fix and feather with B There’s less game on the menu now s! ed Nest Notes — an e-newsletter Cornthe Fixing than at Electra’s opening, Collins said, all filled with home design, largely due to supply issues. She has a h 17 Vermont real estate tips Marc rick’s good source for the elk, though, and it’s t and DIY decorating St. Pa ay one of the restaurant’s bestsellers. D inspirations. “People don’t see it very often, and they’re really game to try it,” she added, Sign up today at no pun intended. sevendaysvt.com/enews. The formidable piece of meat was 13 West Center St., Winooski • 655-2423 served on the bone — perfectly seared, SPONSORED BY PAPA-FRANKS.COM medium rare, juicy and tender, with a TUE-SAT 11AM-9PM tangy-sweet sauce that balanced the plate’s other elements nicely. I haven’t tried the version on the new menu, but its raspberry-amaretto demi-glace sounds 12V-Nest042821.indd 1 4/27/2112v-papafranks030624.indd 4:05 PM 1 2/21/24 1:27 PM like it will have the same effect. For my return visit on the day the menu changed, I tested my industry friend’s theory about a simple meal at the bar. I browsed the entrées, but mostly to see what had changed. When it came time to order, I stuck with lighter fare: steamed mussels with chorizo in a lightly spicy salsa roja sauce ($17) and a classic wedge salad ($17). Both were exactly what I hoped — dishes I’ll return for on dinnertime drives through Shelburne. Electra’s also recently began offering a prix-fixe Twilight Dinner menu daily between 4 and 5 p.m. The $26 meal comes with a choice of salad (or lobster chowder for an extra $4) and a selection of classic (Have you eaten yet?) bistro dishes, such as Wagyu steak frites, citrus-glazed salmon and coq au vin. 293 MAIN STREET, WINOOSKI TINYTHAIRESTAURANT.NET Though missing some of Collins’ more OPEN FIVE DAYS A WEEK, 4-8:30PM • CLOSED SUN & MON • 655-4888 playful elements, it’s an affordable way to check out the restaurant for those who 6h-tinythai082422.indd 1 8/17/22 11:11 AM are wary of the fine-dining price tag. (My initial dinner for three, with a round of cocktails, appetizers, a reasonably priced Let us keep the wheels rolling along with your mojo! bottle of wine, two entrées and a split Call for an appointment today! dessert, was $280; my return visit at the bar with one friend was just under $100.) Collins said she hopes more people will stop for an afternoon meal, especially as the weather warms and Electra’s adds outdoor seating. Regulars have been asking for weekend brunch, too, and while she’s not ready to commit to that, she said she may offer a family-style • diagnostics Sunday supper if staffing allows. • alignments “There’s still a level of sophistication • tire repair QUALITY that I want to go to here,” Collins said. From • brake service CAR CARE, the inviting bar to the luxe banquettes, she’s • oil changes DELIVERED got the right place for it. ➆

obsessed?

Bartenders at Electra’s Restaurant

Wild mushroom “escargots”

Gin Khao Reu Yung?

?

HOW’S THE RIDE FEELIN’?

entrées came to the table without steak knives, which we needed to tackle a fairly hefty cut of elk. We chalked up those omissions to the growing pains of an ambitious new spot still working things out. Same with the occasional miss on seasoning or acidity — we’d have loved a lemon to squeeze over the fried calamari — and elements that seemed slightly out of place. For instance, a rogue cold relish was a jump scare on a plate of otherwise lovely seared scallops ($35, currently on the menu with ’nduja, $36), and a flourish of microgreens appeared on just about everything. The biggest highlights of my first meal were the well-made classic cocktails ($14 for my Last Word), a well-executed maple

INFO

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10/27/23 3:38 PM


AGRICULTURE

In the Zone The USDA’s updated plant hardiness map confirms changes in what Vermonters can grow BY WILL SOLOMON

As home gardeners leaf through colorful seed catalogs, dreaming of this summer’s edible bounty, farmers are already starting seeds in greenhouses across the state. Many are undoubtedly hoping for a strong season after last year’s devastating May frost and record-setting rain. Despite unseasonably warm recent temperatures, Vermonters know there are still months to go before the “safe” outdoor planting date of Memorial Day weekend. And this year, as gardeners plan, they might want to take a closer look at the hardiness zones on their seed packets. In November, the U.S. Department of Agriculture released its first updated Plant Hardiness Zone Map since 2012. The map — which divides the country into zones ranging from 1a to 13b, coldest to warmest — has long served as a guide for overwintering plant tolerance and when to plant in the spring. It does so based on average annual minimum winter temperature data. The latest map confirms a warming trend that Vermont gardeners and farmers

have been experiencing firsthand for years. The update shows a dramatic shift across the state, with the bulk of central Vermont warming from zone 4b (minimum of -25 to -20 degrees) to 5a (minimum of -20 to -15 degrees). Parts of the Burlington area have bumped up from 5a to 5b (minimum of -15 to -10 degrees). Zone 3b (minimum of -35 to -30 degrees) has disappeared from the Northeast Kingdom, and Vermont now registers zone 6a (minimum of -10 to -5 degrees) for the first time in a few spots in Windham and Windsor counties. For Kevin and Paula Dougherty of Rochester’s Uphill Farm, the new map is no surprise. Their small farm market and community-supported agriculture operation sells plants, vegetables, herbs, flowers and berries. The USDA has affirmed significant changes the couple have observed over four decades of farming in central Vermont. “Grapes were something nobody ever would seriously consider growing in this area, and now we do,” Kevin

said. “Blueberries were … kind of iffy. Raspberries, the same. The canes would die, but we haven’t seen that in years.” That doesn’t mean Vermont has become the Golden State. “When we sell plants in the spring, people look for things like Big Boy tomatoes,” Kevin said. “[Big Boy] are California tomatoes. We won’t touch ’em.” They prefer to stick with triedand-true varieties. Andy Jones, who has managed the 600-plus-member Intervale Community Farm’s CSA operation in Burlington since 1993, said the season there has lengthened considerably over three decades of farming. “We are consistently into the field earlier than we were in the early ’90s,” he said. Some spring crops such as lettuce and spinach are now ready to harvest by early June. Frost-tender crops like squash, tomatoes and peppers are being planted outdoors earlier, and hardy fall crops such as kale and Brussels sprouts may be harvestable into December.

“There are a few things that we didn’t even consider planting [in the past], like sweet potatoes,” Jones said. Crops such as okra, certain eggplant varieties and even ginger are increasingly common in the state, he noted. On the flip side, some plants are trickier. “We have had a harder time growing a lot more cool-season crops through the summer,” Jones said. Examples include head lettuce, broccoli and spinach, which suffer from the consistently higher peak summer temperatures. While commercial operations must carefully weigh risks, Jones encouraged home gardeners to experiment, particularly with annual crops. “If you have a little bit of space, you don’t have a lot to lose,” he said. “You might as well push the envelope, because sometimes things will work out.” ➆

INFO

Learn more at planthardiness.ars.usda.gov.

USDA PLANT HARDINESS ZONE MAP AVERAGE ANNUAL EXTREME MINIMUM TEMPERATURE

2023

SOURCE: U.S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE

38

SEVEN DAYS MARCH 6-13, 2024

Temp (F)

Zone

Temp (C)

-35 to -30

3b

-37.2 to -34.4

-30 to -25

4a

-34.4 to -31.7

-25 to -20

4b

-31.7 to -28.9

-20 to -15

5a

-28.9 to -26.1

-15 to - 10

5b

-26.1 to -23.3

-10 to -5

6a

-23 to -20.6

2012


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SIDEdishes « SERVING UP FOOD NEWS

P.35

stable, safe and vibrant marketplace for their income.” The nonprofit market does not pay to use the lot. Ryan estimated that market vendors do $1.2 million in business over roughly 100 operating hours each summer. Market data indicate that

98 percent of customers shop at other Montpelier businesses after attending the market. Ryan said she and BGS representatives plan on a follow-up conversation this week to resolve the issue. Market leadership will work around construction-related interruptions as needed, she said: “We expect to return to 133 State Street this summer.”

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Delight Restaurant Now Open in Burlington A pair of brothers originally from Nepal opened DELIGHT RESTAURANT at 1130 North Avenue in Burlington on February 8. The menu describes the new restaurant’s cuisine as “transcultural.” It includes Indian curries and biryanis, Nepali dumplings and noodle soup, and Indo-Chinese dishes, such as fried rice and chow mein. Owner BHARAT PARTEL, 28, and his 24-year-old brother, BIKASH PORTHEL, moved from New York City to Vermont about eight months ago. (The siblings spell their surname differently in English but pronounce it the same way.) During his seven years in New York, Partel worked in Indian and American restaurants, he said. He and his brother moved to Burlington to join friends from their home city of Ghorahi, in southwest Nepal, and to escape the urban grind. “It is quiet and peaceful here,” Partel said.

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Their roughly 60-seat restaurant was most recently Gurung Restaurant and Bar, which closed in November. The kitchen is staffed by two Nepali natives who also moved to Burlington from New York City: head chef TEJ MAN GHARTI and his nephew, JAY PRAKASH GHARTI, who specializes in cooking breads and meats in the restaurant’s tandoor oven. Partel said they expect to redecorate as business picks up.

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culture Michelle Azar in All Things Equal: The Life and Trials of Ruth Bader Ginsburg

Poetic Justice

THEATER

Ruth Bader Ginsburg play comes to the Flynn B Y M ARY A NN L I CKTE IG • maryann@sevendaysvt.com

T

heater asks audience members to suspend disbelief and, for the duration of a show, allow themselves to be transported to another place and time. People watching Michelle Azar in the one-woman show All Things Equal: The Life & Trials of Ruth Bader Ginsburg go willingly, according to playwright Rupert Holmes. “They just accept that this is Ruth Bader Ginsburg,” he said, referring to the late justice of the U.S. Supreme Court. “And they become chummy with her within minutes. They embrace her; they celebrate with her; they cry with her.” Even after the curtain falls, some continue to believe that Azar is Ginsburg. At postshow question-and-answer sessions, Holmes said, he has heard audience members ask Azar questions that only Ginsburg could answer. They stumble over themselves, saying “you” when they mean “Ruth.” All Things Equal, directed by Laley Lippard and on its second national tour, comes to the Flynn Main Stage in 40

SEVEN DAYS MARCH 6-13, 2024

Burlington on Friday, March 8. Holmes district judge. She wrote a well-regarded framed the 90-minute show as Ginsburg treatise on Swedish civil law, taught at talking to a friend of her granddaughter’s Rutgers’ and Columbia’s law schools, whom she has invited to her Supreme and became the first woman to receive Court chambers. tenure at the latter. While there, she also Ginsburg was the class valedictorian became the first director of the American who missed graduation at Civil Liberties Union’s her Brooklyn high school Women’s Rights Project. because her mother died In that role, she patiently of cancer the day before. and methodically worked She was one of nine to persuade the Supreme women in her class of 552 Court that sex discrimiat Harvard Law School, nation violated the 14th juggling classes, studies Amendment’s guarantee and motherhood while of equal protection. Before caring for her husband, joining the Supreme Court who was sick with cancer. in 1993, she won five of the After she graduated — six cases she presented R UP E R T H O L ME S from Columbia Law there. School, tying for first in By the time she died, her class — no one would hire her as an on September 18, 2020, at age 87, she had attorney, Holmes noted: “She had three become a feminist icon and diminutive strikes against her, she said: She was a hero hailed as a rock star. woman, she was Jewish, and she was a Ginsburg may initially seem an unlikely mother.” subject for playwright Holmes, the British Ginsburg became a clerk for a federal American singer-songwriter most widely

IT’S A FUNNY PLAY, BELIEVE IT OR NOT —

ONLY BECAUSE SHE WAS A WITTY WOMAN.

known for his 1979 No. 1 hit “Escape (The Piña Colada Song).” He created, wrote and scored the AMC TV series “Remember WENN.” He’s also a novelist and twotime winner of the Mystery Writers of America’s Edgar Award. His latest book, New York Times bestseller Murder Your Employer, is the first in his McMasters Guide to Homicide series. (The second, Murder Your Mate, is expected in early 2025.) Holmes, who lives in Cold Spring, N.Y., has amassed many theater credits, as well. He was the sole creator of the musical comedy The Mystery of Edwin Drood, which won five Tony awards in 1986, including Best Musical, Best Book and Best Score. He wrote the Tony-nominated play Say Goodnight, Gracie, about comedian George Burns. With musical director Joseph Joubert, he has written a new adaptation of Gilbert and Sullivan’s The Pirates of Penzance, set in New Orleans and scheduled to open on Broadway next year. Holmes chose to write about Ginsburg, he told Seven Days, because he admired her and because of the parallels he saw between her life and that of his wife, who lost both of her parents while she was in high school. Liza Holmes also studied law while raising a daughter and attended Rutgers Law School, though not while Ginsburg was there. The idea to write the play arose from a conversation Holmes had with theater producer Scott Stander shortly after Ginsburg died. At the time, many theaters remained closed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Stander was spacing audience members eight seats apart and staging Holmes’ oneactor play Say Goodnight, Gracie, Holmes recalled. “We talked about the fact that maybe, for a while, this is the only kind of play we can do. And he said, ‘What would you think about doing a play about Ruth Bader Ginsburg?’” In her later years, Ginsburg became widely known as “the Notorious RBG,” a play on the Notorious B.I.G., a rapper who, like the justice, hailed from Brooklyn. “I felt that there was a risk of her becoming a meme,” Holmes said. Biographies, a documentary, children’s Halloween costumes, key chains, coasters and bumper stickers that said “You Can’t Spell Truth Without Ruth” had made Ginsburg widely known. She had been parodied on “Saturday Night Live.” But she had lived “a remarkable, rich life,” Holmes said. “And the idea that she’s just this symbol of an old lady being tough bothered me.” He began a year of research. While a one-actor show may have been the only practical choice at the time, “I happen to love the one-actor format,” he said. Done right, the character has a reason to talk


to the audience and audience members know why they are there, he said: “You are not just an audience; you are having an audience with this character.” The show uses recorded voices, sound effects, projections and music — including selections from operas Ginsburg was known to attend — to take viewers to her home and various courtrooms as scenes in her life play out. They go to the Supreme Court with Ginsburg as she argues her first case. “You realize how small she is at this big lectern,” Holmes said. The justices are all men, he added, “and you can feel the weight of their stare and their condescension.” Despite such serious scenes, there is comedy, too. “It’s a funny play, believe it or not,” Holmes said, “only because she was a witty woman, and a lot of ironic, a lot of droll things happened.” Audiences may recognize Azar from Shonda Rhimes’ ABC TV series “How to Get Away With Murder.” The Los Angeles-based actor also played a jazz singer on “Criminal Minds” and wrote and starred in her own one-woman show, From Baghdad to Brooklyn. While others may be quick to believe that she personifies Ginsburg, Azar said she didn’t see herself in the role when her manager suggested she audition. For starters, Azar didn’t consider herself a feminist. Her Iraqi father’s Sephardic Jewish traditions were conservative. Marriage and motherhood were roles she was taught to grow into. A career wasn’t forbidden — her mother earned a doctorate degree while rearing four children — but her father would say, “It’s nice if you want to do something, but it’s not important.” Thorough research informed Azar’s performance. She even studied the way Ginsburg held one shoulder higher than the other, the way she tilted her head and how chemotherapy she received during her own bouts of cancer might have compromised her nerves. Azar worked closely with a vocal coach to home in on Ginsburg’s accent, but most dialogue is delivered faster than Ginsburg typically spoke. The justice was known to choose words carefully and employ long pauses. After a show in Florida, Azar said, Ginsburg’s husband’s sister and her husband complimented Azar’s performance, adding that if she had truly presented Ginsburg’s cadence, “the show would have been about eight hours long.” ➆

INFO All Things Equal: The Life & Trials of Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Friday, March 8, 7:30 p.m., at Flynn Main Stage in Burlington. $29-59. flynnvt.org

PERFORMING ARTS

Tickets Now on Sale for ‘The Sound of Music in Concert’ BY MARY AN N LICKTEIG maryann@sevendaysvt.com

As of Tuesday, limited tickets remained available for “The Sound of Music in Concert,” a joint summer performance by Lyric Theatre and the Vermont Symphony Orchestra at Trapp Family Lodge. The June production, featuring a 40-member cast backed by a 40-piece orchestra, will mark the first time all the songs from the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical have been performed live at the lodge, which is owned by the family that inspired the story. The performances run June 20 through 22 in the concert meadow at the Stowe lodge. Last Friday, $49 “shine” tickets went on sale, good only for the concert at the lodge. In the event of rain, the concert will move to the Flynn in Burlington, and those ticket holders will get a refund. Rain-orshine tickets — which allow admission to the concert in either venue — went on sale last fall and are sold out. The Sound of Music opened on Broadway in 1959, starring Mary Martin as Maria von Trapp. The movie version, with Julie Andrews playing Maria, was released in 1965. The story told on stage and screen is loosely based on the actual von Trapps, a singing family that toured Europe. In 1938, they escaped Austria, which had been annexed by the Nazis. They toured the United States in the ’40s as the Trapp Family Singers before settling in Stowe, where mountain views reminded them of Austria. In 1950, they began hosting guests in their rustic 27-room lodge, which burned down in 1980 and was replaced by a 96-room Alpine lodge. “We’re excited that the Trapp Family Lodge is allowing us to sing these songs about their forefathers in their backyard,” Lyric Theatre executive director Erin Evarts told Seven Days. VSO music director Andrew Crust will conduct. Stefanie Weigand is the vocal director, and Kerstin Anderson, a South Burlington native and Lyric alum who played Maria in a 2015 national tour of The Sound of Music, will host and sing. The event commemorates several milestones: the 75th anniversary of the publication of Maria von Trapp’s book The Story of the Trapp Family Singers, the 65th anniversary of the musical’s Broadway debut, Lyric Theatre’s 50th anniversary and the VSO’s 90th. ➆

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INFO

“The Sound of Music in Concert,” Thursday through Saturday, June 20 through 22, 7:30 p.m., at Trapp Family Lodge in Stowe. $49 “shine” tickets. flynnvt.org

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culture GennaRose Nethercott

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Cryptic Compendium Book review: Fifty Beasts to Break Your Heart and Other Stories, GennaRose Nethercott

April 5-7

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BY J IM S C H L E Y • schley@sevendaysvt.com

ennaRose Nethercott’s new collection of prose fiction arrives riding a wave of fanfare for her previous work. The Lumberjack’s Dove (2018) is a book-length poetic parable chosen by Louise Glück for the National Poetry Series, and Thistlefoot (2022) is a propulsive magical-realist novel about a pursuit across centuries, set partly in Vermont. Nethercott, who lives near Brattleboro, also wrote the lyrics for an enthralling album called Modern Ballads, which features her neo-folkloric episodes of love and anguish performed by New England-based musicians such as Lula Wiles, Arc Iris and Rose Polenzani. Nethercott is herself a performer who often accompanies readings from her books with puppetry and projections.

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In Fifty Beasts to Break Your Heart and Other Stories, she has found shrewd ways of kneading together the weird capriciousness of folk myths, monster fables and ghost tales. This collection adventures down the foggy, torchlit paths made by precursors such as Edgar Allan Poe, Mary Shelley, Italo Calvino and Angela Carter. Yet most of its 14 pieces aren’t shaped like “stories” in the usual sense of the term. Rather, many of them are montage-like assemblages with minimal narrative, more akin to prose poetry. The marketing copy for Fifty Beasts is torrid, perhaps meant as a parody of publicity-speak. This book, we’re told, is “about the abomination that resides within us all. That churning, clawing, ravenous yearning: the hunger to be held,

and seen, and known. And the terror, too: to be loved too well, or not enough, or for long enough. To be laid bare before your sweetheart, to their horror. To be recognized as the monstrous thing you are.” That pumped-up verbiage notwithstanding, Nethercott’s writing is for the most part more witty and playful than terrifying. For instance, the title sequence, “Fifty Beasts to Break Your Heart,” is a bestiary, a form of allegory with medieval origins. Nethercott’s version is a whimsical field guide with, yes, 50 descriptions of imaginary creatures, ranging from a few sentences to several paragraphs, each accompanied by a phantasmagorical drawing by Bobby DiTrani. A sliver of a frame story links these entries, involving a trio of “florists” identified only by botanical pseudonyms (Larkspur, Ghost Pipe and Phlox). Here is a typical segment: The Wrip-Wender is a two-headed snake, each side wet-toothed with fatal venom. When the WripWender reaches mating age, one head will fall in love with the other. It will spend a fortnight writhing against the earth as that head thrashes toward its twin. Eventually they will meet. Fang will meet throat. Desire will meet body. One head will poison the other. Both sides will die. In many of these pieces, a Beast or its victim has a mortal escapade due to hunger or yearning, often resulting in one body devouring another. Metaphorically, these are about the allures and perils of love. One of the reasons we turn to literary fiction and poetry is to have our hearts broken wide open, which readers know as a genuine physical and mental sensation — being sundered, emotionally, by the cumulative power of a story in which we can see ourselves. But, despite their author’s claim that these creature portraits will “break your heart,” heartbreak is scarce here. The “Fifty Beasts” are clever contrivances, made by a talented wordsmith fooling around with imagistic puzzle pieces. Since it doesn’t unfold like a sequential story, “Fifty Beasts” might be more effectively delivered as playing cards, like a newfangled sort of tarot. “A Haunted Calendar” is an almanac with cryptic annotations, where again the trickiness of the entries’ devised format supersedes a cohesive story: DAY 9 A corn-husk doll. A familiar song you whistle without noticing. A pile of peaches rotting, uneaten, on


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FROM “A LILY IS A LILY” As everyone knows, when a person is missed enough, a ghost is born. Say, for example, you have a memory of your sweetheart sleeping in a willow tree’s shade, and another of her trying on sunglasses at a mall kiosk. When your sweetheart goes away, you’ll be inclined to think of her there beneath the willow whenever you pass it. You’ll yearn for her when you stumble by the glasses kiosk on your way to work. And you’ll long for her with that sort of longing that webs itself through the entire body, as if a silkworm were spinning fabric of longing inside you, bolts and bolts of silken longing, whole sails of it. And when you don’t think you can miss her any more, pop, a ghost manifests in the spot she once stood. Ghosts appear all over town, in every place the two of you visited. Eventually, when you can’t go anywhere without dodging ghosts, you have to walk right through them. Reprinted from Fifty Beasts to Break Your Heart and Other Stories. ©2024 by GennaRose Nethercott. Used with permission of the publisher, Vintage Books, a division of Penguin Random House, LLC. All rights reserved.

the table. A journal with the pages blacked out. The same song, again. A name that sounds like yours. A name that doesn’t. DAY 10 Ghost (verb) When you think someone is smiling & waving at you so you wave back but they are actually waving at someone behind you wait no they are not smiling, they are yelling, they are pointing desperately behind you, they are crying now, you turn around & “A Diviner’s Abecedarian” proceeds like an alphabetical compendium of spells. This piece has a more developed narrative through line, implicating a group of preadolescents who conspire to torment the “New Girl” at their school. VIDEOMANCY (divination by films) On the night before we kill the New Girl, the six of us go out to the movies. We buy small popcorns and boxes of Junior Mints. The movie has something to do with a bus driver who stumbles on a Masonic treasure, but we aren’t watching for plot. We are watching for the subliminal stills that flicker between the frames. So quick, no one else sees. Halfway through, Xavier Martins leans over to kiss the one of us with the weird mole, and we all feel his lips graze her chin. We barely pause, the hidden movie stills flick, flick, flicking past. A few of Nethercott’s new stories do summon a heartrending response. These go beyond being displays of linguistic cunning

to offer engrossing narratives that probe the depths and risks of human relationships. “Dear Henrietta” uses the form of a letter from a betrayed woman to her betrayer and replacer, gradually disclosing how secrecy creates a stench, “a stain on the clean air.” In “Possession,” three companions and a rooster search for a dear friend who has vanished, and the supernatural aspects of the tale heighten the intra-human connections and their consequences. “A Lily Is a Lily” offers a ghostly encounter as tender and plausibly truthful as an intimate revelation between lovers. But on many pages of Fifty Beasts to Break Your Heart, the author’s adroit writing dispenses not penetrating connections but confections, like a meal composed mostly of desserts. This reader was reminded of a passage in Nethercott’s “Fox Jaw,” where the narrator laments: The story has no purpose. At least, not one I can identify … Purposeless stories don’t remind me of you, and more importantly, don’t remind me of myself. They just leave me alone with words slapped end to end in constant vibration, like those perpetual motion toys made of stainless-steel balls on strings. Back and forth and back and forth, without destination.

INFO Fifty Beasts to Break Your Heart and Other Stories by GennaRose Nethercott, Vintage Books, 272 pages. $17. Nethercott will appear at Booktopia 2024, running Friday through Sunday, April 26 through 28, at Northshire Bookstore in Manchester Center. northshire.com

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON

CONSOLIDATED COMMUNICATIONS ACQUISITION BY CONDOR HOLDINGS LLC Thursday, March 7, 2024 – 7:00 PM The Vermont Public Utility Commission will hold a public hearing via videoconference to gather public input on the acquisition of Consolidated Communications by Condor Holdings LLC (PUC Case No. 23-4353-PET). The hearing will be held on Thursday, March 7, 2024, commencing at 7:00 P.M., utilizing Go To Meeting video conference with a telephone call-in option. The Public Hearing will commence immediately following the public information session, but no earlier than 7:00 P.M. A public information session will begin at 6:30 P.M. hosted by the Vermont Department of Public Service where Consolidated Communications will describe the merger and answer questions. Participants and members of the public may access the public hearing online at https://meet.goto.com/687217653 or call in by telephone using the following information: phone number: +1 (646) 749-3129; access code: 687-217-653. Participants may wish to download the GoToMeeting software application in advance of the hearing at https://meet.goto.com/install. Guidance on how to join the meeting and system requirements may be found at https://www. gotomeeting.com/meeting/online-meeting-support.

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Scrag Mountain Music concerts embrace natural transitions BY AMY L IL LY • lilly@sevendaysvt.com

M

ud season isn’t beautiful, but it does signal the end of what gbymca.org/programs/ tends to be a long Vermont winter. The sense of hope it adventure-camp brings is the inspiration for Scrag Mountain Music’s upcoming concerts in Mont16t-YMCA030624 1 2/29/24 3:14 PM pelier and Warren, titled “Winter Wind, Melting Ice: The Season of Transition.” “We leave behind the cold, drawing-in energy and start exposing ourselves to the air. It’s what Vermonters go through every year,” said Scrag cofounder Mary Bonhag, We’re here to help. who curated the program. The MarshOur obituary and in field-based soprano will perform with two memoriam services are affordable, accessible longtime collaborators, flutist Catherine and handled with Gregory and pianist David Kaplan. Among personal care. the works the latter two will play is a duet titled “Inside the Breath” by Evan Premo, Bonhag’s husband, who cofounded Scrag Post your obituary or in memoriam online and shares artistic director duties with and in print at sevendaysvt.com/lifelines. her. Or contact us at lifelines@sevendaysvt.com Bonhag’s thoughtfully chosen program or 865-1020 ext. 121. is quintessential Scrag: It promises to bring a combination of new music and canonical works to audiences 16t-Obit House Filler.indd 1 10/19/22 10:01 AM in a warm and unstilted way. (Scrag made the cover of the January issue of EMAg, the magazine of Early Music America, for its policy of “Come as you are. Pay what you can.”) Bonhag, who trained with Grammy winner Dawn Upshaw and counts a residency at western Massachusetts’ Tanglewood among her bona fides, will HOSTED BY VERMONT’S sing an early piece by modernist Elliott CONSERVATION DISTRICTS Carter, Warble for Lilac Time (1943). The 10-minute-long setting of Walt Whitman’s Native and naturalized trees Leaves of Grass is a “joyful” evocation of & shrubs • Berry plants • Fruit the melting March snows and yellowtrees • Nut trees • Seed mixes green willow tree sprouts, Bonhag said. Wildlife shelters • Live trout She last performed it as a master’s student & more! at New York’s Bard College Conservatory of Music. PICKUPS AVAILABLE IN “It’s been in my body for 15 years,” she said. “I’ve been waiting to share this Highgate, Montgomery, particular song with Vermonters because North Hero, Williston, Berlin, I think people really relate to it.” Morrisville, Barton, Rutland, Kaplan will also accompany Bonhag Poultney, Middlebury, Putney on three selections from Franz Schubert’s song cycle Winterreise, or Winter Journey MORE DETAILS AT: (1828). Written as the composer was dying VACD.ORG/TREESALES of syphilis, the songs are about a man’s heartbreak in winter; they’re “deep, dark and gorgeous — but heavy,” Bonhag said. She joins a recent spate of female singers performing the work, which was written for a tenor voice. Kaplan’s solo is Claude Debussy’s prelude “Des pas sur la neige,” or

Mary Bonhag

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CLASSICAL MUSIC

2/21/23 12:41 PM

Clockwise from above: Evan Premo, Catherine Gregory and David Kaplan

“Footprints in the Snow” — a logical choice for the theme. He and Gregory, his wife, will also perform David Lang’s “Vent” (1990), a minimalist piece that is included on their first album, released last September. Kaplan lives in Los Angeles, serves as co-artistic director of Lyrica Chamber Music in New Jersey and has performed everywhere from New York City’s Carnegie Hall to London’s Barbican. “Vent,” he said by phone, is “a foundational piece for that era of American minimalism. You can see that David is exploring how he can reduce music to its core or essence. He’s also working at combining the sounds of the two instruments into one laser beam of sound.” Lang, who cofounded the experimental New York City organization Bang on a Can, was a central inspiration for Judd Greenstein, a next-generation new-music

advocate and cofounder of New Amsterdam Records. Bonhag will perform Greenstein’s “Hillula,” a mid-2000s setting of the Zohar. The soprano specializes in sacred music of all types, but for a final piece, she chose one of Johann Sebastian Bach’s few secular cantatas, No. 209. The work features Gregory playing an obbligato flute line — one that equally balances the soprano voice — with Kaplan accompanying. Premo’s “Inside the Breath,” which he wrote specifically for Kaplan and Gregory, premiered at Kaplan’s Lyrica series in 2022. Inspired by a painting of the same title in oil and cold wax by Vermont painter Jan Sandman, the minimalist piece is “a direct musical transcription of my meditation practice,” Premo said by phone. Among the techniques he uses are phrases with the duration of deep, meditative breaths. The work, he added, is “a lot of swirling energy and musically represented sacred geometry.” Premo, whose compositions include commissions for the Pittsburgh Symphony Chamber Orchestra, a former ensemble of the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, and Vermont’s own Capital City Concerts, is particularly interested in spirituality. Scrag’s current season includes the double bassist’s ongoing series of “Spiritual Soundings” — live, improvised, ambient music created through looping and meant to enable audience meditation or movement. “Inside the Breath,” Premo said, is about the composer’s own inwardly spiritual movement, “the inwardness that is necessary to move from winter to spring.” More than any particular piece, Kaplan is looking forward to “the way that we present [the program],” he said, “from the informal spirit of the concerts to the way of engaging with the audience. It’s not that you, as a performer, are in a frame or on a pedestal; there’s a fluidity between audiences and performers. Scrag does that better than most.” ➆

INFO Scrag Mountain Music presents “Winter Wind, Melting Ice: The Season of Transition,” Friday, March 8, 7:30 p.m., at the Unitarian Church of Montpelier (live stream available); and Saturday, March 9, 7:30 p.m., at the Warren United Church. Pay what you can. scragmountainmusic.org


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on screen Dune: Part Two ★★★★

I

n the wake of the superhero boom, it takes a lot to persuade me to see a bigbudget epic in which the protagonist strolls away from explosions. But I read Frank Herbert’s sci-fi classic Dune at a tender age and saw the David Lynch version on its 1984 release, so I couldn’t stay away from the 2021 adaptation of the novel’s first half by Québécois director Denis Villeneuve — or its sequel. Anyway, Dune: Part One ended on a cliff-hanger, so here we are. Part Two enjoyed the largest weekend box-office opening of 2024 so far, making the chances for a third film look promising.

Timothée Chalamet is a messiah, a heartthrob and possibly a little unhinged in the breathtaking sequel to the sci-fi hit.

The deal

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Previously on Dune: It’s the far future, but people still duel with swords. Everybody wants to control the planet Arrakis, source of the psychotropic substance called spice, which makes interstellar travel possible. The emperor (Christopher Walken) orders the Atreides family to take charge of the planet, only to double-cross them in concert with their enemy, the loathsome Baron Harkonnen (Stellan Skarsgård). With the head of the family dead, teenage heir Paul Atreides (Timothée Chalamet) and his mom, Jessica (Rebecca Ferguson), escape into the desert and find refuge with the Indigenous Fremen. In the second film, our protagonists learn to survive in a hostile landscape inhabited by mammoth, hungry sandworms. Leader Stilgar (Javier Bardem) believes in a prophecy that Paul will lead the Fremen to paradise, not knowing that said prophecy was seeded on Arrakis by the Bene Gesserit, the esoteric religious (and somewhat superpowered) order to which Jessica belongs. Stilgar strong-arms Jessica into drinking a brain-opening substance called the “water of life” and becoming the tribe’s spiritual leader. Young warrior Chani (Zendaya) doesn’t trust the outsiders who have always exploited her world, but Paul wins her over with boyish charm and humility. Paul and the Fremen engage in guerrilla warfare against the ruling Harkonnens, causing shake-ups off-planet, where the emperor, the baron, the Bene Gesserit and others play high-stakes games of court politics. Everything is headed toward a showdown. But will Paul really lead the Fremen to paradise or only use them to start a bloody galactic revenge crusade?

REVIEW

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Will you like it?

As sword-wielding epics go, Dune is less like Star Wars than “Game of Thrones.” There are bad guys — the Harkonnens are almost comically evil, portrayed here with liberal use of Nazi imagery — but there aren’t many good guys. Or good girls, for that matter. Everybody who isn’t bloodthirstily fighting is ruthlessly scheming, from the Bene Gesserit Reverend Mother (Charlotte Rampling) to the emperor’s demure daughter (Florence Pugh). Even Paul, our supposed hero, struggles with a will to power that pushes him inexorably toward violent ends. While the screenplay by Villeneuve and Jon Spaihts takes great pains to lay out Paul’s internal conflict, his character never comes fully to life on-screen. He’s weighed down by enormous symbolic baggage, making this a thankless role to play. Herbert’s stiff dialogue defeated Kyle MacLachlan in 1984, and Chalamet doesn’t have much better luck with it. He comes off as more callow than committed to the role’s solemnity, as if he might be tempted to break character and start giggling (and you can’t always blame him). The film’s real center of gravity is its spectacle, the craft with which Villeneuve and his crew depict Herbert’s stupendously

complex worlds. The desert landscape of Arrakis has a delicacy and viscerality that recall the days of George Lucas’ Tatooine. In aerial shots, it has a sculpted beauty; up close, the sand flying in our faces feels convincing. The sequence in which Paul first rides a sandworm is harrowing and exhilarating; regardless of how much CGI went into it, the stunt looks genuinely hard. The scene is dreamlike and fantastical, but it doesn’t have the frustrating weightlessness of so many superhero films. The dream becomes a nightmare in equally visually thrilling scenes set on Giedi Prime, the Harkonnen homeworld. We meet the sociopathic counterpart to Paul, Feyd-Rautha (Austin Butler), in a gladiatorial arena straight out of Spartacus. The whole world is captured in an eerie, airless black and white that suggests an ’80s music video circle of hell, where people wear a lot of vinyl and chains — and kill for fun. With alternatives like these, it’s not hard to sympathize with the Fremen, even as they transform from scrappy survivors into fanatics. By the film’s climax, both Paul and Jessica have been infected with galaxy brain — a phenomenon Herbert seems to have foreseen — and the audience may be worn out. A strategic change

to the book’s ending, however, promises juicy conflict to come. Dune is a heady brew, but its overweening ambition and weirdness are antidotes to the four-quadrant calculation of so many modern blockbusters. I’ll be back for more. MARGO T HARRI S O N margot@sevendaysvt.com

IF YOU LIKE THIS, TRY... DUNE: PART ONE (2021; Max): Part Two

doesn’t spend much time catching up viewers, so a rewatch is recommended. DUNE (1984; Max, rentable): Lynch’s

compressed adaptation of the novel is lacking in many ways. But its steampunk-meets-punk-rock aesthetic clearly influenced Villeneuve’s version, and as I watched Part Two, I found myself remembering moments in the earlier film that deserve to be called iconic. You can’t beat Sting as Feyd-Rautha. ARRIVAL (2016; Paramount+, Peacock,

Showtime, rentable): I’m a fan of Prisoners, Enemy, Sicario and Blade Runner 2049, but this moody, thoughtful adaptation of a Ted Chiang story about extraterrestrial communication is still my favorite Villeneuve movie.


MOVIE CLIPS

CABRINI: This biopic follows immigrant Catholic missionary Francesca Cabrini (Cristiana Dell’Anna) as she tries to relieve poverty in early 20th-century New York. John Lithgow also stars; Alejandro Monteverde (Sound of Freedom) directed. (145 min, PG-13. Capitol, Majestic) IMAGINARY: What if you returned to your childhood home to find your imaginary friend still there — and angry? Jeff Wadlow (Truth or Dare) directed this horror flick, starring DeWanda Wise and Taegen Burns. (104 min, PG-13. Essex, Majestic, Star) KUNG FU PANDA 4: As he levels up to become a spiritual leader, Po (voice of Jack Black) must train his warrior successor in the continuation of the animated adventure series. With Awkwafina and Viola Davis. Mike Mitchell and Stephanie Stine directed. (94 min, PG. Bijou, Capitol, Essex, Majestic, Marquis, Paramount, Star)

CURRENTLY PLAYING 2023 OSCAR NOMINATED SHORT FILMS: See the short films contending for Academy Awards in separate live action, animation and documentary programs. (Run times vary, N/A. Roxy) AMERICAN FICTIONHHHH Jeffrey Wright plays a novelist who tries a daring hoax after his publisher tells him his books aren’t “Black enough” in this comedy-drama from Cord Jefferson. (117 min, R. Roxy; reviewed 1/17) ANYONE BUT YOUHH1/2 A fancy wedding gives two exes (Sydney Sweeney and Glen Powell) an incentive to fake-date in this rom-com from Will Gluck (Easy A). (103 min, R. Majestic)

BOB MARLEY: ONE LOVEHH Kingsley Ben-Adir plays the reggae icon in this biopic directed by Reinaldo Marcus Green (King Richard). With James Norton and Lashana Lynch. (104 min, PG-13. Bijou, Capitol, Essex, Majestic, Playhouse, Roxy, Stowe, Welden) DEMON SLAYER: KIMETSU NO YAIBA — TO THE HASHIRA TRAINING: Tanjiro attempts to level up in the movie series based on the popular dark fantasy anime. Haruo Sotozaki directed. (104 min, R. Roxy) DRIVE-AWAY DOLLSHHH Two friends (Margaret Qualley and Geraldine Viswanathan) run straight into trouble when they encounter outlaws on a road trip in this action comedy directed by Ethan Coen. With Beanie Feldstein and Colman Domingo. (84 min, R. Roxy) DUNE: PART TWOHHH1/2 The saga of Paul Atreides (Timothée Chalamet) and the spice planet Arrakis continues in Denis Villeneuve’s adaptation of Frank Herbert’s pioneering sci-fi series. With Zendaya, Rebecca Ferguson and Javier Bardem. (166 min, PG-13. Big Picture, Bijou, Capitol, Essex, Majestic, Marquis, Paramount, Roxy, Star, Stowe, Welden; reviewed 3/6) MADAME WEBH1/2 Sony’s Spider-Man Universe continues with this action flick in which Dakota Johnson plays a woman using her precognitive abilities to save others from a looming threat. With Sydney Sweeney and Isabela Merced. S.J. Clarkson directed. (117 min, PG-13. Majestic, Roxy, Welden) MIGRATIONHHH A duck family meets many mishaps on its first-ever trip south in this animated family comedy. (92 min, PG. Essex, Majestic, Welden)

ORDINARY ANGELSHHH In this fact-based drama, Hilary Swank plays a hairdresser who rallies a community around the cause of saving a child’s life. With Alan Ritchson and Amy Acker. Jon Gunn directed. (116 min, PG. Big Picture, Capitol, Essex, Majestic, Stowe)

Dakota Johnson in Madame Web

PERFECT DAYSHHHH1/2 Wim Wenders directed this meditative, Oscar-nominated film about a man (Koji Yakusho) who finds joy in his everyday routine — cleaning Tokyo’s arty public toilets. (124 min, PG. Roxy, Savoy; reviewed 2/14) WONKAHHH1/2 Timothée Chalamet plays the young Willy Wonka in this musical fantasy, directed by Paul King (Paddington). (116 min, PG. Essex, Majestic)

OLDER FILMS AND SPECIAL SCREENINGS

CAPITOL SHOWPLACE: 93 State St., Montpelier, 229-0343, fgbtheaters.com *CATAMOUNT ARTS: 115 Eastern Ave., St. Johnsbury, 748-2600, catamountarts.org ESSEX CINEMAS & T-REX THEATER: 21 Essex Way, Suite 300, Essex, 879-6543, essexcinemas.com

THE CHOSEN: SEASON 4: EPISODES 7-8 (Essex, except Fri & Mon)

MAJESTIC 10: 190 Boxwood St., Williston, 878-2010, majestic10.com

ISRAELISM (Savoy, Sun only) LABYRINTH (Essex, Wed 6 & Sun only)

MARQUIS THEATER: 65 Main St., Middlebury, 388-4841, middleburymarquis.com

METROPOLITAN OPERA: LA FORZA DEL DESTINO (Essex, Sat only)

*MERRILL’S ROXY CINEMAS: 222 College St., Burlington, 864-3456, merrilltheatres.net

TROLLS BAND TOGETHER (Majestic, Welden)

PARAMOUNT TWIN CINEMA: 241 N. Main St., Barre, 479-9621, fgbtheaters.com

OPEN THEATERS

PLAYHOUSE MOVIE THEATRE: 11 S. Main St., Randolph, 728-4012, playhouseflicks.com

Catamount Arts’ theater is currently closed until further notice. (* = upcoming schedule for theater was not available at press time)

SAVOY THEATER: 26 Main St., Montpelier, 229-0598, savoytheater.com

*BIG PICTURE THEATER: 48 Carroll Rd., Waitsfield, 496-8994, bigpicturetheater.info BIJOU CINEPLEX 4: 107 Portland St., Morrisville, 888-3293, bijou4.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

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2/29/24 3:21 PM


art

Gold Standards

The exhibition “Gilded” wants us to consider that which does not glitter

COURTESY OF THE ARTIST AND L.A. LOUVER/HOOD MUSEUM

B Y E R IC SUT PHI N

"Invincible Kings of This Mad Mad World" by Gajin Fujita

I

n “Gilded: Contemporary Artists Explore Value and Worth,” gold is an idea as well as a material embellishment. The traveling exhibition, curated by Emily Stamey of the Weatherspoon Art Museum in Greensboro, N.C., is now on view at the Hood Museum of Art in Hanover, N.H. The show asks us to “reconsider our value systems” as the application of gold on artwork purports to draw attention to overlooked or marginalized subjects. The 17-artist exhibition sets up a conundrum. How does adding 24-karat gold to an already precious commodity — contemporary art — critique how we assign value and worth to it? Does the prevalence of gold in the exhibition direct viewers’ focus to the underlying sociopolitical messages embedded in some of the works? Or does it simply dazzle? The first piece a visitor encounters 48

SEVEN DAYS MARCH 6-13, 2024

themes of the Isis and Osiris myth. From a “Invincible Kings of This Mad Mad distance, the sculpture resembles the behe- World,” by LA artist Gajin Fujita, is a fourFROM A DISTANCE, spinal column of a long-extinct beast. panel painting more than 16 feet long. The THE SCULPTURE RESEMBLES THE mothAdjacent to this is Ecuadorean artist billboard-size work features large flowers, Ronny Quevedo’s “Zoot Suit Riot at Qori- a stylized lion and a blue-skinned demon BEHEMOTH SPINAL COLUMN OF cancha,” a painterly take on collage. The painted in a graphic, Japanese tattoo-art

A LONG-EXTINCT BEAST.

upon entering is Sherin Guirguis “Larmes d’Isis II,” a towering sculpture approximately 30 feet high. It consists of wooden teardrops strung randomly among five thick nautical ropes, which are suspended from the ceiling and splay out upon a round base. The teardrops feature white, gray and gold geometric patterns; bits of gold leaf appear on the tips of the ropes at the base of the sculpture. Guirguis, an Egypt-born, Los Angelesbased artist, pays tribute to a poem by Egyptian feminist Doria Shafik and relays

4-by-8-foot work, inspired by zoot suit patterns, presents a maplike motif. Some of the pattern sections are filled in with gold and silver leaf, which highlight their crisp, elegant contours. Text such as “Vogue Pattern,” along with descriptions of the parts of the garment to which the geometric shapes correspond, are interwoven throughout the abstract pattern. Each layer is like an object lesson in the fraught history of the distinctive men’s suit, from its origins in African American communities in the 1930s to its role in the so-called Zoot Suit Riots involving servicemen and Latino youth in Los Angeles in 1943.

style. These subjects are set against a dense network of graffiti that is layered atop a gilded backdrop. “Blue Puddles,” by Brooklyn-based Summer Wheat, merges decorative appeal, formal complexity and visual impact. The 68-by-141-inch painting is an Edenic tableau of cartoonish female figures who gaze at their reflections in black pools of water. The scene is delightfully witchy — a vibe that’s enhanced by the palette: pale blue, violet and black with highlights of gold and neon pink throughout. A sample swatch that demonstrates Wheat’s process is located in a small plaque


ART SHOWS

Embrace Your Inner Artist

COURTESY OF WEATHERSPOON ART MUSEUM/HOOD MUSEUM

Find joy in self-expression with support from encouraging instructors.

"Olympia Triptych" by Hung Liu

next to the piece. Essentially, gouache and acrylic paint are applied to the verso of aluminum mesh; the image we see is the result of the paint squeezing through the mesh. The invitation to experience the work’s tactility is a welcome touch. The gesture also underscores Wheat’s “themes of labor and its values,” as described by Stamey in her catalog essay. Another standout is Hung Liu’s “Olympia Triptych,” in which the late Chineseborn American artist reimagined Édouard Manet’s 1863 “Olympia.” The French painter’s then-scandalous oil painting portrays a sex worker in a brothel setting. Liu based her 41-by-95-inch work on a historical photograph of a Chinese prostitute reclining in the classic odalisque pose. The photograph came from a cache of vernacular 19th-century images that Liu found and frequently based work on. Here, she seamlessly fused photography, lithography, traditional Chinese painting techniques and expressionistic, gestural

painting — including metal leaf — to create a fraught yet harmonious image. “Gilded” offers a veritable treasure chest brimming with shimmering works that point to issues beyond their material opulence — albeit with mixed results. The show’s shortcoming has more to do with the Weatherspoon’s original curatorial strategy. There’s plenty of satisfying art to look at, yet gold tends to draw attention to itself rather than the work’s subject matter. As a result, the abundance of gold signals luxury and, at times, excess. The intrinsic beauty of gold and its connections to taste, wealth and opulence tends to obscure, rather than illuminate, the subtle narratives that “Gilded” would like to highlight. ➆

Enrolling all levels for Drawing, Painting, and Fused Glass Classes. davisstudiovt.com • 802-425-2700 • 916 Shelburne Road, South Burlington 4T-davisstudio020123.indd 1

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Meet the

INFO

STRUT designers!

“Gilded: Contemporary Artists Explore Value and Worth,” on view through June 22 at Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, in Hanover, N.H. hoodmuseum.dartmouth.edu

REVIEW

OLD KIDS ATTIRE / JEFFEREY STEELE STOOF

CASA X BELLCATE CLOVER CHAPEL

STREETFAIRY_UPCYCLE

FREAK FLAG PRODUCTIONS

TONYA WHITNEY

GERALD FITZPATRICK

2C DESIGNZ

JESS RODRIGUES

ZIMI COLLECTIONS

COURTESY OF HOOD MUSEUM

Foreground: “Larmes d’Isis II" by Sherin Guirguis

DAKIN FULLER / FINE FORAGER ARTS

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3/5/24 8:03 AM


art MAR. 6-13 CALL TO ARTISTS

ART NEWS

ART IN THE GARDEN: Horsford Gardens and Nursery in Charlotte invites artists to apply to teach their own classes on its grounds this June through September. Details and application at horsfordnursery.com. Deadline: March 24. Online. Info, 425-2811.

New Owners of Robert Paul Galleries Look to the Future B Y AL I C E D O D G E

GET YOUR ART SHOW LISTED HERE AND ONLINE!

PROMOTING AN ART EXHIBIT? SUBMIT THE INFO AND IMAGES BY FRIDAY AT NOON AT SEVENDAYSVT.COM/POSTEVENT OR ART@SEVENDAYSVT.COM.

50

SEVEN DAYS MARCH 6-13, 2024

‘THE LIFT OF BLUE’: Seeking artists for an upcoming group exhibition in support of mental health awareness at AVA Gallery and Art Center in Lebanon, N.H., in collaboration with West Central Behavioral Health. Deadline: April 8. Online. Free. Info, 603-448-3117.

Jack Morris and Alex Weathers with Martini the dog

PLEX ARTS FESTIVAL: The grassroots immersive arts event in Burlington’s Old North End focuses on experimental, left-of-thedial and contemporary work. All art forms are welcome. Details on Instagram. Deadline: March 24. Online. Free. Info, plexartsfest@gmail.com. VOLUNTEER AT THE PARK: The art park in Enosburg is seeking volunteers June to October to provide support for programming and visitor services. Email for info and application. Deadline: May 10. Cold Hollow Sculpture Park, Enosburg Falls. Info, sue@coldhollowsculpturepark.com.

OPENINGS + RECEPTIONS ALICE WIESE & ATHENA TASIOPOULOS: “Refrain,” an exhibition of mixed-media collage and textile works. Reception and fifth anniversary party: Saturday, March 9, 5:30-8 p.m. Soapbox Arts, Burlington, March 9-April 20. Info, 324-0014. AMY KOLB NOYES: “Bitter Brew: Consumption Choices & Consequences,” an MFA exhibit featuring new installations and mixed-media art. Reception: Wednesday, March 13, 3 p.m. Julian Scott Memorial Gallery, Vermont State University-Johnson, March 11-April 5. Info, 635-1469. AMY SCHACHTER: “Hiding in Plain Sight,” abstract figurative works. Second Floor Gallery, Studio Place Arts, Barre, March 13-April 20. Info, 479-7069. ART AT THE MALTEX: Artworks by Gabriel Boray, Kathleen Fleming, Linden Eller, Druppa and Caleb Kenna. University of Vermont Medical Center, Burlington, through April 30. Info, 865-7296. AXEL STOHLBERG: “The Grand Assemblage,” 3D constructions by the Vermont artist. Third Floor Gallery, Studio Place Arts, Barre, March 13-April 20. Info, 479-7069.

COURTESY OF JACK MORRIS

Jack Morris is a 16th-generation Vermonter with family ties dating back to Ethan Allen, or so he’s been told. His partner, Alex Weathers, is a Houston native who grew up surrounded by contemporary art. The two recently purchased Robert Paul Galleries in Stowe, which over its 34 years has primarily shown paintings and other artworks in traditional styles. The 23-year-old gallerists are anything but. The pandemic disrupted the college years of both new owners, but with surprisingly positive results: In Stowe, Morris taught himself photography during the shutdown. Weathers, who was studying art history at the University of California Santa Cruz, rejected virtual classes and moved to Vermont, where the two started dating. When Morris saw a “retirement sale” sign on the gallery last year, he stopped in to see if he could buy any framing equipment. Instead, he found himself making plans to buy the business. Over the past nine months, the couple has been thrown into the deep end of learning how to run a commercial gallery, from obtaining a business loan to becoming familiar with their client base to repainting the spaces. In late October, they took their first day off. Since taking over from previous owners Robert Paul O’Toole and Gail O’Toole last May, Morris and Weathers have been making lots of changes, without dropping Robert Paul’s roster of established Vermont artists. “The goal that Jack and I have is, we want to keep a lot of the quintessential Vermont artists that people love and know,” Weathers explained, “but we do want to bring in new flavors. We want to slowly become a more contemporary-leaning gallery.” That approach is evident in how the couple are showcasing artists. Instead of keeping everything the same — Morris pointed to a wall where Fred Swan’s paintings had hung for 30 years — he and Weathers are curating rotating exhibitions of each artist’s work alongside a smaller selection of other pieces. Their current show, “40 Years Painting Vermont: An Eric Tobin Retrospective,” features many of the noted plein air painter’s works, including a timeline that starts with a remarkably adept first effort by the artist at age 12. Tobin’s loose brushwork and sense of light, especially in works such as “The Village Church, 2004” and “Journey’s End, 2019,” make these paintings well worth seeing in person. Although Tobin has long had a presence at Robert Paul, a number of these works had never been displayed before. Morris and Weathers will soon change the name of the gallery to Hayden Block (their combined middle names) and look forward to bringing on new artists. They have already added a few fresh faces, such as Brooklyn-based painter and printmaker Emilio Perez, Italian painter Sonia Bukhgalter and Burlington multimedia artist Tim DeLorenzo. The gallerists are looking to diversify the types, styles and subjects of the works they show, as well as who is represented — think fewer barns and older white men, more of everything else. “Viewing art and relating to art is a very personal experience, and I want people to come in here and find something that they

can connect with, and that’s a very individual thing,” Weathers said. “Having diversity within the gallery is so important to me, because I want every type of person to be able to come here and see something that speaks to them.” ➆

INFO

“40 Years Painting Vermont: An Eric Tobin Retrospective” is on view through April 14 at Robert Paul Galleries (soon to be Hayden Block) in Stowe. robertpaulgalleries.com

VISUAL ART IN SEVEN DAYS:

ART LISTINGS ARE WRITTEN BY PAMELA POLSTON. LISTINGS ARE RESTRICTED TO ART SHOWS IN TRULY PUBLIC PLACES.

CHARLI CANCROFT: “The End Is Only the Beginning,” a solo art exhibit as part of a senior capstone project. Reception: Thursday, March 7, 6-7 p.m. McCarthy Art Gallery, Saint Michael’s College, Colchester, through March 9. Info, bcollier@smcvt.edu. ELLIOT BURG AND SHANNON ALEXANDER: An exhibition of photographs of Montpelier’s July flooding. Reception: Thursday, March 14, 3:30-5:30 p.m., celebrating all who helped during and after the flood. Vermont Statehouse, Montpelier, through March 29. Info, david.schutz@vermont.gov. FEDA EID: “Rooted Revelations,” photographic-based self-portraiture by the Lebanese American visual artist. Reception: Saturday, March 9, 3-6 p.m. Firefolk Arts, Waitsfield, March 9-April 30. Donations accepted. Info, firefolkarts@gmail.com. ‘FORM + TEXTURE’: An exhibit in honor of Women’s History Month, featuring fiber artists Sarah Ashe, Breslin Bell, Shari Boraz, Rosalind Daniels, Jennifer Davey, Janet Fredericks, Susan Gaffney, Karen Henderson, Eve Jacobs-Carnahan, Mon Kaczyk, Karen Kamenetzky, McKenna Kellner, Marya Lowe, Patricia Miller, Rachel Montroy, Sharon Myers, Leslie Roth,

= ONLINE EVENT OR EXHIBIT


FIND ALL ART SHOWS + EVENTS AT SEVENDAYSVT.COM/ART

Marcie Scudder, Nancy Sepe, Gaal Shepherd, Gail Smuda, Susan Steinbrock, Fern Strong, Dayna Talbot and Nancy Thun. Reception: Friday, March 8, 4-6 p.m. AVA Gallery and Art Center, Lebanon, N.H., through March 30. Info, 603-448-3117. HIGH SCHOOL SPOTLIGHT: A showcase of artworks by area students. Reception: Saturday, March 9, 2-4 p.m. Yester House Galleries, Southern Vermont Arts Center, Manchester, March 9-24. Info, 362-1405. ‘A KALEIDOSCOPE OF ART’: An annual exhibition of artworks by Vermont students in preschool through 12th grade. Reception: Saturday, March 9, noon-2 p.m. Chaffee Art Center, Rutland, March 9-April 5. Info, 775-0356. LEGACY 2024 COLLECTION: The works of 17 contemporary artists, as well as selected works by Mary and Alden Bryan, honoring the tradition of artists who visit Vermont and New England specifically to paint. Bryan Memorial Gallery, Jeffersonville, March 6-December 22. Info, 644-5100. MARK THOMPSON: “Visuals,” oil paintings, abstract collages and mixed-media sketches by the Montpelier artist. Reception: Saturday, March 9, 2-4 p.m. First Congregational Church of Berlin, March 9-April 30. Info, 522-7649. MICHALE B. ESTAR: Large-scale abstract-figurative paintings on found and repurposed surfaces by the St. Johnsbury artist. Reception: Friday, March 8, 4-8 p.m., with catered dinner available. The Satellite Gallery, Lyndonville, March 8-31. Info, melmelts@ yahoo.com. NEIL BERGER: Watercolor paintings of the natural world. Village Wine and Coffee, Shelburne, through April 13. Info, neildberger@gmail.com. ‘RESPONSES’: A touring exhibit from the Museum of Chinese in America, in partnership with Vermont Humanities as part of its programming around Vermont Reads 2023: Last Night at the Telegraph Club by Malinda Lo. Reception: Friday, March 8, 5-7 p.m. Manchester Community Library, Manchester Center, March 8-April 19. Info, 262-1357. ‘RISE: TREES, OUR BOTANICAL GIANTS’: A group exhibition in which 27 artists pay homage to wood in their work, whether in wood materials or in ceramic, textiles and functional design. Reception and awards: Thursday, March 7, 5-7 p.m. The Gallery at Mad River Valley Arts, Waitsfield, March 7-April 26. Info, 496-6682. ROBERT TOWNE: “Natural Transitions,” paintings; curated by Studio Place Arts. Morse Block Deli & Taps, Barre, through May 10. Info, 479-7069. SMALL MEMBERS’ GROUP SHOW: An exhibition featuring works in a variety of styles and mediums, selected from the collections of the participating artists. Bryan Memorial Gallery, Jeffersonville, March 6-May 12. Info, 644-5100. STUDENT ART EXHIBITION: Works in a variety of mediums by students of Lamoille Union School. Bryan Memorial Gallery, Jeffersonville, March 6-24. Info, 644-5100.

‘THEN TO NOW’: A collection of glass pieces produced by AO Glass cofounders Rich Arentzen and Tove Ohlander over the past 20 years. Reception: Saturday, March 16, 3-5 p.m. Frog Hollow Vermont Craft Gallery, Burlington, through March 29. Info, 863-6458. ‘TRACES’: A group photography exhibit featuring images that hint of people and events come and gone, as told by the traces left behind. Juried by Jeff Curto. Reception: Friday, March 8, 4-7 p.m. PhotoPlace Gallery, Middlebury, March 8-29. Info, photos@photoplacegallery.com. ‘UP & DOWN, IN & OUT: EMBROIDERY AND ITS KIN’: A group exhibition of original contemporary needlework. Main Floor Gallery, Studio Place Arts, Barre, March 13-April 20. Info, 479-7069.

VISITING ARTIST TALK: JOE HARJO: The multidisciplinary artist from the Muscogee (Creek) Nation of Oklahoma discusses his work, which addresses the lack of visibility of Native culture, lived experience and identity in America. Red Mill Gallery, Vermont Studio Center, Johnson, Wednesday, March 6, 8 p.m. Free. Info, 635-2727. ‘MIGRATION AND CONTEMPORARY CULTURES IN VERMONT’: A conversation on how immigrant and refugee artists bridge creative traditions to new possibilities in Vermont, with Negina Azimi and Abdullah Hafizi, of the global arts collective ArtLords, and exhibiting artist Paula Higa; moderated by University of Vermont professor Pablo Bose. In person or register for virtual option. BCA Center, Burlington, Thursday, March 7, 6-7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 865-7166. OPEN STUDIO: A guided meditation, an hour of art making in any modality or genre, and a share-andwitness process. No experience required. Many materials available. Expressive Arts Burlington, Thursday, March 7, 12:30-2:30 p.m. Donations accepted. Info, 343-8172. PECHAKUCHA NIGHT, VOL. 36: A series of fast-paced presentations by local creatives in a social setting. Tickets at flynnvt.org. Flynn Space, Burlington, Thursday, March 7, 7 p.m. $10.

Human rights are not only violated by terrorism, repression or assassination, but also by unfair economic structures that create huge inequalities. — POPE FRANCIS

SOVEREIGN OF THE VATICAN CITY STATE

40TH SEASON OPENING: A reception for the Legacy 2024 Collection, Small Members’ Group Show and the Student Art Exhibition. Bryan Memorial Gallery, Jeffersonville, Saturday, March 9, 3-6 p.m. Free. Info, 644-5100. WEEKLY WATERCOLOR SESSIONS: Artist Pauline Nolte demonstrates and instructs painting with watercolors in an eight-week class on Tuesdays, 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Supplies provided. To reserve a space, email judi@waterburypubliclibrary. com. Waterbury Public Library, March 12-April 30. Free. Info, 244-7036. ➆

But wait, there’s more!

100

additional art listings are on view at sevendaysvt.com/art.

4T-sweeney030624.indd 1

Now hear this!

2/12/24 11:18 AM

Seven Days is recording select stories from the weekly newspaper for your listening pleasure.

LISTEN to this story and more:

NEW

The Fight for Decker Towers: Drug Users and Homeless People Have Overrun a LowIncome High-Rise. Residents Are Gearing Up to Evict Them. 31 MINS.

JAMES BUCK

‘TELLING STORIES FRAME BY FRAME’: The Vermont Arts Council Spotlight Gallery hosts a virtual showcase of films by Vermont State University students in the Cinema Studies & Production program. Virtual artists talk: Friday, March 8, 5-6 p.m. Online, through April 30. Info, 828-5422.

ART EVENTS

Find all the calls to artists, ongoing art shows and future events online.

Start listening at: sevendaysvt.com/aloud 4t-aloud030624.indd 1

SEVEN DAYS MARCH 6-13, 2024

51

3/5/24 3:53 PM


LUKE AWTRY

music+nightlife Knowing the Score: The High Breaks Debut New Hip-Hop Series

Though sometimes derided and often controversial, sampling has become a bedrock of modern popular music. It had its birth in hip-hop in the ’70s, when producers took drum breaks from soul, funk and R&B records, especially anything by the Godfather of Soul, JAMES BROWN, who has been sampled more than 9,000 times to date. In 2024, samples are a bigger part of pop music than ever, with rappers now sampling other rappers — young stars ICE SPICE and JUICE WRLD have sampled DIDDY and EMINEM songs, respectively. Maybe it’s a nod to nostalgia, or maybe it’s just in keeping with modern society’s need to rehash everything. (Hi there, Hollywood. What’s the remake this week?) But modern sampling has a bit of a snakeeating-its-own-tail vibe, as artists take hooks from songs that were already built on other songs. That’s not to say some cool music isn’t coming out of the changing practice, as musicians try out new ideas. Take Burlington mainstay MATT HAGEN, who wants to cut out the middleman and make brand-new, sample-ready tunes for local rappers to use. As he explained by phone last week, the guitarist was in the studio with his surf-rock act, the HIGH BREAKS, when he had an epiphany of sorts. “The band has all these songs I call ‘one-line rides,’” he said. “It’s music with a single lyric recycled throughout the song, what I like to think of as a palate cleanser — little, mostly instrumental grooves.” Hagen and his bandmates realized the songs made for perfect sample fodder and hatched an idea: a series featuring the High Breaks playing live backing music for local hip-hop artists to freestyle over. High Break Beats is a weekly residency at Nectar’s in Burlington, running on Wednesdays from March 13 to 27. The band will play sets of its own tunes followed by a different crew of 802 rappers every week, including BOXGUTS, HUMBLE AMONG, ESKAE and BIG HOMIE WES. “I used the Metal Monday format to set it up,” the ever-busy Hagen said, referring to the metal series he has hosted at Nectar’s. “As soon as I came up with the idea, I reached out to DJ KANGANADE. Kanga’s one of the best 52

SEVEN DAYS MARCH 6-13, 2024

The High Breaks

S UNDbites News and views on the local music + nightlife scene B Y CHR IS FA RN S W O RT H turntablists around, and he’ll be the backbone of the night.” Hagen sees the fusion of local bands and rappers as a natural extension of a scene he believes is more collaborative than ever. “Any time I think of these weird little ideas for things, I’m so blown away and grateful for the support I get from the community,” he said. “And from Nectar’s, who always seem down to try out new things.” The series is sponsored by cannabis growers and dispensaries such as Blue

Sage, Winooski Organics and Forbins. Hagen wants the shows to “raise awareness of the Vermont cannabis industry through collective sponsorship and collaboration. “Alcohol sponsorship has always been an industry standard,” Hagen continued. “This is a way to show that the cannabis industry can fill that role, too. And, hey, if you ask me, cannabis and music historically vibe a lot better than booze, especially when you talk about hip-hop.” The shows will also host live recordings of KRIS BROWN’s

“Cannasations,” a podcast featuring Brown, a voice-over artist who narrated the High Breaks’ Smirk of the Dolphin live show, talking with different area cannabis figures. Hagen hopes the series will foster interplay among musicians of different genres and spur his band to take its sample-ready tunes beyond the Green Mountains. His SAN MATEO collaborator MATT BURR, former drummer for GRACE POTTER AND THE NOCTURNALS, works with young rappers at his Puerto Rico recording studio, San Juan Sound. “Matt has an opportunity to expose a lot of those young artists on a global scale,” Hagen said. “So I sent him some of the tracks the band and I recorded — I’d love to make this a cross-cultural bridge. That would be wild.” For Hagen, it’s the latest endeavor in what seems like an endless procession of projects. Whether he’s singing murder ballads at the 126 downtown, strumming jazz guitar at Hotel Vermont, rocking out in a RAGE AGAINST THE MACHINE cover band or playing PINK FLOYD songs for the upcoming solar eclipse, Hagen is the hardest-working man in (Vermont) show business. Maybe that’s why he’s trying to get in on James Brown’s sample crown? “It’s a little crazy, I know. But when I do things in batches, I always have problems with the projects sort of stacking up,” Hagen said. “Last week I was in the studio with the High Breaks for a few days, then I was in there myself for a few days afterwards, recording my Christmas album.” Uh, Christmas album, you say? “Yeah! It’s all originals, 10 new holiday classics,” Hagen said. “It’s kind of weird to pivot from recording surf rock

Eye on the Scene Last week’s live music highlights from photographer Luke Awtry NOAH KESEY MAGIC BAND, MUDDY WATERS, BURLINGTON, FRIDAY, MARCH 1: I will argue that Coldplay’s debut, Parachutes, would be a near-perfect

album if it weren’t for that annoying song “Yellow.” Ironically, last Friday, the Noah Kesey Magic Band ended their set at Muddy Waters with a cover of the song — and it was the best version I’ve heard. I always wanted “Yellow” to be a total sludge fest, and Kesey delivered. The rest of the set, featuring songs from Kesey’s new album, Holding Hands Around the World (which I’m definitely getting on cassette), was even better. But what’s this about Muddy Waters, the mellow downtown coffee shop, having rock shows? The trend started last year with some late-night Burlington Electronic Department shows and was affectionately dubbed “Clubby Muddys” by Muddy Waters employee and roost.world front person Zaq Schuster. Though the coffee shop isn’t ready to go public quite yet, very cool plans for live entertainment at Muddy’s are in the works.


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188 MAIN STREET BURLINGTON, VT 05401 | TUE-SAT 5PM-1:30AM | 802-658-4771

1. “Talking Dirty” by Noah Kesey 2. “Blunt Packed to My Head” by conswank, My Favorite Color 3. “Get Yer Boogie On” by Atom & the Orbits 4. “Bait and Switch” by Ghastly Sound 5. “Twenty” by Lily Seabird 6. “Riddlin’” by Xander Naylor 7. “Into the House” by Wren Kitz

Scan to listen sevendaysvt. com/playlist

to making Christmas music, but if I want this record ready for the holidays, I have to do it now.” Stay tuned to see if any of the Christmas songs involve fucking a dolphin, as the High Breaks’ last record did. In the meantime, get down to Nectar’s next week for the start of High Break Beats. Even better, the shows are free! Find more information at liveatnectars.com.

On the Beat

The Stone Church in Brattleboro is bringing back its GRRRLS 2 the Front series, which debuted last year. With a month of workshops and a run of live shows at venues around the state, GRRRLS 2 the Front aims to increase participation among women, trans and nonbinary people in the music industry, particularly in sound design, lighting and booking — all areas where those

No Showers On Vacation FRI 3.8

Hayley Jane w/ Hunter Root WED 3.13, 3.20, 3.27

HIP HOP & SURF ROCK

High Break Beats

The High Breaks, DJ Kanga & more THUR 3.14 (low tix) + FRI 3.15 (sold out)

Eggy

SAT 3.16 (sold out) + SUN 3.17 (low tix)

Dogs In A Pile FRI 3.22

All Night Boogie Band w/ Baby Fern & The Plants FRI 3.29

Byrdman in 2012

The Edd w/ Moondogs w/ DJ Jime Time SAT 3.30

Knights of the Brown Table

I found out the way one would expect Tribute to Ween to learn of the death of someone who had achieved near-urban-legend status SAT 3.9, FRI 3.22 in Burlington: a dozen or so midnight Malcom Miller texts from friends who, like me, had spent THUR 3.14 FULL MELT THURSDAY years downtown and often came across Hudson Lee, Frequent Byrdman in the wild — for instance, near w/ O-Prime Delta, gonima Radio Bean. You could always bet he’d FRI 3.29 be drunker than you and would find a Grippo Funk Band way to tell you to “get right with Jah” in FRI 4.5 a heavy Jamaican accent before pushing Natalie Cressman & Ian Faquini his shopping cart loaded with colorful curiosities full steam ahead. Byrdman was no stranger to the 8v-nectars030624 1 3/4/24 7:13 PM Radio Bean stage, often appearing at open-mic nights to belt out his local hits “Radio Bean Is the Musical Scene,” “Orange Juice” and “Too Many Dogs in Burlington.” I even have a vague recollection of him approaching me during a DINO BRAVO set at the Bean one night and asking me to shout out “Jah” over the mic between songs. I think I made some excuse about the microphone or said I was Jewish, I can’t recall, but he didn’t seem to mind. 4-ADVENTURE SPORTS FUN This isn’t an obituary, mind you. AND INCLUSIVE EVENT IN I have no idea who the real Joseph THE MAD RIVER VALLEY Allen was; I only knew the strange character who was Byrdman. I’ve heard he was a complex individual Individual, Team, Relay, with plenty of trouble in his past, Kids and Taster Categories but that’s for another writer to delve into. Me, I’m just raising a glass 6-mile RUN to the passing of a character from Burlington’s weird-ass past, when the 6-mile PADDLE city possessed an odd charm that has 10-mile BIKE transformed into something darker 2.5-mile AT SKI these days. Radio Bean holds a memorial for Byrdman on Wednesday, March 6, at 9 p.m. “Byrd was one of the first people For more info scan I met in Burlington,” club owner LEE QR code or go to: ANDERSON wrote. “So many memories, madriverpath.org epic recycling wagons and songs of his swirling around my mind right now. A true eccentric.” ➆

MAD RIVER TRIATHLON

Burlington lost one of its most distinctive and memorable characters when BYRDMAN died over the weekend. Sometimes called SUPER BYRDMAN — real name JOSEPH BYRD ALLEN, 73 — the local personality was struck and killed by an allegedly drunk driver while riding his bicycle on Shelburne Road on Saturday night.

APRIL 14, 2024

LUKE AWTRY

GRRRLS 2 the Front

LiveAtNectars.com THURS 3.7, 3.21, 3.28

COURTESY OF BROOKE BOUSQUET

Listening In

groups are woefully underrepresented. “We’ve really stepped it up this year,” Stone Church programming director and chief GRRRLS 2 the Front organizer ERIN SCAGGS told me when she brought a workshop north to visit Higher Ground in South Burlington last week. “The amount of venues that joined in this year alone is just so cool!” Those venues include Higher Ground, Radio Bean, the Monkey House, Foam Brewers and the 126 in the Burlington area, and the Stone Church and Epsilon Spires in Brattleboro. Out of state, Nova Arts in Keene, N.H., Alphaville in Brooklyn and the Drake in Amherst, Mass., are also participating. “The program is more expansive now,” Scaggs said. “It’s year-round and strives for greater systemic structural changes.” The series offers 10- to 12-week tech production classes in sound and lighting, led by the Stone Church’s staff. Students in those classes, who visited the Flynn after getting the full tour of Higher Ground, will also participate in meetups with industry pros and songwriting symposiums. They’ll help bottle Foam’s special offering for the series, Riot Grrrl beer. March will see 13 dedicated GRRRLS 2 the Front shows, featuring artists such as THUS LOVE, ORANGE PEEL MYSTIC, DUTCH EXPERTS, HAYLEY JANE, RUBBLEBUCKET and many, many more. Visit stonechurchvt. com/grrrls-to-the-front for more information.

SEVEN DAYS MARCH 6-13, 2024 8v-MadRiverPath022124.indd 1

53 2/15/24 2:58 PM


music+nightlife

CLUB DATES

Find the most up-to-date info on live music, DJs, comedy and more at sevendaysvt.com/music. If you’re a talent booker or artist planning live entertainment at a bar, nightclub, café, restaurant, brewery or coffee shop, send event details to music@sevendaysvt.com or submit the info using our form at sevendaysvt.com/postevent.

live music WED.6

Adirondack Jazz Orchestra (jazz) at Olive Ridley’s, Plattsburgh, N.Y., 7 p.m. Free.

Josh Panda, Peter Day (Americana) at On Tap Bar & Grill, Essex Junction, 5 p.m. Free.

Duncan MacLeod Trio (blues) at Jericho Café & Tavern, 6:30 p.m. Free.

Karl Lucas (jazz) at Hugo’s, Montpelier, 7:30 p.m. Free.

Embers in Umbra, Tired of Trying, Assorted Fruit (hardcore, punk) at Despacito, Burlington, 8 p.m. $10.

Laura Fedele-Rasco (acoustic) at Twiggs — An American Gastropub, St. Albans, 5:30 p.m. Free.

Bent Nails House Band (blues, rock) at Bent Nails Bistro, Montpelier, 8 p.m. Free.

Mal Maiz, Taproots (Latin psych rock) at Zenbarn, Waterbury Center, 7 p.m. $15.

Bob Gagnon (jazz) at Two Heroes Brewery Public House, South Hero, 6 p.m. Free.

The Radiance, Hard Copies (rock) at the Underground, Randolph, 7:30 p.m. $10/$14.

Diamond, Cricket Blue (folk) at Radio Bean, Burlington, 7 p.m. $5/$10.

Rap Night Burlington (hip-hop) at Drink, Burlington, 9 p.m. $5.

Jazz Night with Ray Vega (jazz) at Hotel Vermont, Burlington, 8:30 p.m. Free.

Sanctuary (covers) at On Tap Bar & Grill, Essex Junction, 9 p.m. Free.

Jazz Sessions (jazz) at the 126, Burlington, 9 p.m. Free.

Satyrdagg, COOP (jazz, jam) at Radio Bean, Burlington, 11 p.m. $10.

Live Jazz (jazz) at Leunig’s Bistro & Café, Burlington, 6:30 p.m. Free.

Ethereal Bloom: Ambient Music, Sound & Light (ambient) at Spiral House Art Collective, Burlington, 7 p.m. $5/$15. Hurray for the Riff Raff, NNAMDI (indie) at Higher Ground Ballroom, South Burlington, 8 p.m. $20/$25. Jerborn (acoustic) at 1st Republic Brewing, Essex, 6 p.m. Free. Jim Branca Trio (blues) at Red Square, Burlington, 7 p.m. Free. JJ Booth (singer-songwriter) at Whammy Bar, Calais, 7 p.m. Free. Just Us (rock) at Olive Ridley’s, Plattsburgh, N.Y., 9 p.m. Free.

Marc Edwards (singer-songwriter) at Despacito, Burlington, 8 p.m. Free.

Silversun Pickups, Hello Mary (indie rock) at Higher Ground Ballroom, South Burlington, 7 p.m. $39/$45.

A Memorial for Super Birdman (memorial) at Radio Bean, Burlington, 9 p.m. Free.

Sticks & Stones (covers) at the Old Post, South Burlington, 8 p.m. Free.

Turnover, MSPAINT, Drook (indie) at Higher Ground Ballroom, South Burlington, 7:30 p.m. $25/$27.

THICK, Peg Tassey & the Loud Flowers (punk) at Foam Brewers, Burlington, 8:30 p.m. Free.

Wednesday Night Dead (Grateful Dead covers) at Zenbarn, Waterbury Center, 7 p.m. $5.

Timothy James (acoustic) at Gusto’s, Barre, 6 p.m. Free.

Owl Stars (folk) at Two Heroes Brewery Public House, South Hero, 6 p.m. Free.

Tuned Up Concert Series: Double You (jam) at Stowe Cider, 9 p.m. Free.

Paul Asbell (jazz) at Bleu Northeast Kitchen, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. Free.

Vermont Bluegrass Pioneers (bluegrass) at Jericho Café & Tavern, 6:30 p.m. Free.

Resistor, Choke Out, Old North End, Dead Solace, Keepsake (metal) at Monkey House, Winooski, 8 p.m. $10/$15.

Willverine (electronic) at the Wallflower Collective, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. Free. Workingman’s Army, Red Heron, No Fun Haus (rock) at Nectar’s, Burlington, 8 p.m. Free.

Wildflower, Swale, Holy Heart (folk rock) at Radio Bean, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. $10/$12.

THU.7

Andy Morse (jazz) at Hugo’s, Montpelier, 7:30 p.m. Free.

SAT.9

Bob MacKenzie (blues) at Black Flannel Brewing & Distilling, Essex, 6 p.m. Free.

FRI.8 // THICK [PUNK]

Chicky Stoltz (singer-songwriter) at Filling Station, Middlesex, 6 p.m. Free.

Female Future Brooklyn punk duo

Avery Cooper, Jack Hanson (jazz) at the Venetian Cocktail & Soda Lounge, Burlington, 8 p.m. Free. THICK

formed in 2014, quickly

Cleary Gagnon Saulnier (jazz) at Foam Brewers, Burlington, 7 p.m. Free.

cementing themselves as a ferocious voice in the riot grrrl movement. Their 2022 LP, Happy

Elijah Kraatz (Romani) at Radio Bean, Burlington, 7 p.m. $5.

the heaviness. The band swings through Burlington as part of GRRRLS 2 the Front — a

Frankie and the Fuse (rock) at Red Square, Burlington, 7 p.m. Free. Greenbush (jazz, blues) at Bent Nails Bistro, Montpelier, 7 p.m. Free. No Showers on Vacation (jam) at Nectar’s, Burlington, 9 p.m. $5/$10. Nobby Reed Project (covers) at On Tap Bar & Grill, Essex Junction, 6 p.m. Free. Saints & Liars, Carrie Nation & the Speakeasy (Americana) at Higher Ground Showcase Lounge, South Burlington, 7 p.m. $12/$15. Troy Millette (singer-songwriter) at Stone’s Throw, Waterbury, 6 p.m. Free.

54

Now, drew critical praise for both its naked rage and the melody and hooks layered inside series, launched by Brattleboro’s Stone Church, that centers female-led acts and people of underrepresented gender identities throughout March and April, spread across 15 venues and multiple states. THICK play Foam Brewers on Friday, March 8, with support from local indie-rock outfit PEG TASSEY & THE LOUD FLOWERS.

FRI.8

Brandon Frenyea (acoustic) at Olive Ridley’s, Plattsburgh, N.Y., 6 p.m. Free. Brothers Miller (folk) at Whammy Bar, Calais, 7 p.m. Free. Comatose Kids, Clive (indie) at Light Club Lamp Shop, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. $10. C.Shreve the Professor (hip-hop) at Bent Nails Bistro, Montpelier, 9 p.m. Free.

SEVEN DAYS MARCH 6-13, 2024

Dave Mitchell’s Blues Revue (blues) at Red Square, Burlington, 2 p.m. Free. David Karl Roberts (singersongwriter) at Stone’s Throw, Richmond, 6 p.m. Free. Escuela Grind, CAPRA, Cooked (metal) at Higher Ground Showcase Lounge, South Burlington, 7 p.m. $18/$20. Foolish Pride (rock) at Monopole, Plattsburgh, N.Y., 10 p.m. Free.

Hayley Jane, Hunter Root (roots) at Nectar’s, Burlington, 8 p.m. $12. Jared Johnson (acoustic) at Blue Cat Bistro, Castleton, 6 p.m. Free. Jessica & Brendan (folk) at the Venetian Cocktail & Soda Lounge, Burlington, 8 p.m. Free. John Lackard Blues Band (blues) at Moogs Place, Morrisville, 8 p.m. Free. Jordan Sedwin (jazz) at Bleu Northeast Kitchen, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. Free.

Be-er (rock) at Radio Bean, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. $10. Bearly Dead (tribute) at Zenbarn, Waterbury Center, 8 p.m. $20. The Bleeding Hearts Family Band (Americana) at the Den at Harry’s Hardware, Cabot, 7 p.m. Free. Blue Northern (blues) at Bent Nails Bistro, Montpelier, 9 p.m. Free. Breakin’ Strings (bluegrass) at Higher Ground Showcase Lounge, South Burlington, 7:30 p.m. $15/$18.

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. NASTEELUVZYOU, Ron Stoppable (hip-hop) at the Other Half, Burlington, 7 p.m. Free.

Ron Gagnon (singer-songwriter) at 14th Star Brewing, St. Albans, 6 p.m. Free. The Steppes (rock fusion) at Hugo’s, Montpelier, 7:30 p.m. Free. Swooli, Chase Murphy, Surfgawd, PSTREETBANDITS, Charlie Mayne, Flywlkr (hip-hop) at Radio Bean, Burlington, 9 p.m. $10/$12. Thea Wren (jazz) at Foam Brewers, Burlington, 8 p.m. Free. Toast (covers) at On Tap Bar & Grill, Essex Junction, 9 p.m. Free. Tuned Up Concert Series: The Grift (rock) at Stowe Cider, 9 p.m. $20. Wolf van Elfmand, Tallgrass Getdown, Delta Sweet Duo (folk) at Light Club Lamp Shop, Burlington, 8 p.m. $10.

Claudine Langille (Irish folk) at Scotch Hill Brewing Company, Fair Haven, 4 p.m. $5.

SUN.10

Cooie & Adlai (folk) at Twiggs — An American Gastropub, St. Albans, 6:30 p.m. Free.

Bluegrass Brunch (bluegrass) at the Skinny Pancake, Burlington, noon. Free.

Cooper (covers) at On Tap Bar & Grill, Essex Junction, 5 p.m. Free.

Sunday Brunch Tunes (singersongwriter) at Hotel Vermont, Burlington, 10 a.m.

Dead to the Core (Grateful Dead tribute) at Nectar’s, Burlington, 8 p.m. $10. Direct Hit (covers) at Gusto’s, Barre, 9 p.m. Free.

Amanda Case (acoustic) at Foam Brewers, Burlington, 1 p.m. Free.

Vermont Jazz Ensemble (jazz) at Zenbarn, Waterbury Center, 5 p.m. $20.


TUE.12

Big Easy Tuesdays with Jon McBride (jazz) at the 126, Burlington, 8 p.m. Free. Bluegrass Jam (bluegrass) at Taps Tavern, Poultney, 7 p.m. Free. Honky Tonk Tuesday with the Hogtones (country) at Radio Bean, Burlington, 9 p.m. $10. Local Strangers (Grateful Dead tribute) at Nectar’s, Burlington, 9 p.m. $10/$20. Radio Trapani, Ben Dexter (electronic) at Radio Bean, Burlington, 7 p.m. $7/$10. Red River North (country) at Lawson’s Finest Liquids, Waitsfield, 5 p.m. Free. Stand Still, Doom Service, Commitment in Pain, Taken Alive (punk) at Higher Ground Showcase Lounge, South Burlington, 7 p.m. $15/$18.

WED.13

Bent Nails House Band (blues, rock) at Bent Nails Bistro, Montpelier, 8 p.m. Free. High Break Beats (surf, hip-hop) at Nectar’s, Burlington, 9 p.m. Free.

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. Tom Bisson (singer-songwriter) at Two Heroes Brewery Public House, South Hero, 6 p.m. Free. Tom Waits Night (tribute) at Radio Bean, Burlington, 8 p.m. $10. Wednesday Night Dead (Grateful Dead covers) at Zenbarn, Waterbury Center, 7 p.m. $5. Wild Pink (rock) at Foam Brewers, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. Free. Willverine (electronic) at the Wallflower Collective, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. Free.

djs WED.6

Local Dork (DJ) at Foam Brewers, Burlington, 6 p.m. Free.

THU.7

DJ Chaston (DJ) at Red Square Blue Room, Burlington, 11 p.m. Free. DJ Two Sev (DJ) at Red Square, Burlington, 11 p.m. Free. NASTEELUVZYOU (DJ) at the Other Half, Burlington, 10 p.m. Free. Vinyl Night with Ken (DJ) at Taps Tavern, Poultney, 6 p.m. Free.

FRI.8

DJ Craig Mitchell (DJ) at Red Square Blue Room, Burlington, 10 p.m. Free. DJ JamStar (DJ) at Olive Ridley’s, Plattsburgh, N.Y., 9 p.m. Free. DJ Kata (DJ) at Red Square, Burlington, 10 p.m. Free. DJ Kata (DJ) at Red Square, Burlington, 10 p.m. Free. DJ Mildew (DJ) at Red Square, Burlington, 7 p.m. Free. DJ Scott Carlson, DJ GayBar (DJ) at the Other Half, Burlington, 7 p.m. Free. DJ Taka (DJ) at Light Club Lamp Shop, Burlington, 11 p.m. $10/$15.

DJ Two Rivers (DJ) at Gusto’s, Barre, 9 p.m. Free. Rekkon, Kanganade, Aquatic Underground (DJ) at Despacito, Burlington, 8 p.m. Free.

SAT.9

Blanchface (DJ) at Manhattan Pizza & Pub, Burlington, 10 p.m. Free.

Trivia Thursday (trivia) at Spanked Puppy Pub, Colchester, 7 p.m. Free.

WED.6

March Madness: Two-Prov (Prelims A) (comedy) at Vermont Comedy Club, Burlington, 6:30 p.m. $5.

DJ A-Ra$ (DJ) at Red Square, Burlington, midnight. Free.

Standup Comedy Open Mic (comedy open mic) at Vermont Comedy Club, Burlington, 8:30 p.m.

DJ Raul (DJ) at Red Square Blue Room, Burlington, 6 p.m. Free.

THU.7

Kush Jones, Aquatic Underground (EDM) at Radio Bean, Burlington, 10:30 p.m. $15. Malcolm Miller (DJ) at Club Metronome, Burlington, 10 p.m. $5. Matt Payne (DJ) at Red Square Blue Room, Burlington, 10 p.m. Free. Molly Mood (DJ) at Red Square, Burlington, 10 p.m. Free.

SUN.10

Mi Yard Reggae Night with DJ Big Dog (reggae and dancehall) at Nectar’s, Burlington, 9 p.m. Free.

TUE.12 SAT.9 // KUSH JONES [EDM]

comedy

The Vanguard: Jazz on Vinyl (DJ) at Paradiso Hi-Fi, Burlington, 7 p.m. Free.

WED.13

Local Dork (DJ) at Foam Brewers, Burlington, 6 p.m. Free.

Max Higgins: Underdog (comedy) at Vermont Comedy Club, Burlington, 6:30 p.m. $25.

FRI.8

Irish Sessions (Celtic, open mic) at Burlington St. John’s Club, 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 Taps Tavern, Poultney, 7 p.m. Free. The Ribbit Review Open Mic & Jam (open mic) at Lily’s Pad, Burlington, 7 p.m. Free.

THU.7

Open Stage Night (open mic) at Orlando’s Bar & Lounge, Burlington, 8 p.m. Free.

MON.11

Open Mic (open mic) at Despacito, Burlington, 7 p.m. Free.

TUE.12

SUN.10

$5 Improv Night (comedy) at Vermont Comedy Club, Burlington, 7 p.m. $5.

TUE.12

Free Stuff! (comedy) at Lincolns, Burlington, 9:30 p.m. Free.

WED.13

Standup Comedy Open Mic (comedy open mic) at Vermont Comedy Club, Burlington, 8:30 p.m.

SAT.9

Green State Gear Swap (gear swap) at Higher Ground Ballroom, South Burlington, 1 p.m. Free. Sunday Funday (games) at 1st Republic Brewing, Essex, noon. Free. Venetian Karaoke (karaoke) at the Venetian Cocktail & Soda Lounge, Burlington, 7 p.m. Free.

MON.11

Trivia (trivia) at McKee’s Pub & Grill, Winooski, 7 p.m. Free. Trivia with Craig Mitchell (trivia) at Monkey House, Winooski, 7 p.m. Free.

TUE.12

Karaoke Tuesdays (karaoke) at Vermont Comedy Club, Burlington, 9 p.m. Free. Karaoke with DJ Party Bear (karaoke) at Charlie-O’s World Famous, Montpelier, 9:30 p.m. Free.

WED.6

Karaoke Night (karaoke) at Drink, Burlington, 8 p.m. Free. Rock and Roll Bingo (bingo) at McKee’s Pub & Grill, Winooski, 7 p.m. Free. Trivia Night (trivia) at Stone Corral, Richmond, 7 p.m. Free. Venetian Trivia Night (trivia) at the Venetian Cocktail & Soda Lounge, Burlington, 6 p.m. Free.

THU.7

Karaoke Night (karaoke) at Zenbarn, Waterbury Center, 7 p.m. Free. Karaoke with Matt Mero (karaoke) at Olive Ridley’s, Plattsburgh, N.Y., 8 p.m. Free. Radio Bean Karaoke (karaoke) at Radio Bean, Burlington, 9 p.m. Free.

Keeping Up With the Joneses Bronx-born DJ and producer KUSH JONES got his start in the early 2000s, coming up around the Lite Feet dance

Irish Sessions (Celtic, open mic) at Burlington St. John’s Club, 6:30 p.m. Free.

Trivia (trivia) at Highland Lodge, Greensboro, 7 p.m. Free.

culture that emerged from New York City and soon spread across the country. His self-

Open Mic (open mic) at Monopole, Plattsburgh, N.Y., 10 p.m. Free.

Jones critical appeal and an expanding fan base. He makes a tour stop this Saturday, March

Untapped: A Night of Drag & Burly-Q (drag) at Monkey House, Winooski, 7:30 p.m. $15.

SUN.10

WED.13

40 volumes — as well as his 2021 LP, existing, do not desire to be perceived, have earned

Karoke with DJ Big T (karaoke) at McKee’s Pub & Grill, Winooski, 9 p.m. Free.

SAT.9

Ever Mainard (comedy) at Vermont Comedy Club, Burlington, 7 & 9 p.m. $25.

Trivia (trivia) at Jericho Café & Tavern, 6:30 p.m. Free.

Open Mic with Danny Lang (open mic) at Taps Tavern, Poultney, 7 p.m. Free.

Karaoke Friday Night (karaoke) at Park Place Tavern & Grill, Essex Junction, 8 p.m. Free.

Rabble-Rouser Trivia Night! (trivia) at Rabble-Rouser Chocolate & Craft, Montpelier, 7 p.m. $5.

Open Mic Night (open mic) at Drink, Burlington, 8 p.m. Free.

released series of EPs titled Strictly 4 MY CDJZ — which is planned to eventually include

Karaoke (karaoke) at McKee’s Pub & Grill, Winooski, 9 p.m. Free.

Ever Mainard (comedy) at Vermont Comedy Club, Burlington, 7 & 9 p.m. $25.

open mics & trivia, jams karaoke, WED.6 etc. Bluegrass Jam (open bluegrass jam) at Stone’s Throw, Richmond, 6:30 p.m. Free.

FRI.8

Trivia Night (trivia) at Four Quarters Brewing, Winooski, 6 p.m. Free. Trivia Night (trivia) at McGillicuddy’s Five Corners, Essex Junction, 6:30 p.m. Free.

Karaoke with Motorcade (karaoke) at Manhattan Pizza & Pub, Burlington, 9 p.m. Free. Music Bingo (music bingo) at Stone Corral, Richmond, 7 p.m. Free. Taproom Trivia (trivia) at 14th Star Brewing, St. Albans, 6:30 p.m. Free. Trivia Night (trivia) at the Depot, St. Albans, 7 p.m. Free. Trivia Tuesday (trivia) at On Tap Bar & Grill, Essex Junction, 7 p.m. Free. Tuesday Trivia (trivia) at Vermont Comedy Club, Burlington, 7 p.m. Free.

WED.13

Karaoke Night (karaoke) at Drink, Burlington, 8 p.m. Free. Rock and Roll Bingo (bingo) at McKee’s Pub & Grill, Winooski, 7 p.m. Free. Trivia Night (trivia) at Stone Corral, Richmond, 7 p.m. Free. Venetian Trivia Night (trivia) at the Venetian Cocktail & Soda Lounge, Burlington, 6 p.m. Free. ➆

Trivia Night (trivia) at Nectar’s, Burlington, 6:30 p.m. Free.

9, at Radio Bean in Burlington. Local DJ crew AQUATIC UNDERGROUND kick off the show. SEVEN DAYS MARCH 6-13, 2024

55


GOT MUSIC NEWS? MUSIC@SEVENDAYSVT.COM

music+nightlife

REVIEW this Astral Underground, Sunsets Are Sacred (SELF-RELEASED, CD, DIGITAL)

Last year, André 3000 released an album of instrumental flute music called New Blue Sun. That album — the first from the former Outkast rapper in 17 years — inspired strong reactions from fans hoping for a hip-hop record. As comedian Leslie Jones put it while guest hosting “The Daily Show,” “This is how you know the white people are winning: Y’all done turned André 3000 into Jethro Tull!” Maybe it’s just my steady diet of eclectic Vermont music, but André’s flute album didn’t bother me one bit. Or perhaps it’s because I’m already a fan of the Enosburgh cosmic-jazz trio Astral Underground. Consisting of local musicians Ben Maddox (Farm, the Mountain Says No) and John Notaro (Mushroom Teeth), along with flutist and Strut Records artist Margaux Simmons, who formed the avant-garde African jazz outfit the Pyramids in the 1970s, Astral Underground truly make flute music for the cosmos. Their latest album, Sunsets Are Sacred, follows up their self-titled 2022 debut by going even deeper into the void of interstellar funk and new-age post-rock.

Wren Kitz, Natural History vol. 2 (ANOTHER EARTH, CASSETTE, DIGITAL)

The ocean waves lap against craggy rock, their percussive whoosh and crashing almost — almost — keeping time. Wind plays against the water’s rush, the sound not unlike the brush of a drumstick against the bronze bell of a hi-hat. You’re alone, the sounds of thousands of years of peaceful isolation welcoming you to Star Island. This sonic travelogue is brought to you by Burlington experimental songwriter, producer, bread maker and field-recording enthusiast Wren Kitz. Natural History vol. 2 is the latest release in a series in which the artist uses field recordings to capture the tonal character of physical places and establish an aural palette. On the first volume, released in 2022, Kitz abandoned traditional songwriting altogether to direct his reel-to-reel tape recorder at the sounds of everything from a murder of crows in the trees near

Surrounded by Notaro’s rock-solid drum work and Maddox’s multiinstrumental layers of sound, Simmons and her flute take center stage throughout the record. She leads off the album on “Taurus Witches” with a run of soft, ethereal notes building like latticework, as Maddox and Notaro come in with a gritty synth bass and frenetic drumbeat. It’s jazz filtered through a doom-laden lens of indie rock and pulsing EDM. The vibe is so thick, you may want to call the BBC to demand that it use Sunsets Are Sacred to score a documentary about stars collapsing or black holes swallowing matter. “Dog and Bird” channels the spiritual free jazz of Pharoah Sanders and sets up the even more esoteric title track. “Sunsets Are Sacred” is suffused with the primordial aura of Notaro’s babbling, chaotic drums. Washes of synth and flute color in the margins of the

song while leaving light-years of space. Funk with shades of Sun Ra appears in “Middleweight.” Maddox and Notaro link up like churning gears, while Simmons lets loose a barrage of cascading, aspirated notes on the flute. Her virtuosity is impossible to ignore on this album. Half a century of skill and invention comes through, whether she is playing long, keening figures on the glacial “Your Precious and Immortal Memory” or mixing it up on “X Loop,” a propulsive, head-nodding jam. Astral Underground might be one of the least likely Vermont bands in a long time: two veterans of the local heavy-rock scene combining forces with a legendarily skilled jazz flutist to create an amalgamation of genres that works on every level. It’s the kind of music that exudes possibility and never telegraphs what’s around the corner. André 3000 would approve. Listen to Sunsets Are Sacred at astralunderground. bandcamp.com.

Red Rocks Park in South Burlington to a chorus of crickets in Marlborough, N.H. Vol. 2 narrows the focus to Star Island, a 38-acre part of the Isles of Shoals off the coast of New Hampshire and Maine. Settled in the early 17th century, the island has long been a destination for those seeking a little solitude. Kitz maps the island’s acoustic landscape in two movements, each just under 25 minutes long. “DAYTIME” is a field-recording symphony of movements, starting with “On the Rocks, Facing East,” which pairs the sounds of the Atlantic Ocean meeting the island’s granite coast with howling wind and birdsong. Kitz’s skill as a sonic documentarian is on full display as he presents Star Island like the main setting of a novel, sketching out its remote boundaries before introducing its inhabitants. As he moves inland and the sound of the waves recedes, a ghostly banjo appears briefly, the specter of

a songwriter idly plucking his instrument against the backdrop of wind and water. Voices carry on in the next movement, “Chattering on the Pier.” Kitz’s recording just brushes against the island’s human inhabitants, treating them like background characters. A crew of sailors sings a traditional sea shanty that Star Island residents have used for centuries to send off departing vessels and greet arriving ones — “Oceanic, Oceanic, rah-rah-rah … you did come back, you did come back!” We hear a tour guide reading an excerpt from the poem “Landlocked” by Celia Thaxter. “NIGHTTIME” depicts a changed island once the sun goes down. The hypnotic rhythm of chirping crickets and cicadas beats against the distant sounds of waves and cars. The lonely cadence of Kitz’s footsteps on dirt and gravel as he approaches a truck trestle is the only other human sound. As he moves from a dump to a barn and eventually to the end of a pier, raindrops and church bells creep in, completing Kitz’s lush portrait of Star Island. The most effective ambient musicians take all the tonal characters they’ve captured and harness them into something more conceptual. Kitz is a master at the practice, and Natural History vol. 2 is a perfect showcase. Listen in at wrenkitz.bandcamp.com.

GET YOUR MUSIC REVIEWED: 56

SEVEN DAYS MARCH 6-13, 2024

CHRIS FARNSWORTH

CHRIS FARNSWORTH

ARE YOU A VT ARTIST OR BAND? SEND US YOUR MUSIC! DIGITAL: MUSIC@SEVENDAYSVT.COM; SNAIL MAIL: MUSIC C/O SEVEN DAYS, 255 S. CHAMPLAIN ST., SUITE 5, BURLINGTON, VT 05401


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calendar M A R C H

WED.6 activism

CHAMPLAIN VALLEY DSA GENERAL MEETING: Members of the local chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America and other left-wing activists gather to plan political activities. Democracy Creative, Burlington, 7-8:30 p.m. Free. Info, hello@ champlainvalleydsa.org. DISABLED ACCESS & ADVOCACY OF THE RUTLAND AREA (DAARA) MONTHLY ZOOM MEETING: Community members gather online to advocate for accessibility and other disability rights measures. 11:30 a.m.-noon. Free. Info, 779-9021.

agriculture

SEED SWAP, INFO TABLE & GIVEAWAY: Home gardeners trade seeds, enter a cookbook raffle, and talk to growing and composting masters. ADA accessible. South Burlington Public Library & City Hall, 5:307 p.m. Free. Info, 846-4140.

business

MENTAL FITNESS WORKSHOP: MASTERING YOUR MINDSET WITH DEB CHISHOLM: Female entrepreneurs learn how to strengthen the part of their mind that serves them while

6 - 1 3 ,

2 0 2 4

quieting the anxious part. Presented by Women Business Owners Network Vermont. 8:30-10 a.m. Free; preregister. Info, 503-0219. QUEEN CITY BUSINESS NETWORKING INTERNATIONAL GROUP: Savvy businesspeople make crucial contacts at a weekly chapter meeting. Burlington City Arts, 11:15 a.m.-1 p.m. Free. Info, 829-5066.

community

COMMUNITY PARTNERS DESK: VETERANS OUTREACH PROGRAM: Representatives post up in the main reading room to answer questions and provide resources. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 1-3 p.m. Free. Info, 863-3403.

crafts

JEWELRY MAKING WITH CASEY: Crafty folks string beads together to create teardrop earrings. Ages 7 and up. Brownell Library, Essex Junction, 3-4:30 p.m. Free; limited space. Info, 878-6956. YARN CRAFTERS GROUP: A drop-in meetup welcomes knitters, crocheters, spinners, weavers and beyond. BYO snacks and drinks. Must Love Yarn, Shelburne, 5-7 p.m. Free. Info, 448-3780.

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 Emily Hamilton. 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.

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SEVEN DAYS MARCH 6-13, 2024

film

See what’s playing at local theaters in the On Screen section. ‘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, 10:30 a.m., 12:30, 2:30 & 4:30 p.m. $3-5 plus regular admission, $14.50-18; admission free for members and kids 2 and under. Info, 864-1848. ‘GREAT WHITE SHARK 3D’: Viewers learn the true story behind one of our most iconic — and misunderstood — predators. 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, $14.50-18; admission free for members and kids 2 and under. Info, 864-1848. ‘OCEANS: OUR BLUE PLANET 3D’: Scientists dive into the planet’s least-explored habitat, from its sunny shallows to its alien depths. 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, $14.50-18; admission free for members and kids 2 and under. Info, 864-1848. ‘SMALL ISLAND BIG SONG— AN OCEAN SONGLINE’: A documentary, filmed across three years and 16 islands, connects ancient musical traditions from Madagascar to Rapa Nui. Mahaney Arts Center, Middlebury College, 4:30-6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 443-5697.

FIND MORE LOCAL EVENTS IN THIS ISSUE 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.

= ONLINE EVENT

‘TINY GIANTS 3D’: Through the power of special cameras, audiences are transported into the world of the teeniest animals on Earth. 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, $14.50-18; admission free for members and kids 2 and under. Info, 864-1848.

food & drink

WHAT’S THAT WINE WEDNESDAYS: Aspiring sommeliers blind-taste four wines from Vermont and beyond. Shelburne Vineyard, noon-6 p.m. $15. Info, 985-8222.

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.

language

BEGINNER IRISH LANGUAGE CLASS: Celtic-curious students learn to speak an Ghaeilge in a supportive group. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, noon-1 p.m. Free. Info, 863-3403. ELL CLASSES: ENGLISH FOR BEGINNERS & INTERMEDIATE STUDENTS: Learners of all abilities practice written and spoken English with trained instructors. Presented by Fletcher Free Library. 6:30-8 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, bshatara@ burlingtonvt.gov. INTERMEDIATE IRISH LANGUAGE CONVERSATION AND MUSIC: Speakers with some experience increase their fluency through conversation and song. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 10:30 a.m.-noon. Free. Info, 863-3403. SPANISH CONVERSATION: Fluent and beginner speakers brush up on their español with a discussion led by a Spanish teacher. Presented by Dorothy Alling Memorial Library. 5-6 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, programs@damlvt.org.

music

CLASSICAL WOMEN COMPOSERS OF OLD: Early female composers such as Hildegard von Bingen, Elisabeth Jacquet de la Guerre and Francesca Caccini are featured in this three-part series. ADA accessible. South Burlington Public Library & City Hall, 1:152:30 p.m. Free. Info, 846-4140. LUNCHTIME PIPE ORGAN SERIES: ED BROMS: The house organist of Boston’s Episcopal Cathedral Church of St. Paul goes hard on the historic Estey organ. Epsilon Spires, Brattleboro, noon-1 p.m. Donations. Info, info@epsilonspires.org.

québec

MONTRÉAL EN LUMIÈRE: Performing arts, fine dining and family activities combine all over the city for 11 days of spectacular sights, sounds and scenes. See montrealenlumiere.com for full schedule. Various Montréal

locations. Prices vary. Info, 855-219-0576.

sports

GREEN MOUNTAIN TABLE TENNIS CLUB: Ping-Pong players swing their paddles in singles and doubles matches. Rutland Area Christian School, 7-9 p.m. Free for first two sessions; $30 annual membership. Info, 247-5913. SMUGGS 55+ SKI CLUB: Seniors who love to ski, snowboard and snowshoe hit the slopes after coffee and pastries. Smugglers’ Notch Resort, Jeffersonville, 9 a.m.-noon. $30 for annual membership. Info, president@ smuggs55plus.com.

THU.7

climate crisis

HOWARD E. WOODIN ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES COLLOQUIUM SERIES: CLIMATE CHANGE: OUR RESPONSE AS ARTISTS: Small Island Big Song producer BaoBao Chen moderates a discussion between the performing artists. Franklin Environmental Center at Hillcrest, Middlebury College, 12:40-1:30 p.m. Free. Info, 443-5552.

crafts

KNIT FOR YOUR NEIGHBOR: All ages and abilities are invited to knit or crochet hats and scarves for the South Burlington Food Shelf. All materials are 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. SEWING (AND QUILTING) TOGETHER: Library staff lead a friendly monthly meetup for needlesmiths. ADA accessible. South Burlington Public Library & City Hall, 4-6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 846-4140.

environment

LOVE THE LAKE: MATTHEW VAUGHAN: The Lake Champlain Basin Program chief scientist gives an address titled “Exploring Water Quality Impacts of the July 2023 Storm in the Lake Champlain Basin.” Virtual option available. Lake Champlain Basin Program Office, Grand Isle, 6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 372-3213.

etc.

NIGHT OWL CLUB: Astronomers and space exploration experts discuss the latest in extraterrestrial news with curious attendees. Presented by Fairbanks Museum & Planetarium. 7 p.m. Free. Info, 748-2372.

film

See what’s playing at local theaters in the On Screen section. ‘THE ANIMAL KINGDOM’: A father and son embark on a desperate

quest in a world where humans are inexplicably transforming into animals in this 2023 French hit. Film House, Main Street Landing Performing Arts Center, Burlington, 7-9:10 p.m. $6-12; VTIFF membership benefits apply. Info, 660-2600. ‘BOMBSHELL: THE HEDY LAMARR STORY’: A 2017 documentary focuses on a Hollywood star in her real-life roles as an actor and inventor. Highland Center for the Arts, Greensboro, 7 p.m. $5. Info, 533-2000. ‘FUNGI: THE WEB OF LIFE 3D’: See WED.6. ‘GREAT WHITE SHARK 3D’: See WED.6. HIRSCHFIELD THURSDAYS: ‘THE ZONE OF INTEREST’: Auschwitz commandant Rudolf Höss and his family live a disturbingly normal life in this Oscar-nominated drama. Dana Auditorium, Sunderland Language Center, Middlebury College, 7-9 p.m. Free. Info, 443-5844. ‘OCEANS: OUR BLUE PLANET 3D’: See WED.6. ‘TINY GIANTS 3D’: See WED.6.

food & drink

ARE YOU THIRSTY, NEIGHBOR?: A special discount cocktail menu sparks conversations and connections over cribbage and cards. Wild Hart Distillery and Tasting Room, Shelburne, 3-8 p.m. Free. Info, info@wildhartdistillery.com. DESTINATION DINNER: CARIBBEAN: Jerk chicken, pasties, tres leches cake and limeade delight taste buds. Highland Center for the Arts, Greensboro, 5-7 p.m. $6-20; preregister; limited space. Info, 533-2000. FREE WINE TASTING: Themed wine tastings take oenophiles on an adventure through a region, grape variety, style of wine or producer’s offerings. Dedalus Wine Shop, Market & Wine Bar, Burlington, 4-7 p.m. Free. Info, 865-2368. SHEEP SHOP CAFÉ GRAND OPENING: Customers feed the sheep and sip artisanal tea in a Victorian-style café and farm shop. Sheep Shop, South Woodbury, 7 a.m.-7 p.m. Free. Info, 456-7035.

games

DUPLICATE BRIDGE: A lively group plays a classic, tricky game with an extra wrinkle. Waterbury Public Library, 12:30-4:30 p.m. Free. Info, 244-7223. 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. Donations. Info, lafferty1949@ gmail.com.

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, THU.7

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LIST YOUR EVENT FOR FREE AT SEVENDAYSVT.COM/POSTEVENT

SAT.9

FAMILY FUN

MAR. 9 | FAMILY FUN

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.

Comet Me, Bro Starry-eyed children of all ages prepare for the solar eclipse at the Montshire Museum of Science’s annual Astronomy Day. This daylong celestial celebration features heavenly fun for all ages, including crafts, hands-on demonstrations and educational talks. Curious kids meet and learn from real-life physicists and astronomers from Dartmouth College, who share from their research. Members of the Cowasuck Band of the PennacookAbenaki People tell their traditional space stories and lead little ones in an art activity.

WED.6

FAMILY GROUP: RACIAL LEARNING FOR YOUNG CHILDREN: With Tucker Foltz of the Rokeby Museum, parents prepare for a four-week class teaching their kids about race and bias from an early age. For families with kids ages 3 through 5. In-person classes on Saturdays in March. 6-7 p.m. Free; preregister; limited space. Info, 877-3406.

burlington

FAM JAM: Vermont Folklife hosts a tuneful get-together for musicians of all ages and skill levels. BYO instruments. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 6:307:30 p.m. Free. Info, ytv@vtfolklife.org. TODDLER TIME: Librarians bring out books, rhymes and songs specially selected for young ones 12 through 24 months. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 11-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 863-3403.

ASTRONOMY DAY Saturday, March 9, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., at Montshire Museum of Science in Norwich. Regular admission, $17-20; free for members and kids under 2. Info, 649-2200, montshire.org.

AFTERSCHOOL: LEGO & BOARD GAMES: Blocks and boards make for a fun, creative afternoon. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 2-3 p.m. Free. Info, 878-4918. BABY TIME: Parents and caregivers bond with their pre-walking babes during this gentle playtime. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 10:3011 a.m. Free. Info, 878-4918. BABYTIME: Caregivers and infants from birth through age 1 gather to explore board books and toys. South Burlington Public Library & City Hall, 10:30-11 a.m. Free. Info, 846-4140. PLAY TIME: Little ones build with blocks and read together. Ages 1 through 4. Brownell Library, Essex Junction, 1010:45 a.m. Free. Info, 878-6956. READ TO A DOG!: Kids of all ages sign up for a 10-minute time slot to tell stories to Emma the therapy pup. South Burlington Public Library & City Hall, 3:30-4:30 p.m. Free; preregister; limited space. Info, 846-4140.

mad river valley/ waterbury

QUEER READS: LGBTQIA+ and allied youth get together each month to read and discuss ideas around gender, sexuality and identity. Waterbury Public Library, 6-7 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 244-7036. TEEN HANGOUT: Middle and high schoolers make friends at a no-pressure meetup. Waterbury Public Library, 3-6 p.m. Free. Info, 244-7036.

© ALEXANDR YURTCHENKO | DREAMSTIME

chittenden county

burlington

‘DANIEL TIGER’S NEIGHBORHOOD LIVE!’: Audience members join the lovable cat on an interactive musical adventure in the tradition of “Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood.” The Flynn, Burlington, 5 p.m. $25-57. Info, 863-5966. FAMILY PLAYSHOP: Kids from birth through age 5 learn and play at this school readiness program. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 10-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 863-3403. FLYNNZONE KIDS HOUR: ‘PROFESSOR BEN T. MATCHSTICK’: A combination of clown tricks, hand puppets and Japanese kamishibai theater leaves little ones ages 3 through 5 in stitches. The Flynn, Burlington, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 863-5966.

chittenden county

FRENCH STORY TIME: Kids of all ages listen and learn to native speaker Romain Feuillette raconte une histoire. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 10:15-10:45 a.m. Free. Info, 878-4918. SATURDAY STORIES: Kiddos start the weekend off right with stories and songs. Ages 3 through 7. Brownell Library, Essex Junction, 10-10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 878-6956. SPRING GNOMES: Crafters of all ages make little forest folk to celebrate the changing seasons. Brownell Library, Essex Junction, 2-3 p.m. Free. Info, 878-6956.

mad river valley/ waterbury

BRIAN WRAY: The picture book author launches The Book Bus with a reading and craft time. Inklings Children’s Books, Waitsfield, 10-11 a.m. Free. Info, 496-7280.

upper valley

THU.7

chittenden county

KIDS BOOK CLUB FOR K-2: Little bookworms and their caregivers learn to love reading together through sharing, crafts and writing activities. South Burlington Public Library & City Hall, 4-5 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 846-4140. MUSIC AND MOVEMENT WITH MISS EMMA: The star of “Music for Sprouts” and “Mr. Chris and Friends” leads little ones 5 and younger in singing, scarf play and movement. South Burlington Public Library & City Hall, 10:30-11:15 a.m. Free. Info, 846-4140. PRESCHOOL MUSIC WITH LINDA BASSICK: The singer and storyteller extraordinaire leads little ones in indoor music and movement. Birth through age 5. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 10:30-11 a.m. Free. Info, 878-4918. PRESCHOOL PLAYTIME: 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 from birth through age 5 learn from songs, crafts and picture books. Brownell Library, Essex Junction, 10-10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 878-6956.

barre/montpelier

ROBIN’S NEST NATURE PLAYGROUP: Outdoor pursuits through fields and forests captivate little ones up to age 5 and their parents. North Branch Nature Center, Montpelier, 10 a.m.-noon. Free; donations accepted. Info, 229-6206.

stowe/smuggs

WEE ONES PLAY TIME: 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

PRESCHOOL STORY TIME: Games, activities, stories and songs engage 3through 5-year-olds. Waterbury Public Library, 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 244-7036.

FRI.8

chittenden county

LEGO BUILDERS: Each week, children ages 8 and older build, explore, create and participate in challenges. Children ages 6 to 8 are welcome with an adult. South Burlington Public Library & City Hall, 3-4:30 p.m. Free. Info, 846-4140. TEEN ZINE: COMMUNITY COOKBOOK: Volunteers in grades 6 through 12 cut and paste crafty little booklets for distribution. Brownell Library, Essex Junction, 3:30-5:30 p.m. Free. Info, 878-6956. TEEN: DUNGEONS & DRAGONS: Local wizards and warlocks ages 12 and up play a collaborative game of magic and monsters. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 5-6 p.m. Free. Info, 878-4918.

upper valley

STORY TIME: Preschoolers take part in tales, tunes and playtime. Latham Library, Thetford, 11 a.m. Free. Info, 785-4361.

ASTRONOMY DAY: Dartmouth College physicists and Pennacook-Abenaki storytellers present a day of hands-on fun for starry-eyed folks of all ages. See calendar spotlight. Montshire Museum of Science, Norwich, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Regular admission, $17-20; free for members and kids under 2. Info, 649-2200.

northeast kingdom

WEEE!! DANCE PARTY: Little ones and their caregivers express themselves through movement at this free-wheeling DJ bash. Highland Center for the Arts, Greensboro, 2-3 p.m. $5 suggested donation; preregister. Info, 533-2000.

SUN.10

burlington

SENSORY-FRIENDLY SUNDAY: Folks of all ages with sensory processing differences have the museum to themselves, with adjusted lights and sounds and trusty sensory backpacks. ECHO Leahy Center for Lake Champlain, Burlington, 9-10 a.m. Free; preregister. Info, kvonderlinn@echovermont.org.

barre/montpelier

DANCE, SING AND JUMP AROUND: Movers and shakers of all ages learn line SUN.10 SEVEN DAYS MARCH 6-13, 2024

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Burlington, noon-1 p.m. Free. Info, 863-3403.

lgbtq

POP-UP HAPPY HOUR: Locals connect over drinks at a speakeasy-style bar. Hosted by OUT in the 802. Lincolns, Burlington, 5:30-7 p.m. Free. Info, 860-7812.

music

FERN MADDIE: The Montpelier balladeer serenades audiences with her soulful vocals and clawhammer banjo. Willey Memorial Hall, Cabot, 7-9 p.m. $12-15. Info, 793-3016.

Angel Investor In Poet’s Choice, a new comedy by New Haven playwright Mary Pratt making its world premiere at the Valley Players Theater, God and the Devil need to settle a bet: Do humans want happiness or success? Pem, the fallen angel they recruit to divine the answer, sets about offering a writer the choice between lifelong contentment or the fame and fortune of a blockbuster artistic career. Directed by Doug Bernstein and featuring a cast of local actors, this gut-busting and thoughtprovoking play probes some of life’s biggest questions.

‘POET’S CHOICE’ Friday, March 8, and Saturday, March 9, 7:30 p.m.; and Sunday, March 10, 2 p.m., at Valley Players Theater in Waitsfield. See website for additional dates. $1418. Info, 583-1674, valleyplayers.com.

MONTRÉAL EN LUMIÈRE: See WED.6.

seminars

ECOGATHERINGS: Sterling College hosts online learning sessions digging into big ideas such as joy, rage, climate change, mutual aid, food and art. See ce.sterlingcollege.edu for upcoming topics. 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, ecogather@ sterlingcollege.edu.

words

JACQUELYN LENOX TUXILL: The author reads from her memoir, Whispers From the Valley of the Yak: A Memoir of Coming Full Circle. Norwich Bookstore, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 649-1114. VIEVEE FRANCIS: The award-winning poet behind The Shared World and Forest Primeval reads from her work. Vermont Studio Center, Johnson, 8-9 p.m. Free. Info, 635-2727.

FRI.8 crafts

FIBER ARTS FRIDAY: Knitters, crocheters, weavers and felters chat over their projects of the day

60

UVM LANE SERIES: REVERIE ROAD: Winifred Horan and John Williams of Solas, Katie Grennan of Gaelic Storm, and jazz and raga pianist Utsav Lal debut their new, dreamy Celtic project. Aoife Scott opens. University of Vermont Recital Hall, Burlington, 7:30-9:30 p.m. $6.50-39.50. Info, 656-4455.

MONTRÉAL EN LUMIÈRE: See WED.6.

seminars

JOURNALISM COURSE: Veteran freelance reporter Carolyn Shapiro teaches attendees about media literacy and how the local news industry works. Presented by AARP Vermont. 10-11 a.m. Free; preregister. Info, 866-227-7451.

DRAGON BOAT RACING INFO SESSION: Malia Racing members answer questions from adventurous prospective rowers. South Burlington Public Library & City Hall, 6-7:30 p.m. Free. Info, manager@maliaracing.com.

MERCEDES DE GUARDIOLA, MARIESSA DOBRICK & TOM STEVENS: The author of “Vermont for the Vermonters”: The History of Eugenics in the Green Mountain State talks to a state archivist and a state representative. Waterbury Public Library, 6 p.m. Free. Info, 244-7036.

SMALL ISLAND BIG SONG: This stunning multimedia collaboration reunites the distant yet interconnected musical traditions of 16 countries from across the Pacific and Indian oceans. Wilson Hall, McCullough Student Center, Middlebury College, 7:30-9:30 p.m. $5-25. Info, 443-6433.

québec

sports

talks

Middlebury, 7:30 p.m. $27-37; cash bar. Info, 382-9222.

‘WINTER WIND, MELTING ICE: THE SEASON OF TRANSITION’: Scrag Mountain Music presents works inspired by the changing seasons for flute, piano and soprano. Live stream available. Unitarian Church of Montpelier, 7:30 p.m. Pay what you can. Info, 377-3161.

québec

RED BENCH SPEAKER SERIES: LOST & FOUND, HOW INDEPENDENT SKI AREAS AROUND VERMONT ARE BEING RESURRECTED: A panel of experts digs into Vermont’s snowy past and present. Vermont Ski and Snowboard Museum, Stowe, 6:308 p.m. $10. Info, 253-9911.

COURTESY OF BOBBY KINTZ OF PHOTOS BY KINTZ

THU.7

OPENS MAR. 8 | THEATER at this weekly meetup. Waterbury Public Library, noon-2 p.m. Free. Info, 244-7036.

film

See what’s playing at local theaters in the On Screen section. ‘FUNGI: THE WEB OF LIFE 3D’: See WED.6. ‘GREAT WHITE SHARK 3D’: See WED.6. ‘INSIDE THE YELLOW COCOON SHELL’: The sudden death of a young man’s sister-in-law brings unexpected responsibilities and profound realizations in this 2023 Cannes Film Festival favorite from debut Vietnamese filmmaker Pham Thien An. The Screening Room @ VTIFF, Main Street Landing Performing Arts Center, Burlington, 7-8:30 p.m. $5. Info, 660-2600. ‘OCEANS: OUR BLUE PLANET 3D’: See WED.6. ‘TINY GIANTS 3D’: See WED.6.

food & drink

SHEEP SHOP CAFÉ GRAND OPENING: See THU.7.

SEVEN DAYS MARCH 6-13, 2024

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.

lgbtq

RPG NIGHT: Members of the LGBTQ community gather weekly to play games such as Dungeons & Dragons and Everway. Rainbow Bridge Community Center, Barre, 5:30-8:30 p.m. Free. Info, 622-0692.

music

ANDRIANA CHOBOT: The expressive alto immerses listeners in a multigenre soundscape combining pop, folk, rock and jazz. The Phoenix, Waterbury, 7:30-8:30 p.m. $15-30. Info, 355-5440. ‘ANÓNIMO FROM AMAZONIA: BOLIVIAN MISSION BAROQUE’: The acclaimed Sarasa Ensemble plays Indigenous-influenced sacred and secular works from the 17th century. Brattleboro Music Center, 7 p.m. $20-25. Info, 257-4523.

DÀIMH: A Scottish supergroup, named after the Gaelic word for “connection,” blows minds with its electrifying sound. Highland Center for the Arts, Greensboro, 7 p.m. $5-25. Info, 533-2000. FIDDLE WORKSHOP: Intermediate and advanced players learn from musicians Katie Grennan and Winifred Horan. Teens and adults welcome. Southwick Hall, University of Vermont, Burlington, 5:15-6:15 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, mark.sustic@gmail.com. FRIDAY NIGHT PIANO: A performance of piano rolls from the 1900s through the present — and from ABBA to Led Zeppelin — entertains as audiences eat snacks around the firepit. Main Street Museum, White River Junction, 5-10 p.m. Free. Info, info@mainstreetmuseum.org. MISSY RAINES: Toes tap as the Grammy Award-nominated instrumentalist doles out bluegrass numbers. Chandler Center for the Arts, Randolph, 7 p.m. Pay what you can. Info, 728-9878. REED FOEHL & HIS BAND: Audiences leave this Grammynominated songwriter’s intimate dinner show with new earworms aplenty. Town Hall Theater,

SAT.9

agriculture

SEED SWAP: Green thumbs stock up on a variety of garden starters at a seasonal Swap Sisters exchange. Hardwick Memorial Hall, 1-3 p.m. Free. Info, 755-6336.

bazaars

BAKE & BOOK SALE: Sales of snacks and stories benefit the church’s mission work. United Church of Fairfax, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Free. Info, 849-6313.

crafts

CABLE/ARAN KNITTING CLASS WITH CINDY HILL: Needlesmiths learn a new pattern for a stylish neck warmer. Materials provided. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 2:45-4:15 p.m. Free; donations accepted; preregister. Info, 363-6330.

dance

SUGAR ON TAP: BURLESQUE VARIETY SHOW: Green Mountain Cabaret performers deliver a sultry evening of sass and class. Ages 18 and up. Black Box Theater, Main Street Landing Performing Arts Center, Burlington, 8-10 p.m. $20-25. Info, info@greenmountain cabaret.com. SWING DANCE: All-star DJs back a night of dancing with big-band bops. Bring clean shoes. Champlain Club, Burlington, beginners’ lesson, 7:30 p.m.; dance 8 p.m. $5. Info, 864-8382.

theater

fairs & festivals

‘ALL THINGS EQUAL: THE LIFE AND TRIALS OF RUTH BADER GINSBURG’: Michelle Azar stars as the iconic Supreme Court justice in this one-woman show written by Tony Award winner Rupert Holmes. The Flynn, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. $29-59. Info, 863-5966.

NWV VERMONT RAILS MODEL RAILROAD SHOW: Model train enthusiasts of all ages chug, chug, chug their way through a day of exhibits and hands-on family activities. Collins Perley Sports and Fitness Center, St. Albans, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. $2-8; free for kids under 6. Info, 598-0905.

‘LONG LIVE LOVE’: The Essex Community Players premieres Don Zolidis’ romantic farce, in which estranged playwright spouses compete to control the ending of their play within a play. Essex Memorial Hall, 7:30-9:30 p.m. $14-18. Info, 871-5026.

film

‘POET’S CHOICE’: The Valley Players premiere playwright Mary Pratt’s take on It’s a Wonderful Life, in which an angel offers a writer a lifetime of either happiness or artistic success. See calendar spotlight. Valley Players Theater, Waitsfield, 7:30 p.m. $1418. Info, 583-1674.

words

FRIENDS OF THE RUTLAND FREE LIBRARY BOOK SALE: A broad selection of used, rare and antique books goes on sale to benefit the library. Rutland Free Library, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Free. Info, 773-1860. WRITING CRAFT TALK: VIEVEE FRANCIS: The award-winning poet talks shop with listeners interested in the art of writing. Vermont Studio Center, Johnson, 10-11 a.m. Free. Info, 635-2727.

See what’s playing at local theaters in the On Screen section. ‘FUNGI: THE WEB OF LIFE 3D’: See WED.6. ‘GREAT WHITE SHARK 3D’: See WED.6. ‘LA FORZA DEL DESTINO’: The Metropolitan Opera’s first staging of Verdi’s epic drama in nearly 30 years broadcasts live. Town Hall Theater, Middlebury, noon. $12-26. Info, 382-9222. ‘OCEANS: OUR BLUE PLANET 3D’: See WED.6. ‘TINY GIANTS 3D’: See WED.6. ‘VICTIMS OF SIN’: A cabaret dancer rescues an abandoned baby only to find herself up against the kid’s murderous biological father in this 1950 Mexican noir musical. The Screening Room @ VTIFF, Main Street Landing Performing Arts Center, Burlington, 7-8:45 p.m. $5. Info, 660–2600.

food & drink

CAPITAL CITY WINTER FARMERS MARKET: Root veggies, honey, maple syrup and more change hands at


LIST YOUR EVENT FOR FREE AT SEVENDAYSVT.COM/POSTEVENT

an off-season celebration of locally grown food. Barr Hill, Montpelier, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Free. Info, nicole. zarrillo@caledoniaspirits.com. SHEEP SHOP CAFÉ GRAND OPENING: See THU.7.

games

CHESS CLUB: Players of all ages and abilities face off and learn new strategies. ADA accessible. South Burlington Public Library & City Hall, 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Free. Info, 846-4140. LEARN TO PLAY MAH-JONGG: Pauline Nolte teaches a seven-week course on the American and Chinese styles of this ancient game. Waterbury Public Library, 10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, judi@ waterburypubliclibrary.com.

health & fitness

COMMUNITY YOGA CLASS: An all-levels session offers a weekly opportunity to relax the mind and rejuvenate the body. Wise Pines, Woodstock, 10-11 a.m. Free; donations accepted. Info, 432-3126.

holidays

EAT, DRUM, DANCE! IN CELEBRATION OF GHANA’S INDEPENDENCE DAY: Renowned dancer and choreographer Samuel Maama Marquaye performs alongside Shidaa Projects drummers and movers before a traditional meal of jollof rice. West African dance party follows. First Church in Barre, Universalist, 6 p.m. $20 suggested donation. Info, 522-4927.

language

CROISSANTS ET CONVERSATION: Novice French speakers meet up over refreshments and games. Alliance Française of the Lake Champlain Region, Burlington, 10-11:30 p.m. Free. Info, info@aflcr.org. FRENCH CONVERSATION FOR ALL: Native French speaker Romain Feuillette guides an informal discussion group. All ages and abilities welcome. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 10:30-11:30 a.m. Free; preregister; limited space. Info, 878-4918. INTRODUCTION TO THE IRISH LANGUAGE: Chris Branagan leads an informal lesson for newcomers to Gaelic. Fletcher Room, Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 1:30-2:30 p.m. Free. Info, 363-6330.

music

THE BEERWORTH SISTERS: The acoustic duo delivers sweet harmonies. Matt Saraca opens. Shelburne Vineyard, 6-8 p.m. Free. Info, 985-8222. BURLINGTON CIVIC SYMPHONY SPRING CONCERT: Daniel Bruce leads the orchestra in a performance of works by Aaron Copland, Igor Stravinsky and Felix Mendelssohn. Elley-Long Music Center, Saint Michael’s College, Colchester, 7-9 p.m. $1020. Info, info@bcsovt.org.

COLD CHOCOLATE: The folk-funk fusion outfit delivers a high-octane show. York Street Meeting House, Lyndon, 7 p.m. $15-20; free for kids under 18. Info, 748-2600. RAY VEGA AND HIS SIX-PIECE BAND: The Nuyorican outfit presents an evening of funky original tunes. Vergennes Opera House, 7:30 p.m. $20-25; cash bar. Info, 877-6737. THE ROUGH & TUMBLE: An Americana duo gets audiences laughing and crying with its vivid songwriting. The Geoff Goodhue Trio opens. Fairlee Town Hall Auditorium, 6-10 p.m. $20. Info, matt@rootedentertainment. com. SONGS AND ARIAS: Voice students deliver an evening of supercharged songs. Robison Concert Hall, Mahaney Arts Center, Middlebury College, 7:308:45 p.m. Free. Info, 443-5000. WHO’S BAD: THE ULTIMATE MICHAEL JACKSON EXPERIENCE: Gravity-defying dance moves and uncanny interpretations of classic songs such as “Billie Jean” and “Smooth Criminal” make for a power-packed celebration of hits. Paramount Theatre, Rutland, 7 p.m. $40. Info, 775-0903. ‘WINTER WIND, MELTING ICE: THE SEASON OF TRANSITION’: See FRI.8. Warren United Church of Christ, 7:30 p.m.

québec

MONTRÉAL EN LUMIÈRE: See WED.6.

sports

WORK OUT (AND BRUNCH) WITH DRAGON BOATERS: Interested adventurers try out rowing at an open practice, and get brunch with the team members after. Ethos Athletics, Burlington, 11:15 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Free; preregister; limited space. Info, manager@maliaracing.com.

talks

JANE VINCENT: A local tells the story of captain Philomene Daniels, the first female steamboat pilot, who operated out of Vergennes. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 2-4 p.m. Free. Info, 878-4918.

theater

CIRCUS SPECTACULAR: Highflying aerialists, acrobats and jugglers from around the globe dazzle audience members at this New England Center for Circus Arts fundraiser. Virtual option available. Latchis Hotel & Theater, Brattleboro, 7:30 p.m. $20-50. Info, 254-9780. ‘POET’S CHOICE’: See FRI.8.

words

FRIENDS OF THE RUTLAND FREE LIBRARY BOOK SALE: See FRI.8. READ BETWEEN THE VINES: CABIN FEVER EDITION: Grownup bibliophiles lean into their Scholastic Book Fair nostalgia by picking up some springtime reads. Putnam’s vine/yard, White River Junction, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Free. Info, 649-1114.

Find club dates at local venues in the Music + Nightlife section online at sevendaysvt.com/ music.

The VT High School Snowboard League would like to

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community

HUMAN CONNECTION CIRCLE: Neighbors share stories from their lives and forge deep connections. Pickering Room, Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 3-4:30 p.m. Free; preregister; limited space. Info, humanconnectioncircle@ gmail.com.

film

music + nightlife

9/7/23 12:05 PM

VT WORKERS’ CENTER HEALTH CARE IS A HUMAN RIGHT WRJ TOUR STOP: Locals share their medical system stories and learn how they can help address the health care crisis. Junction Arts & Media, White River Junction, 2-3 p.m. Free. Info, 295-6688.

Find even more local events in this newspaper and online:

See what’s playing at theaters in the On Screen section.

6h-Pawsathome091323-3.indd 1

activism

YARN CRAFTERS GROUP: See WED.6, 1-3 p.m.

film

pawsathomevt.com • 802.871.2329

SUN.10

FOMO?

Find visual art exhibits and events in the Art section and at sevendaysvt.com/art.

Mobile Veterinary Hospice & End of Life Care

‘LONG LIVE LOVE’: See FRI.8.

crafts

art

Paws At Home

for hosting our state competition !! 6h-VPA030624 1

3/4/24 10:48 AM

See what’s playing at local theaters in the On Screen section. THE 96TH ACADEMY AWARDS HOSTED BY REVOLUTION: Film buffs attend a funky screening of the Oscars. Dress code is “Black Tie DIY.” Junction Arts & Media, White River Junction, 6:30 a.m.noon. Free. Info, 295-6688. ‘FUNGI: THE WEB OF LIFE 3D’: See WED.6. ‘GREAT WHITE SHARK 3D’: See WED.6. ‘OCEANS: OUR BLUE PLANET 3D’: See WED.6. ‘TINY GIANTS 3D’: See WED.6.

Learn more about highlighted listings in the Magnificent 7 on page 11.

= ONLINE EVENT

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McCullough Student Center, Middlebury College, 5-6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 443-3168.

Piano Laughing Matter

food & drink

SHEEP SHOP CAFÉ GRAND OPENING: See THU.7, 7 a.m.-5 p.m.

Turns out that the life of a concert pianist is sometimes more giggle-worthy than glamorous. Award-winning ivory tickler Sarah Hagen combines her classical training with standup comedy (while sitting down) in Perk Up Pianist. This riotous hour of music, stories from the road and jokes about Claude Debussy delights classical music aficionados and comedy fans alike. Hagen plays expressive works by Frédéric Chopin and Franz Liszt in between ruminations on what it would be like to date Ludwig van Beethoven and mindboggling tales of the things people have said to her after concerts.

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.

lgbtq

‘PERK UP PIANIST’

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.

Sunday, March 10, 2 p.m., at Chandler Center for the Arts in Randolph. $10-45; free for kids under 12. Info, 728-9878, chandler-arts.org.

CRAFT CLUB: Crafty queer folks work on their knitting, crocheting and sewing projects. Rainbow Bridge Community Center, Barre, 10 a.m.-noon. Free. Info, 622-0692. PRIDE SKI DAY: Pride Center of Vermont and Audubon Vermont invite queer and trans skiers of all experience levels to enjoy a day of complimentary rentals and trail access. Craftsbury Outdoor Center, Craftsbury Common, 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, matt@pridecentervt.org.

‘PERK UP PIANIST’: Combining her classical training with irreverent standup comedy, Sarah Hagen gives a glimpse into the chaotic life of a concert pianist. See calendar spotlight. Chandler Center for the Arts, Randolph, 2 p.m. $10-45; free for kids under 12. Info, 728-9878. PLAY EVERY TOWN: Prolific pianist David Feurzeig continues a four-year, statewide series of shows in protest of high-pollution

‘GREAT WHITE SHARK 3D’: See WED.6. ‘OCEANS: OUR BLUE PLANET 3D’: See WED.6. REQUIRED VIEWING: Audiences don’t know which cult classic they’re about to watch at this monthly screening series. Spiral House Art Collective, Burlington, 7-9 p.m. Free. Info, colleengoodhue@gmail.com.

food & drink

IRISH BREAD MAKING: Home bakers make traditional Irish soda bread and scones. While they bake, local poet Angela Patten reads from her mother’s humorous cookbook. St. Mark Youth Center, Burlington, 4-6 p.m. Free;

Sarah Hagen

worldwide concert tours. Waitsfield United Church of Christ & Village Meeting House, 4 p.m. Free. Info, playeverytown@gmail. com. ‘SONGS OF WAR, GRIEF AND HEALING’: Local singers put on a benefit concert and dinner for Middle East Children’s Alliance. Highland Center for the Arts, Greensboro, 3 p.m. $10-40. Info, 533-2000. SUSAN CATTANEO: One of Boston’s most respected singer-songwriters draws from a deep well of folk and country traditions. Plainfield Town Hall Opera House, 4 p.m. $20 suggested donation. Info, plainfieldartsvt@gmail.com.

VA-ET-VIENT: The francophone fiddlers lead a warmhearted afternoon of music and sing-alongs. First Congregational Church Essex, Essex Junction, 3-4:30 p.m. $20; free for kids under 18. Info, 878-5745.

theater

outdoors

KEN LANGER: The Barre Unitarian Universalist Church director launches his book The Emergence of God: The Intersection of Science, Nature, and Spirituality. Next Chapter Bookstore, Barre, 1-3 p.m. Free. Info, 617-459-8978.

CHILL TAKEOVER: BOLTON VALLEY: The Chill Foundation commands the slopes for an incredible night of all-ages fun, including demos, drinks, food and raffles. Bolton Valley Resort, 5:3010 p.m. $45. Info, 383-6929.

québec

MONTRÉAL EN LUMIÈRE: See WED.6.

CIRCUS SPECTACULAR: See SAT.9, 1 p.m. ‘POET’S CHOICE’: See FRI.8, 2 p.m.

words

OPEN MIC POETRY: Resident poet Bianca Amira Zanella welcomes writers and listeners of all stripes to an artful afternoon of readings. Phoenix Books, Rutland, 2 p.m. Free. Info, 855-8078.

JANE HAWLEY STEVENS: The author of The Celestial Garden: Growing Herbs, Vegetables and Flowers in Sync With the Moon and Zodiac explains how plants and people can benefit from an astrological approach. Norwich Bookstore, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 649-1114.

WEST AFRICAN DANCE AND DRUM CLASS: Participants learns songs, rhythms and moves from across the African diaspora. Ages 13 and up. Wilson Hall,

Play, swim, repeat

🌞 Co-ed Day Camp 🌞 Nine sessions 🌞 M - F, 8:00 - 4:00

See how we can help today by visiting shsvermont.com or calling 802-474-2079.

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.

What’s next = ONLINE EVENT for your career? What’s next Work it out with for your Seven Days Jobs. career? Find 100+ new job postings weekly from trusted, local employers in Seven Days newspaper and online.

Work ithiring out with See who’s at jobs.sevendaysvt.com. Seven Days Jobs.

gbymca.org/programs/ adventure-camp SEVEN DAYS MARCH 6-13, 2024

Find even more local events in this newspaper and online: Find visual art exhibits and events in the Art section and at sevendaysvt.com/art.

agriculture

dance

FOMO?

art

MON.11

ADVENTURE CAMP at ROCK POINT

Are you searching for a like-minded friend to help tackle chores and tasks? Do you seek a companion to join you in hobbies and activities? Our caregivers, seniors themselves, show up ready to exceed expectations on a schedule that meets your needs.

8H-seniors020724 1 8H-Seniors020123.indd 1

‘FUNGI: THE WEB OF LIFE 3D’: See WED.6.

MAR. 10 | MUSIC

Need Help?

62

See what’s playing at local theaters in the On Screen section.

‘TINY GIANTS 3D’: See WED.6.

music

KEITH MURPHY: A master of contemporary Celtic guitar, mandolin, piano and French Canadian foot percussion weaves a compelling tapestry of textures, harmonies and rhythms. Adamant Community Club, 4-6 p.m. $15. Info, 454-7103.

film

Find 100+ new job postings weekly from trusted, local employers in Seven Days newspaper and online.

See who’s hiring at jobs.sevendaysvt.com.

2/1/2411:16 3:54 PM 2/01/24 AM 16t-YMCA030624 1

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7/30/21 1:58 PM


LIST YOUR EVENT FOR FREE AT SEVENDAYSVT.COM/POSTEVENT

donations accepted; preregister; limited space. Info, 363-6330.

‘GREAT WHITE SHARK 3D’: See WED.6.

donation; preregister. Info, 359-5000.

games

‘LA FORZA DEL DESTINO’: See SAT.9. Paramount Theatre, Rutland, 1 p.m. $20. Info, 775-0903.

theater

MONDAY NIGHT GAMES: Discounted wine by the glass fuels an evening of friendly competition featuring new and classic board games, card games, and cribbage. Shelburne Vineyard, 4-7 p.m. Free. Info, 985-8222.

language

ENGLISH CONVERSATION CIRCLE: Locals learning English as a second language gather in the Digital Lab to build vocabulary and make friends. ADA accessible. South Burlington Public Library & City Hall, noon-1 p.m. Free. Info, 846-4140.

TUE.12

community

‘OCEANS: OUR BLUE PLANET 3D’: See WED.6. ‘TINY GIANTS 3D’: See WED.6.

language

PAUSE-CAFÉ FRENCH CONVERSATION: Francophones and French-language learners meet pour parler la belle langue. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 5-6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 343-5493. SOCIAL HOUR: The Alliance Française of the Lake Champlain Region hosts a rendez-vous over Zoom. 5:30-6:30 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, ellen.sholk@gmail.com.

music

CURRENT EVENTS DISCUSSION GROUP: Brownell Library holds a virtual roundtable for neighbors to pause and reflect on the news cycle. 10-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 878-6955.

NATURALIST JOURNEYS: BEN COSGROVE: A traveling composer plays fascinating, evocative music inspired by geography. North Branch Nature Center, Montpelier, 6:30-8 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 229-6206.

dance

seminars

SWING DANCING: Local Lindy hoppers and jitterbuggers convene at Vermont Swings’ weekly boogie-down. Bring clean shoes. North Star Community Hall, Burlington, beginner lessons, 6:30 p.m.; dance 7:30-9 p.m. $5. Info, 864-8382.

film

See what’s playing at local theaters in the On Screen section. ‘FUNGI: THE WEB OF LIFE 3D’: See WED.6.

RESEARCHING YOUR IRISH ANCESTORS: Ed McGuire gives a brief history of Irish immigration to North America and plenty of tips for tracking down family trees in this genealogy workshop. Vermont Genealogy Library, Essex Junction, 7-9 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 363-6330.

talks

ROLF DIAMANT: The historian explains how abolitionism, the Civil War and the Reconstruction period gave rise to the concept of national parks. 5:30-7 p.m. $10 suggested

FAMILY FUN

SUN.10

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dances and singing games set to joyful live music. Capital City Grange, Berlin, 3-4:30 p.m. $5 suggested donation; free for kids. Info, 223-1509. GENDER CREATIVE KIDS: Trans and gender-nonconforming kiddos under 13 and their families build community and make new friends at this joyful monthly gathering. Locations vary; contact organizer for info. Various locations statewide, 2-4 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 865-9677. WINTER FUN DAY: Free pizza, outside activities, sing-alongs and crafts make for a stupendous Sunday. Old Schoolhouse Common, Marshfield, 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Free. Info, 426-3581.

rutland/killington

VT’S ORIGINAL PREGNANCY AND BABY EXPO: Naturally You Childbirth presents

words

BURLINGTON LITERATURE GROUP: TONI MORRISON: Readers analyze two novels, Song of Solomon and Jazz, over seven weeks. 6:30-8 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, info@nereadersandwriters. com. CLIMATE AND ECOLOGY BOOK DISCUSSION: Andrew Krivak’s novel The Bear, about the last person on Earth, inspires a climate-conscious conversation. Joslin Memorial Library, Waitsfield, 6:30-7:30 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 496-9127. MARGOT LIVESEY: A Scottish author celebrates the publication of her latest novel, The Road From Belhaven. Norwich Bookstore, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 649-1114. THE MOTH STORYSLAM: Local tellers of tales recount true stories in an open-mic format. Film House, Main Street Landing Performing Arts Center, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. $17.50; preregister. Info, susanne@ themoth.org. POETRY GROUP: A supportive drop-in group welcomes those who would like to share and listen to poetry. ADA accessible. South Burlington Public Library & City Hall, 11 a.m.-noon. Free. Info, 846-4140.

MON.11

burlington

STORIES WITH SHANNON: Bookworms ages 2 through 5 enjoy fun-filled reading time. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 11-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 863-3403.

chittenden county

POKÉMON CLUB: Players trade cards and enjoy activities centered on their favorite strategic game. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 4-5 p.m. Free. Info, 878-4918.

upper valley

2024 solar eclipse

‘THE CHER SHOW’: The Tonywinning musical about a pop superstar’s unparalleled story comes to the Queen City. The Flynn, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. $58.54-83.50. Info, 863-5966.

a fair full of vendors and education for new and expecting parents. Franklin Conference Center, Rutland, 11-3 a.m. $5. Info, 236-7946.

STORY TIME WITH BETH: A bookseller and librarian extraordinaire reads two picture books on a different theme each week. Norwich Bookstore, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 649-1114.

film

WED.13

DOUGLAS ARION: An astronomer illuminates everything Vermonters need to know to prepare to be in the path of totality. Craftsbury Public Library, Craftsbury Common, 6 p.m. Free. Info, 586-9683. ‘PRECLIPSE’: The Vermont Symphonic Winds and Bella Voce perform the entirety of Gustav Holst’s seven-movement symphony “The Planets.” Elley-Long Music Center, Saint Michael’s College, Colchester, 7-8:30 p.m. $10-15. Info, vermontsymphonicwinds@ gmail.com.

business

QUEEN CITY BUSINESS NETWORKING INTERNATIONAL GROUP: See WED.6.

community

CURRENT EVENTS: Neighbors have an informal discussion about what’s in the news. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 10:30 a.m.-noon. Free. Info, 878-4918.

crafts

GREEN MOUNTAIN CHAPTER OF THE EMBROIDERERS’ GUILD OF AMERICA: Anyone with an interest in the needle arts is welcome to bring a project to this monthly meeting. Holy Family Parish Hall, Essex Junction, 9:30 a.m.-1 p.m. Free. Info, gmc.vt.ega@gmail.com. YARN CRAFTERS GROUP: See WED.6.

TUE.12

burlington

SING-ALONG WITH LINDA BASSICK: Babies, toddlers and preschoolers sing, dance and wiggle along with Linda. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 1111:30 a.m. Free. Info, 863-3403.

chittenden county

JOURNEY FROM SAP TO SYRUP: A FAMILY PROGRAM: Vermonters of all ages kick off the sweetest season with a day of tree tapping, evaporator demonstrations and syrup tastings. Ages 3 and up. Audubon Vermont Sugarhouse, Huntington, 9:30-11 a.m. Pay what you can. Info, 434-3068. PRESCHOOL STORY TIME: Little ones enjoy a cozy session of reading, rhyming and singing. Birth through age 5. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 10:30-11 a.m. Free. Info, 878-4918. STORYBOOK CRAFTYTOWN: Creative kids make a project based on the book they read. Ages 8 and up, or ages 6 and up with an adult helper. ADA accessible.

Community Center, Barre, 5:30-7 p.m. Free. Info, 622-0692.

See what’s playing at local theaters in the On Screen section.

politics

ESSENTIALS OF CAMERA OPERATION: Aspiring photographers and cinematographers learn how to shoot like the pros. The Media Factory, Burlington, 6-8 p.m. Free; donations accepted; preregister. Info, 651-9692. ‘FUNGI: THE WEB OF LIFE 3D’: See WED.6. ‘GREAT WHITE SHARK 3D’: See WED.6. ‘OCEANS: OUR BLUE PLANET 3D’: See WED.6.

DAVE GRAM & M.E. KABAY: A journalist and a computer scientist discuss how to spot misinformation and disinformation. Live stream available. KelloggHubbard Library, Montpelier, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 223-3338.

seminars

ECOGATHERINGS: See THU.7, 6-7:30 p.m.

sports

‘TINY GIANTS 3D’: See WED.6.

GREEN MOUNTAIN TABLE TENNIS CLUB: See WED.6.

food & drink

SMUGGS 55+ SKI CLUB: See WED.6.

WHAT’S THAT WINE WEDNESDAYS: See WED.6.

theater

‘THE CHER SHOW’: See TUE.12.

games

BOARD GAME NIGHT: Lovers of tabletop fun play classic games and new designer offerings. Waterbury Public Library, 6-8 p.m. Free. Info, 244-7036.

health & fitness

words

CHAIR YOGA: See WED.6.

language

BEGINNER IRISH LANGUAGE CLASS: See WED.6. ELL CLASSES: ENGLISH FOR BEGINNERS & INTERMEDIATE STUDENTS: See WED.6. INTERMEDIATE IRISH LANGUAGE CONVERSATION AND MUSIC: See WED.6.

lgbtq

QUEER WRITER’S GROUP: LGBTQ authors meet monthly to discuss their work, write from prompts, and give each other advice and feedback. Rainbow Bridge

South Burlington Public Library & City Hall, 3-4:30 p.m. Free. Info, 846-4140. TODDLERTIME: Miss Alexa delights infants and toddlers ages 1 to 3 and their adult caregivers with interactive stories, songs, rhymes and more. South Burlington Public Library & City Hall, 10:30-11 a.m. Free. Info, 846-4140.

mad river valley/ waterbury

HOMESCHOOL COMPUTER CLUB: Home students learn everything from basic tech techniques to graphic design in this monthly class. Waterbury Public Library, 11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 244-7036.

WED.13

burlington

TODDLER TIME: See WED.6.

chittenden county BABYTIME: See WED.6.

EGGSTATIC!: Kids ages 6 through 10 learn how eggs work and why they evolved for some species. Birds of

‘THE PLAY THAT GOES WRONG’: A play-within-a-play goes horribly awry in this award-winning comedy, presented by Northern Stage. Barrette Center for the Arts, White River Junction, 7:30 p.m. $19-69. Info, 296-7000.

AFTER HOURS BOOK CLUB: Readers spend the evening discussing The Lost Girls of Willowbrook by Ellen Marie Wiseman. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 6:307:30 p.m. Free. Info, 878-4918. LIFE STORIES WE LOVE TO TELL: Prompts from group leader Maryellen Crangle inspire true tales, told either off the cuff or read from prewritten scripts. Presented by Dorothy Alling Memorial Library. 2-3:30 p.m. Free; preregister; limited space. Info, 878-4918. ➆

Vermont Museum, Huntington, 10-11 a.m. $15-35 suggested donation; preregister; limited space. Info, 434-2167. MOVIE MATINEE: Film lovers have a family-friendly afternoon at this screening of an animated favorite. Brownell Library, Essex Junction, 3-4:30 p.m. Free. Info, 878-6956. PLAY TIME: See WED.6.

barre/montpelier

FARMERS NIGHT: VERMONT YOUTH ORCHESTRA: The VYO String Squad and the Winds, Brass and Percussion Ensemble perform mariachi jams and movie themes. House Chamber, Vermont Statehouse, Montpelier, 7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 828-0749.

mad river valley/ waterbury

LEGO CHALLENGE CLUB: Kids engage in a fun-filled hour of building, then leave their creations on display in the library all month long. Ages 6 through 8. Waterbury Public Library, 3-4 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 244-7036. K

SEVEN DAYS MARCH 6-13, 2024

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classes

In your heart forever.

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 ADULT ART CLASSES: This spring, the T.W. Wood Gallery in Montpelier is proud to offer art classes for the community. Classes include Dry Point Plexiglass Printmaking, Accordion Bookbinding, Drawing, Sci-Fi Fantasy Illustration and Art History. Classes are designed for all skill levels. Available to ages 16-plus. Enroll now and let your creativity flourish. Cost: $480 for weekly 2-hour class for 12 weeks. Location: T.W. Wood Gallery, 46 Barre St., Montpelier. Info: Bailey Southgate, 802-2626035, bsouthgate@twwood gallery.org, twwoodgallery.org.

Share the story of your special friend. Your beloved pet was a part of the family. Explain how and why in a Seven Days pet memorial. Share your Seven Days Pet Memorials animal’s photo and a written remembrance in the Fur-ever Loved section of the newspaper and online. It’s an affordable way to acknowledge and celebrate the nonhuman companions in our lives.

Fur-ever

TO SUBMIT A PET MEMORIAL,

please visit sevendaysvt.com/ petmemorials or scan the QR code. 64

SEVEN DAYS MARCH 6-13, 2024

2v-petmemorials.indd 1

culinary AUTHENTIC TACOS IN AN INSTANT!: Thanks to the Instant Pot, you can enjoy authentic Mexican tacos in an instant! You’ll learn to cook three types of tacos, plus guacamole from scratch. Students will master the Instant Pot, hone their knife skills, get hands-on instruction and connect with classmates over great food. Wed., Mar. 13, 6-8:30 p.m. Cost: $45 for 2.5-hour class, incl. dinner. Location: Access CVU, 369 CVU Rd., Hinesburg. Info: Ariel Voorhees, 802-482-7194, ariel@ gatherroundchef.com, cvsdvt. ce.eleyo.com. THE BASICS OF WINE TASTING: Learn how to taste wine, know what you like and what to buy in an easy-to-understand way. Tue., Mar. 19, 6:30-9 p.m. Cost: $45. Location: Standing Stone Wines, 33 Main St., Winooski. Info: lilsicles@icloud.com, sevendaystickets.com.

ADULT LIVE SPANISH E-CLASSES: Join us for adult Spanish classes this spring, using Zoom online video conferencing. This is our 18th year! Learn from a native speaker via small group classes or individual instruction. You’ll always be participating and speaking. Classes from beginning to advanced. Note: Classes fill up fast. See our website or contact us for details. Group classes begin week of Apr. 1; private instruction avail. any time. Location: Online. Info: 802-585-1025, spanishparavos@ gmail.com, spanishwaterbury center.com. MANDARIN CONVERSATION CIRCLE: Join the New Mandarin Conversation Circle meeting! Volunteers from the Vermont Chinese School help you learn and improve your Mandarin while you make new friends. 1st and 3rd Tue. of each month, 11 a.m.-noon. Location: South Burlington Public Library, 180 Market St. Info: 802-307-6332, sevendaystickets.com.

astrology YOUR ASTROLOGICAL MOON: Mother, Moods and Mystery: In this in-person three-part series, explore your natal moon to gain deeper understanding of your emotional development, needs, triggers, instincts and more. The ancient wisdom tradition of astrology offers fresh insights into your patterns, helping you develop self-acceptance and practical tools for better well-being. Wed., Mar. 20 & 27, & Apr. 3, 5:30-7 p.m. Cost: $75/3 classes, 1.5 hours each. Location: The Wellness Collective, 875 Roosevelt Hwy., Ste. 120, Colchester. Info: Jennie Date, 802-578-3735, hiddenpathastrology@gmail. com, hiddenpathastrology.com.

classes for participants at all levels. Please visit our website to read about all of our offerings or contact Micheline by email for more information. 11-week classes begin Mar. 18, online or in person. Location: Alliance Française, 43 King St., Burlington. Info: education@aflcr.org, aflcr.org.

EASTER SUGAR COOKIE DECORATING: This class is the perfect introduction to decorating cookies with royal icing! You will learn the basics of cookie decorating, including obtaining the correct icing consistency and outlining and flooding cookies. Decorate and take home four cookies and a goodie bag of recipes and treats. Please disclose all allergies when you register. Sun., Mar. 24, 2-4 p.m. Cost: $65. Location: Red Poppy Cakery, Waterbury Village Historic District. Info: 203-400-0700, sevendaystickets.com. FOCACCIA ART WORKSHOP: Join our workshop to craft focaccia bread art with diverse toppings. Kids need adult supervision. Tickets accommodate extra attendees without kits. The recipe suits vegan/vegetarian diets but contains gluten. Alert us to allergies during registration; note, our facility isn’t allergen-free. Take home your 8-inch masterpiece and the recipe! Thu., Apr. 25, 6-7:30 p.m. Location: Red Poppy Cakery, Waterbury Village Historic District. Info: 203-4000700, sevendaystickets.com.

language ALLIANCE FRANÇAISE SPRING CLASSES: Join us for online and in-person adult French classes this spring. Our 11-week session starts on Mar. 18 and offers

meditation TRUST IN SELF AND OTHER: Join the workshop/retreat “Trust in the Other, Within and Without: Buddhism, Psychotherapy, and the Path of Compassion and Ease” with Polly Young Eisendrath and Mark Unno, PhD. Apr. 4, 5 & 6. Cost: $200 for 2.5 days. Location: Burlington Friends Meeting, 173 N. Prospect St. Info: Jeanne Plo, 802-233-6377, jeanne.plo@gmail. com.

CLASS PHOTOS + MORE INFO ONLINE SEVENDAYSVT.COM/CLASSES 3/5/24 3:25 PM


COURTESY OF KELLY SCHULZE/MOUNTAIN DOG PHOTOGRAPHY

housing »

APARTMENTS, CONDOS & HOMES

on the road »

CARS, TRUCKS, MOTORCYCLES

pro services »

CHILDCARE, HEALTH/ WELLNESS, PAINTING

buy this stuff »

APPLIANCES, KID STUFF, ELECTRONICS, FURNITURE

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INSTRUCTION, CASTING, INSTRUMENTS FOR SALE

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NO SCAMS, ALL LOCAL, POSTINGS DAILY

Humane

Atalie AGE/SEX: 2-year-old spayed female ARRIVAL DATE: January 29, 2024 SUMMARY: This playful, social and curious girl is looking for an active household that will be able to provide lots of exercise and enrichment. She’s smart and food motivated, so learning basic manners should be a fun and rewarding undertaking for both her and an adopter. She can get very excited, so teaching alternative behaviors to minimize jumping and keep her attention on you will be important and help you both enjoy your time walking around the neighborhood or out on adventures.

Society of Chittenden County

DID YOU KNOW?

High-value treats are the best reward for dog training! You can experiment with a variety of treats to find out what your dog likes best, but cheese and jerky are usually popular! Give your dog small pieces of treats so your dog gets the reward but doesn’t gain unwanted weight.

Sponsored by:

DOGS/CATS/KIDS: Atalie may do well with another dog in a new home. She has no known experience living with cats or children. 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.

NEW STUFF ONLINE EVERY DAY! PLACE YOUR ADS 24-7 AT SEVENDAYSVT.COM. SEVEN DAYS MARCH 6-13, 2024

65


CLASSIFIEDS housing

FOR RENT ROOMY 3-BR & 1-BR AVAIL. NOW Roomy 3-BR, now $2,200/mo. Redone 1-BR avail. now, $1,000/mo. Refs. req., no pets. Call Joe’s cell: 802-318-8916.

HOUSEMATES BEAUTIFUL HOME IN CALAIS Share a large, beautifully handcrafted home in Calais w/ a couple seeking help w/ housecleaning, firewood stacking, gardening & cat sitting. $450/mo. Call 802863-5625 or visit homesharevermont. org for application. Interview, refs. & background checks req. EHO.

HOMESHARE CLOSE TO I-89 Active retired couple in Richmond who enjoy travel & the outdoors are seeking a responsible housemate to help w/ occasional house projects. Beautiful location, 10 minutes to I-89. A dog would be considered! Call 802-863-5625 or visit homesharevermont. org for application. Interview, refs. & background checks req. EHO. LIVE-IN CAREGIVER My 86-years-young mother is looking for someone who is willing to share her spacious 2-BR, 2-BA apt. in Montpelier. Rent, utils. & weekly stipend incl. She requires assistance for showering & trips to the BA + some meal preparation. If you are interested in meeting my mother to further discuss this opportunity, please contact Gary at gary@vtconcretecutting .com.

housing ads: $25 (25 words) legals: 52¢/word buy this stuff: free online

SUBLETS/ TEMPORARY SUBLET IN BURLINGTON Looking for someone to fill a BR in a 4-BR apt. in Burlington, Mar. 1-May 25. Your roommates will be 2 girls & 1 guy, all in their 20s. A beautiful, big room w/ a newly renovated kitchen & BA. Rent is $1,085 + gas, electricity & internet. In-unit laundry & off-street parking. Walking distance to downtown! I would be open to negotiating a discount on the monthly rent or doing just a portion of the time frame. Call or text Anna at 802-558-2716.

OFFICE/ COMMERCIAL OFFICE/RETAIL SPACE AT MAIN STREET LANDING on Burlington’s waterfront. Beautiful, healthy, affordable spaces for your business. Visit mainstreetlanding.com & click on space avail. Melinda, 864-7999.

CLASSIFIEDS KEY appt. appointment apt. apartment BA bathroom BR bedroom DR dining room DW dishwasher HDWD hardwood HW hot water LR living room NS no smoking OBO or best offer refs. references sec. dep. security deposit W/D washer & dryer

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

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services

AUTO DONATE YOUR CAR TO CHARITY Running or not! Fast, free pickup. Maximum tax deduction. Support Patriotic Hearts. Your car donation helps veterans! 1-866-5599123. (AAN CAN)

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

SEVEN DAYS MARCH 6-13, 2024

services: $12 (25 words) fsbos: $45 (2 weeks, 30 words, photo) jobs: michelle@sevendaysvt.com, 865-1020 x121

FINANCIAL/LEGAL DISABILITY BENEFITS You may qualify for disability benefi ts if you are between 52-63 years old & under a doctor’s care for a health condition that prevents you from working for a year or more. Call now! 1-877-247-6750. (AAN CAN) FREE AUTO INSURANCE QUOTES For uninsured & insured drivers. Let us show you how much you can save! Call 855-569-1909. (AAN CAN)

HEALTH/ WELLNESS PROFESSIONAL THERAPEUTIC MASSAGE THERAPY Deep-tissue bodywork. Steamed towels/ hot packs. 30 years’ experience. Plainfield, Vt. Contact Peter Scott at 802-522-3053 or pscottmbs@gmail.com. Info: pscottmbs.com. PSYCHIC COUNSELING Psychic counseling, channeling w/ Bernice Kelman, Underhill. 40+ years’ experience. Also energy healing, chakra balancing, Reiki, rebirthing, other lives, classes & more. Info, 802-899-3542, kelman.b@juno.com.

HOME/GARDEN AGING ROOF? NEW HOMEOWNER? STORM DAMAGE? 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 mo. Lifetime warranty & professional installs. Senior & military discounts avail. Call 1-866-370-2939. (AAN CAN) BEAUTIFY YOUR HOME Get energy-efficient windows. They will increase your home’s value & decrease your energy bills. Replace all or a few! Call 844-3352217 now to get your free, no-obligation quote. (AAN CAN)

LOCKSMITH 24-7 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 your home, commercial & auto locksmith needs! 1-833-237-1233. (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)

CAREGIVING CAREGIVERS AVAIL.! Our skilled caregivers are here to help. We can provide the care you need in the comfort of your home. Give us a call at 802-923-3434 to learn more. You can also check out our website at greenmountaintotal care.net.

buy this stuff

print deadline: Mondays at 3:30 p.m. post ads online 24/7 at: sevendaysvt.com/classifieds questions? classifieds@sevendaysvt.com 865-1020 x115

Early buyers $5 (8 a.m.), general $2 (9 a.m.). Vendors offering antique, midcentury & vintage items in a flea market atmosphere. Call Don Willis Antiques for info: 802-751-6138, montpelierantiques market.com.

PETS CORGI PUPS Cute little potatoes, friendly, loving. 1st shots, health guarantee, tails docked. Ready to go Mar. 20 in East Hardwick. $775. Call 802-595-5345. RAGDOLL KITTENS FOR SALE Kittens for sale from Lachute Ragdolls, located in upstate New York. Visit lachuter ag dolls.com, email lachuteragdolls@ gmail.com or call 518-586-1212. SNORKIE PUPS Miniature schnauzer/ Yorkshire terrier cross in East Hardwick. 7-13 pounds full grown. Non-shedding, hypoallergenic. 1st shots, health guarantee. Ready to go on Mar. 20. $775. Call 802-595-5345 GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES 12-week-old AKC East German shepherd puppies for sale. 2 bicolor males, 1 sable male. Sweet & calm temperament, excellent dogs. Call or text for more information, 802-373-1636.

music

Legal Notices PLACE AN AFFORDABLE NOTICE AT: SEVENDAYSVT.COM/LEGAL-NOTICES OR CALL 802-865-1020, EXT. 121. STATE OF VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT PROBATE DIVISION CHITTENDEN UNIT DOCKET NO.: 23-PR-06732 In re ESTATE of CLETUS FLYNN NOTICE TO CREDITORS To the creditors of: Cletus Flynn, late of Milton, 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: February 27, 2024 Signature of Fiduciary: /s/ Sandra M. Flynn Executor/Administrator: Sandra M. Flynn, c/o Drislane Law Office, PO Box 1080, Williston, VT 05495 michelle@drislanelaw.com (802) 860-7266 Name of Publication: Seven Days Publication Date: 3/6/2024 Name of Probate Court: State of Vermont Chittenden Probate Division Address of Probate Court: 175 Main Street, Burlington, VT 05401 ACT 250 NOTICE MINOR APPLICATION 4C0018-1 10 V.S.A. §§ 6001 – 6111 Application 4C0018-1 from City of South Burlington, Attn: Thomas DiPietro 180 Market Street, South Burlington, VT 05403 was received on February 1, 2024 and deemed complete on February 20, 2024. The project specifically authorizes upgrades to the existing trail system at Red Rocks Park (the Park) to improve access and prevent further degradation of the existing natural area. The project scope includes measures for the improved conveyance of stormwater, erosion control measures, and parking improvement projects in several locations throughout the Park. The project is located at 4 Central Avenue in South Burlington, Vermont. This application can be viewed online by visiting the Act 250 Database: (https://anrweb.vt.gov/ANR/ Act250/Details.aspx?Num=4C0018-1). No hearing will be held, and a permit will be issued

LEGALS »

MISCELLANEOUS INSTRUCTION DIRECTV SATELLITE TV Service starting at $74.99/mo.! Free install. 160+ channels avail. Call now to get the most sports & entertainment on TV. 877-310-2472. (AAN CAN)

ANTIQUES/ COLLECTIBLES ANTIQUES MARKET Antiques market, Sun., Mar. 10 & 25, 8 a.m.-1 p.m., at the Canadian Club, 414 E. Montpelier Rd., Rte. 14, Barre, Vt.

GUITAR INSTRUCTION Berklee graduate w/ 30 years’ teaching experience offers lessons in guitar, music theory, music technology, ear training. Individualized, step-by-step approach. All ages, styles, levels. Rick Belford, 864-7195, rickbelford.com.

(1558) SHOP TOOLS, BUS PARTS & MORE! ONLINE AUCTION: TUES., MARCH 12 @ 10AM

PREVIEW: Monday, March 11 from 11AM-1PM. Burlington, Vermont THCAuction.com  800-634-SOLD

16t-hirchakbrothers030624 1

3/4/24 9:51 AM


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WANT MORE PUZZLES? Try these online news games from Seven Days at sevendaysvt.com/games.

NEW ON FRIDAYS:

Put your knowledge of Vermont news to the test.

1 6 BY JOSH REYNOLDS

SUDOKU

BY JOSH REYNOLDS

See how fast you can solve this weekly 10-word puzzle.

DIFFICULTY THIS WEEK: ★★★

DIFFICULTY THIS WEEK: ★★★

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.

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.

NEW EVERY DAY:

ANSWERS ON P.68 ★ = MODERATE ★★ = CHALLENGING ★★★ = HOO, BOY!

Guess today’s 5-letter word. Hint: It’s in the news!

crossword

ADDITIVE-FREE ANSWERS ON P. 68

»

SEVEN DAYS MARCH 6-13, 2024

67


** Material stricken out deleted. *** Material underlined added.

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The Cooperative Development Institute’s Water Infrastructure Support Program is seeking Statements of Qualifications from qualified engineering firms on behalf of Sterling View

Section 19 Parking rates. (a) As Written (b) (1)-(8) As Written. (9) Marketplace Parking Garage. a. – b. As Written c. Monthly Permit Rates: One hundred and twenty dollars ($120.00) for a seven (7) day per week monthly permit in the Marketplace lower garage. No monthly permits available in the Marketplace upper garage, except maintenance of those in existence at the time of adoption of this language. Forty dollars ($40.00) for a five (5) day per week monthly permit for city employees when paid for by a City of Burlington department. The director of the department of public works or his or her designee may pro-rate monthly parking permit fees at times of sale and termination. (e)-(f) As Written

5

NOTICE OF REQUEST FOR STATEMENT OF QUALIFICATIONS FOR ENGINEERING SERVICES

It is hereby Ordained by the Public Works Commission of the City of Burlington as follows: That Appendix C, Rule and Regulations of the Traffic Commission, Section 18 Parking facility designations, Section 19 Parking rates, of the Code of Ordinances of the City of Burlington is hereby amended as follows: Section 18 Parking facility designations. (a) Metered lot locations: (1) – (13) As Written. (14) Reserved. The city-leased and public works managed lot more commonly understood to be the Courthouse

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Application 300015-9 from Mount Mansfield Unified Union School District, Attn: Phil Graff, 10 River Rd, Jericho, VT 05465 was received on January 29, 2024 and deemed complete on February 20, 2024. The project is generally described as construction of two gravel

By: Stephanie H. Monaghan District Coordinator 111 West Street Essex Junction, VT 05452 802-261-1944 stephanie.monaghan@vermont.gov

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It is hereby Ordained by the Public Works Commission of the City of Burlington as follows: That Appendix C, Rule and Regulations of the Traffic Commission, Section 19, Parking Rates, of the Code of Ordinances of the City of Burlington is hereby amended as follows:

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ACT 250 NOTICE MINOR APPLICATION 300015-9 10 V.S.A. §§ 6001 – 6111

Dated this February 28, 2024.

Sponsor(s): Department of Public Works Action: Approved Date: 2/21/2024 Attestation of Adoption: Phillip Peterson, PE Public Works Engineer, Technical Services Published: 03/06/24 Effective: 03/27/24

CITY OF BURLINGTON IN THE YEAR TWO THOUSAND TWENTY-FOUR A REGULATION IN RELATION TO RULES AND REGULATIONS OF THE TRAFFIC COMMISSION—SECTION 19 PARKING RATES.

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By: /s/ Kaitlin Hayes Kaitlin Hayes District Coordinator 111 West Street Essex Junction, VT 05452 (802) 622-4084 kaitlin.hayes@vermont.gov

For more information contact Stephanie H. Monaghan at the address or telephone number below.

Sponsor(s): Department of Public Works Action: Approved Date: 2/21/2024 Attestation of Adoption: Phillip Peterson, PE Public Works Engineer, Technical Services Published: 03/06/24 Effective: 03/27/24

BCO Appx.C, Sec 18 & Sec 19 2/21/24

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Dated this February 28, 2024.

CITY OF BURLINGTON IN THE YEAR TWO THOUSAND TWENTY-FOUR A REGULATION IN RELATION TO RULES AND REGULATIONS OF THE TRAFFIC COMMISSION—SECTION 18 PARKING FACILITY DESIGNATIONS. SECTION 19 PARKING RATES.

** Material stricken out deleted. *** Material underlined added.

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For more information contact Kaitlin Hayes at the address or telephone number below.

No hearing will be held and a permit will be issued unless, on or before March 20, 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://nrb.vermont.gov/documents/ party-status-petition-form, and email it to the District 4 Office at: NRB. Act250Essex@vermont.gov. Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law may not be prepared unless the Commission holds a public hearing.

Section 19 Parking rates. (a) As Written. (b) The rate of charge for parking in metered city lots shall be as follows: (1) Location Rate per Hour Courthouse Plaza Parking Garage, Main Street and South Winooski Avenue $1.50 (2)-(16) As Written. (c)-(f) As Written

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unless, on or before March 20, 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://nrb.vermont.gov/documents/ party-status-petition-form, and email it to the District 4 Office at: NRB. Act250Essex@vermont.gov. Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law may not be prepared unless the Commission holds a public hearing.

Plaza Parking Garage lot; this regulation will expire on April 1, 2026. (b)-(f) As Written

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[CONTINUED]

Cooperative Community, Inc. in Hyde Park, Vermont for the redevelopment of their water, wastewater, and stormwater infrastructure. Required professional services will include but are not limited to: engineering assessments, additional preliminary engineering services, design-and construction-relations services, preparation of bidding and contracting documents, participation in evaluating bids received, and construction administration to ensure compliance with plans and specifications. Procurement of said services will be in accordance with 40 U.S.C. § 1101-1104. Qualified entities interested in being considered must submit: (1) letter of interest; (2) statement of qualifications and experience of firm and associates to be involved with the project; (3) references; (4) related prior experience; and (5) experience with federal funding sources. Submit the requested information to wisp@cdi.coop no later than March 29, 2024 to be considered. Please visit https://cdi.coop/rfqhydepark/ to view the full Request for Qualifications.

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Legal Notices

wetlands on the Camels Hump Middle School and Richmond Elementary School campus. The project is a stormwater retrofit project and involves no changes to the existing buildings or roads. The project is located at 173 School Street in Richmond, Vermont. This application can be viewed online by visiting the Act 250 Database: (https:// anrweb.vt.gov/ANR/Act250/Details. aspx?Num=300015-9).

BCO Appx.C, Sec 19, 2/21/24 CITY OF BURLINGTON IN THE YEAR TWO THOUSAND TWENTY-FOUR A REGULATION IN RELATION TO RULES AND REGULATIONS OF THE TRAFFIC COMMISSION—SECTION 19 PARKING RATES. Sponsor(s): Department of Public Works Action: Approved Date: 2/21/2024 Attestation of Adoption: Phillip Peterson, PE Public Works Engineer, Technical Services Published: 03/06/24 Effective: 03/27/24 It is hereby Ordained by the Public Works Commission of the City of Burlington as follows: That Appendix C, Rule and Regulations of the Traffic Commission, Section 19, Parking Rates, of the Code of Ordinances of the City of Burlington is hereby

amended as follows: Section 19 Parking rates. (a) As Written (b) (1)-(7) As Written. (8) College Street/Lakeview/Westlake Parking Garage Facility. a. - b. As Written. c. Monthly Permit Rates. Eighty-four dollars ($84.00) for a five (5) day per week monthly permit; the five (5) days per week shall be Monday through Friday (“standard workweek permit”). One-hundred dollars ($100.00) for a seven (7) day per week monthly permit (“standard calendar-week permit”). Twenty dollars ($20.00) for a five (5) day per week monthly permit for city employees when paid for by a City of Burlington department. Zero dollars ($0.00) for a restaurant/retail/service worker seven (7) day per week monthly permit with eligibility determined by the department of public works within policy approved by the public works commission. Fifty-five dollars ($55.00) for a five (5) day per week monthly permit for individuals who held valid monthly parking permits at the Elmwood lot as of April 30, 2022, for the period inclusive of May 1, 2022, through April 30, 2025, after which such rate will increase to the standard workweek permit rate. The director of the department of public works or his or her designee may prorate monthly parking permit fees at times of sale and termination. A standard workweek permit priced at forty ($40) for a five (5) day per week monthly permit; is exclusively offered during the school year, from September to June, and is restricted to students currently enrolled in the Burlington High School, verified by Burlington School District staff. (9) As Written (e)-(f) As Written ** Material stricken out deleted. *** Material underlined added. BCO Appx.C, Sec 19, 2/21/24 CITY OF BURLINGTON IN THE YEAR TWO THOUSAND TWENTY-FOUR A REGULATION IN RELATION TO RULES AND REGULATIONS OF THE TRAFFIC COMMISSION— 7A ACCESSIBLE SPACES DESIGNATED. Sponsor(s): Public Works Commission Action: Approved Date: 2/21/2024 Attestation of Adoption: Phillip Peterson, PE Public Works Engineer, Technical Services Published: 03/06/24 Effective: 03/27/24 It is hereby Ordained by the Public Works Commission of the City of Burlington as follows: That Appendix C, Rule and Regulations of the Traffic Commission, 7A Accessible spaces designated of the Code of Ordinances of the City of Burlington is hereby amended as follows: 7A Accessible spaces designated. No person shall park any vehicle at any time in the following location, except automobiles displaying special handicapped license plates issued pursuant to 18 V.S.A. § 1325, or any amendment or renumbering thereof: (1)-(32) As written. (33) Reserved. On the east side of North Willard Street, in the first space north of the driveway at 172 North Willard Street. (34)-(173) As written. ** Material stricken out deleted. *** Material underlined added. BCO Appx.C, Section 7A 2/21/2024


SEVENDAYSVT.COM/CLASSIFIEDS

CITY OF BURLINGTON IN THE YEAR TWO THOUSAND TWENTY-FOUR A REGULATION IN RELATION TO RULES AND REGULATIONS OF THE TRAFFIC COMMISSION— 27 NO PARKING EXCEPT WITH RESIDENT PARKING PERMIT. Sponsor(s): Public Works Commission Action: Date: 2/21/2024 Attestation of Adoption: Phillip Peterson, PE Public Works Engineer, Technical Services Published: 03/06/24 Effective: 03/27/24 It is hereby Ordained by the Public Works Commission of the City of Burlington as follows: That Appendix C, Rule and Regulations of the Traffic Commission, 27 No parking except with resident parking permit, designated of the Code of Ordinances of the City of Burlington is hereby amended as follows: 27 No parking except with resident parking permit. No person shall park any vehicle except (1) a vehicle with a valid residential street sticker or valid license plate number via a digital permitting program; (2) a vehicle with a valid transferable residential hanging tag; (3) a clearly identifiable delivery vehicle while conducting a delivery; (4) a clearly identifiable car share vehicle; or (5) a vehicle displaying a valid state-issued special registration plate or placard for an individual with a disability on any street, or portion thereof, designated as “residential parking.” (a)-(k) As written. (l) Streets designated for resident parking at all times, except between the hours of 6:00 a.m. and 6:00 p.m. Between the hours of 6:00 a.m. and 6:00 p.m., nonresidents shall not park a vehicle for a period longer than four (4) hours; this four (4) hour time limit shall not apply to residents with a valid residential parking sticker properly displayed or to visitors at a residence with a valid guest pass properly displayed: (1) As written (2) North Williams Street ** Material stricken out deleted. *** Material underlined added. /hm: BCO Appx.C, Section 27 2/21/2024 CITY OF BURLINGTON IN THE YEAR TWO THOUSAND TWENTY-FOUR A REGULATION IN RELATION TO RULES AND REGULATIONS OF THE TRAFFIC COMMISSION— 3 STOP SIGN LOCATIONS. Sponsor(s): Public Works Commission Action: Approved Date: 2/21/2024 Attestation of Adoption: Phillip Peterson, PE Public Works Engineer, Technical Services Published: 03/06/24 Effective: 03/27/24

of the City of Burlington is hereby amended as follows: 3 Stop sign locations. Stop signs are authorized at the following locations: (1)-(185) As written. (186) Reserved. At the intersection of the northern leg of Robinson Parkway and South Prospect Street, causing all traffic on Robinson Parkway to stop. (187) Reserved. At the intersection of the southern leg of Robinson Parkway and South Prospect Street, causing all traffic on Robinson Parkway to stop. (188)-(319) As written. ** Material stricken out deleted. *** Material underlined added. BCO Appx.C, Section 3 2/21/2024 NOTICE OF APPLICATION TO BROWNFIELDS REUSE AND ENVIRONMENTAL LIABILITY LIMITATION ACT PROGRAM Please take notice that Mountaha, LLC whose mailing address is 75 South Winooski Avenue, Burlington, VT 05404, is applying to the Vermont Brownfields Reuse and Environmental Liability Limitation Program (10 V.S.A. §6641 et seq.) in connection with the redevelopment of property known as Bushey’s Auto Repair in the Town of Essex Junction. A copy of the application, which contains a preliminary environmental assessment and a description of the proposed redevelopment project is available for public review at the Essex Junction Clerk’s Office and at the Vermont Department of Environmental Conservation offices in Montpelier. Comments concerning the application and/or the above referenced documents may be directed to The State of Vermont at (802) 461-6204 or at caitlyn.bain@vermont.gov. Comments may also be submitted by mail to the Vermont Department of Environmental Conservation, Waste Management Division, 1 National Life Drive – Davis 1, Montpelier, VT 05620; attention: The State of Vermont. STATE OF VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT PROBATE DIVISION CHITTENDEN UNIT DOCKET NO.:​23-PR-05160 In re: Estate of John Opulski NOTICE TO CREDITORS To the creditors of: John Opulski, late of Jericho, 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: 2/27/24 Signature of Fiduciary: /s/ Callie Opulski Executor/Administrator: Callie Opulski, c/o Kohn Rath LLP, P.O. Box 340, Hinesburg, VT 05461

It is hereby Ordained by the Public Works Commission of the City of Burlington as follows:

Name of Publication: Seven Days Publication Date: 03/06/2024

That Appendix C, Rule and Regulations of the Traffic Commission, 3 Stop sign locations of the Code of Ordinances

Name of Probate Court: State of Vermont - Chittenden Probate Division Address of Probate Court: 175 Main Street , Burlington, VT 05401

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TOWN OF WESTFORD DEVELOPMENT REVIEW BOARD NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Pursuant to 24 V.S.A. Chapter 117 and the Westford Land Use & Development Regulations, the Westford Development Review Board will hold a public hearing at the Westford Public Library (1717 Route 128) & via ZOOM on Monday, March 25th, 2024 at 7:00 PM to review the following application: Preliminary Plat Public Hearing for 9-Lot, 8-Unit Planned Unit Development & Subdivision –Swansong Take Two LLC Property. Applicant: Lee Hendler (approx. 83.2 acres) located off VT-128 in the Rural 10, Rural 5, Flood Hazard Overlay, and Water Resource Overlay Zoning Districts. This is a proposal to subdivide the subject parcel into 8 single-unit dwelling lots and a 60.3-acre open space lot. Join Zoom Meeting https://zoom.us/j/92727770910?pwd= MEVNd25TeUVJck1Xa216Y29RR0tjZz09 Meeting ID: 927 2777 0910 - Passcode: 1eshW7 Or Dial +1 929 205 6099 Meeting ID: 927 2777 0910 - Passcode: 440942 For more information call the Town Offices at 878-4587 Monday–Thursday 8:30am–4:30pm & Friday 8:30a.m.-1:00 p.m. Matt Wamsganz, Chairman Dated February 29, 2024 NORTHSTAR SELF STORAGE WILL BE HAVING A PUBLIC AND ONLINE SALE/AUCTION FOR THE FOLLOWING STORAGE UNITS ON MARCH 21, 2024, AT 9:00 AM Northstar Self Storage will be having a public and online sale/auction on March 21, 2024 at 9am EST at 681 Rockingham Road, Rockingham, VT 05151 (Units R81), 615 Route 7, Danby, VT 05739 (D36), 1124 Charlestown Road, Springfield, VT 05156 (Units S57, S64), 3446 Richville Rd, Manchester Center, VT 05255 (51) 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 1 R81 Rebecca Richmond Household Goods 2 D36 Jessica Terry Household Goods 3 S57 Brittney Rowe Household Goods 4 S64 Shawn Aponte Household Goods 5 51 Floie Bright Household Goods STATE OF VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT PROBATE DIVISION CHITTENDEN UNIT DOCKET NO.:​23-PR-06743

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Dated: February 29, 2024 Signature of Fiduciary: /s/ Anton Voinov Executor/Administrator: Anton Voinov, 11665 Log Jump Trl Ellicott City, MD 21042 avoinov1@gmail.com (202) 679-7711 Name of Publication: Seven Days Publication Date: 3/6/2024 Name of Probate Court: State of Vermont - Chittenden Probate Division Address of Probate Court: 175 Main Street , Burlington, VT 05401 NOTICE TO CREDITORS In re ESTATE of Mary Lemiesz NOTICE TO CREDITORS To the creditors of: Mary Lemiesz, late of Burlington, 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. The claim may be barred forever if it is not presented within the four (4) month period. Dated: March 1, 2024 Signature of Fiduciary: /s/ Gary Rodes Executor/Administrator: Gary Rodes, 284 Pulp Mill Bridge Rd. Weybridge, VT 05753 Phone: 802-388-6517 Email: gary.rodes@gmail.com Name of Publication: Seven Days Publication Date: 03/06/2024 CITY OF ESSEX JUNCTION DEVELOPMENT REVIEW BOARD PUBLIC MEETING MARCH 21, 2024 6:30 P.M. This meeting will be held in person at 2 Lincoln Street in the conference room and remotely.The meeting will be live-streamed on Town Meeting TV. • JOIN ONLINE: Visit www.essex junction.org for meeting connection information. • JOIN CALLING: Join via conference call (audio only): Dial 1(888) 788-0099 (toll free) Meeting ID: 839 2599 0985 Passcode: 940993 PUBLIC MEETING Conceptual site plan for removal of building #14 at 5 Fuller Place to construct a 32-unit apartment building with underground parking at 5 Fuller Place in the MCU District by O’LearyBurke Civil Associates, agents for 222 Franklin Inc., owner.

In re ESTATE of Helena Vladich

PUBLIC HEARING

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

Final site plan to convert an existing duplex into a tri-plex with two additional parking spaces at 4 Church Street in the MF3 District by John Giroux, owner.

To the creditors of: Helena Vladich, late of Colchester, 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.

This DRAFT agenda may be amended. Any questions re: above please call Chris Yuen or Terry Hass – 802-878-6950 IN ACCORDANCE WITH VT TITLE 9 COMMERCE AND TRADE CHAPTER 098: STORAGE UNITS 3905. ENFORCEMENT OF LIEN, Champlain Valley Self Storage, LLC shall host an auction of the following units on or after 3/23/24:

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Contents: household goods Sean Beaudoin: #618 Danielle Poole #845 Shayla Tessier: #522 Location: 78 Lincoln St. Essex Jct., VT Contents: household goods James Lafountain: #014 Tonika Jenkins: #026 Auction pre-registration is required, email info@champlainvalleyselfstorage. com to register. CITY OF BURLINGTON ORDINANCE 8.17. An Ordinance in Relation to Solid Waste Generation Tax Updates Sponsor: Department of Public Works Rules suspended and placed in all stages of passage: 02/26/24 Date: 02/26/24 Signed by Mayor: 03/04/24 Published: 03/06/24 Effective: 03/27/24 It is hereby Ordained by the City Council of the City of Burlington as follows: That Article I, In General, Chapter 14, Solid Waste, of the Code of Ordinances of the City of Burlington be updated and hereby is amended by amending the following sections thereof to read as follows: 14-1. Purpose. As written. 14-2 Definitions. The following definitions shall apply to this article: Definitions 1-3. As Written. Hauler. Any person who collects, transfers, or transports solid waste, including persons who exclusively collect compostables and recyclables, as those terms are defined herein, as that generated within Chittenden Solid Waste District borders for compensation, including any operator of a vehicle or trailer, or a container on or attached to such vehicle or trailer, to collect solid waste from self-haulers. Definitions 5-7. As written. Recyclable. Solid waste which may be reclaimed or processed so that it may be used in the production of materials or products, including excavated material, street sweepings, and other refuse collected from the City right-of-way which is recycled and/or repurposed into topsoil and other usable soils. Definitions 9-10. As written. Compostables. Food residuals, and leaf and yard residuals as those terms are defined in 10 V.S.A 6602. 14-3 Solid waste regulation. As written. 14-4. Collection. (a). As written. (b) All collectors and haulers of solid waste, and recyclables, and/or compostables in the city shall register with the department of public works and such registration shall constitute authorization to collect and dispose of solid waste and recyclables. Registrants may be required to provide information necessary to assure the proper handling of such materials. The public works commission, with city council approval, may establish other requirements, including a registration fee, necessary to carry out these provisions. (c)-(d). As Written. 14-5 – 14-12. As Written. 14-13. Effective date. The November 7, 2022 amendments to this article shall be effective on May 1, 2023. The February 26, 2024 amendments to this article shall be

Location: 2211 Main St. Colchester, VT

LEGALS » SEVEN DAYS MARCH 6-13, 2024

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Legal Notices [CONTINUED] effective in accordance and compliance with procedure as codified in Article 20, Section 49 of the Burlington City Charter. 14-14 Solid waste generation tax. (I) GENERAL PROVISIONS. (a) As written. (b) Purpose and authority. This section is enacted to raise revenue for recycling and waste management purposes under authority of the Charter of the City of Burlington, Act No. 298, Acts of 1949, as amended, Sections 48VI and 49. (II) TAXES IMPOSED: (a) There is hereby imposed a tax upon the collection and removal of solid waste, including recyclables but excluding compostables and the disposal of same by persons or agencies registered with the City of Burlington under Section 14-4(b) or licensed by any other government entity to collect or haul solid waste from within Burlington. (b) The tax shall be imposed upon solid waste haulers, not including those haulers exclusively hauling compostables, and collectors at the rate per month per residential dwelling unit served in Burlington set forth in the city’s budget or as established by resolution of the city council. The amounts of tax charged are not refundable. (c) As Written. (III) – (XIV). As Written. 14-15—14-18. As Written. * Material stricken out deleted. ** Material underlined added. cs/HIM/Ordinances 2024/Solid Waste Generation Tax Updates February 26, 2024 NORTHFIELD MUTUAL HOLDING COMPANY NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING The Annual Meeting of the Corporators of the Northfield Mutual Holding Company will be held on Tuesday, April 2, 2024 beginning at 6:15 p.m. at ECHO, Leahy Center for Lake Champlain, 1 College St, Burlington, VT. The matters to be considered include a review of corporate activities. Please call (802) 871-4492 for information. PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE Burlington Comprehensive Development Ordinance Pursuant to 24 V.S.A. §4442 and §4444, notice is hereby given of a public hearing by the Burlington City Council to hear comments on the following proposed amendments to the City of Burlington’s Comprehensive Development Ordinance (CDO): ZA-24-02 Neighborhood Code ZA-24-02 Neighborhood Code Amendments 1-6 The public hearing will take place on Monday, March 25, 2024 during the Regular City Council Meeting which begins at 5:30 pm in Contois Auditorium, Burlington City Hall, 149 Church Street, Burlington, VT or you may access the hearing/meeting as follows: On-line: https://zoom.us/j/92511527405 By telephone: +1 305 224 1968 US Webinar ID: 925 1152 7405 Pursuant to the requirements of 24 V.S.A. §4444(b): Statement of purpose:

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SEVEN DAYS MARCH 6-13, 2024

The purpose of the proposed amendment is as follows: • ZA-24-02 Neighborhood Code -- This amendment creates a new framework for the city’s residential zoning districts that enables a range of housing types, including single-family, ADUs, duplex through four-unit developments, as well as townhouses and small multi-unit buildings in some locations. These amendments enable greater flexibility for existing homes as well as a range of housing options within neighborhoods, create new zoning standards along transportation corridors identified in planBTV, and comply with Act 47 of 2023 of the VT Legislature. • ZA-24-02 Amendment 1 – This amendment would reduce the allowable lot coverage in the Medium-Density Residential (RM) district to 55%. • ZA-24-02 Amendment 2 -- This amendment would reduce the maximum dwelling units per structure to 4 units in the RM district. • ZA-24-02 Amendment 3 – This amendment would apply the Residential Low Density (RL) district to residentiallyzoned parcels with frontage on sections of Colchester Avenue and North Avenue, which were proposed to be within the proposed Residential Corridor District, due to wildlife sightings. • ZA-24-02 Amendment 4 – This amendment would apply the RL district to residentially-zoned parcels generally bounded by N. Willard St., Mansfield Avenue, Archibald St., and Pearl St, except for the first 200 ft. depth of the properties with street frontage on Pearl Street between N. Willard and N. Prospect which are in the proposed Residential Corridor District. • ZA-24-02 Amendment 5 – This amendment would change all RL districts to RM districts within the City. • ZA-24-02 Amendment 6 – This amendment is intended to increase compliance and accountability for permit applicants. Geographic areas affected: These amendments apply to the following areas of the city: • ZA-24-02 Neighborhood Code -- All current residential zoning districts (RL, RL-W, RM, RM-W, and RH) within the city with additional changes to expand the residential districts into the following adjacent parcels: ◦ 60 Austin Drive (057-2-112-000) ◦ 2076 North Avenue (021-2-052-000) • ZA-24-02 Amendment 1 –All RM districts in the City. • ZA-24-02 Amendment 2 -- All RM districts in the City. • ZA-24-02 Amendment 3 – This amendment would apply to residentially-zoned parcels with frontage on sections of Colchester Avenue and North Avenue, which were proposed to be within the proposed Residential Corridor District. • ZA-24-02 Amendment 4 – This amendment would apply to residentially-zoned parcels generally bounded by N. Willard St., Mansfield Avenue, Archibald St., and Pearl St, except for the first 200 ft. depth of the properties with street frontage on Pearl Street between N. Willard and N. Prospect. • ZA-24-02 Amendment 5 – This amendment would apply to all RL districts within the City. • ZA-24-02 Amendment 6 – This amendment would apply to the entire City. List of section headings affected: The proposed amendments modify the following sections of the Burlington Comprehensive Development Ordinance: • ZA-24-02 Neighborhood Code – • Sec. 4.3.1 Base Districts Established, Map 4.3.1-1 Base Zoning Districts; • Sec. 4.3.2 Overlay Districts Established; • Sec. 4.4.3, Enterprise Districts, including Table 4.4.3-1, Map 4.4.3-1 Enterprise Districts;

• Sec. 4.4.5 Residential Districts; Map 4.4.5-1 Residential Zoning Districts; Tables 4.4.5-1, Minimum Lot Size and Frontage: RL, RL-W, RM and RM-W; Table 4.4.5-2, Base Residential Density; 4.4.5-3, Residential District Dimensional Standards; 4.4.5-5, Senior Housing Bonus; 4.4.5-7, Residential Conversion Bonus; 4.4.5-8, Maximum Density, Lot Coverage and Building Heights with Bonuses; • Map 4.4.6-1, Recreation, Conservation and Open Space Districts; • Sec. 4.5.1, Design Review Overlay District; Map 4.5.1-1; Design Review Overlay; • Sec. 4.5.3, RH Density Bonus Overlay District and Map 4.5.3-1: RH Density Bonus Overlay • Sec. 4.5.4, Natural Resource Protection Overlay (NR) District; Map 4.5.4-1 Natural Resource Overlay District; • Sec. 4.5.5, RL Larger Lot Overlay District and Map 4.5.5-1, RL Larger Lot Overlay; • Sec. 4.5.6, Mouth of the River Overlay District and Map 4.5.6-1, Mouth of River Overlay; • Sec. 4.5.7, Centennial Woods Overlay District and Map 4.5.7-1, Centennial Woods Overlay; • Sec. 4.5.8, South End Innovation District Overlay, including Tables 4.5.8-1, 2 & 3, and Maps 4.5.8-1 and 4.5.8-2. • Sec. 5.2.1, Existing Small Lots; • Sec. 5.2.4 (a) Buildable Area Calculation; • Sec. 5.2.5 (b), Exceptions to Yard Setbacks Requirements; • Sec. 5.3.4, Nonconforming Uses; • Sec. 5.4.8, Historic Buildings and Sites; • Sec 5.4.12, Mobile Home Parks; • 6.2.2 (h) Design Review- Building Location and Orientation; • Sec. 6.3.2 (a), Relate development to its environment, and 6.3.2(a) 1. Architectural Review- Massing, Height and Scale; • Sec. 11.1.3 (PUD) General Requirements and Applicability and 11.1.4 (PUD) Modification of Requirements.; • Article 13- Definitions; • Appendix A- Use Table • ZA-24-02 Amendment 1 –Table 4.4.5-1 Lot Size, Frontage, Setback and Lot Coverage Standards in Residential Districts. • ZA-24-02 Amendment 2 – Table 4.4.52 Principal & Secondary Structures Massing and Placement Standards in Residential Districts. • ZA-24-02 Amendment 3 – Maps 4.3.1-1 Base Zoning Districts and 4.4.5-1 Residential Zoning Districts. • ZA-24-02 Amendment 4 – Maps 4.3.1-1 Base Zoning Districts and 4.4.5-1 Residential Zoning Districts. • ZA-24-02 Amendment 5 –Maps 4.3.1-1 Base Zoning Districts and 4.4.5-1 Residential Zoning Districts, and all references to the Residential Low Density (RL) District will be modified to reflect Residential Medium Density (RM) standards throughout the CDO. • ZA-24-02 Amendment 6 – Sec. 2.7.8, Withhold Permit. The full text of the Burlington Comprehensive Development Ordinance is available online at www.burlingtonvt. gov/DPI/CDO. Upon request, a hard copy of the proposed amendments can be viewed at the Clerk’s Office located on the second floor of City Hall, 149 Church Street, Burlington, Monday through Friday 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. or online at https://www.burlingtonvt.gov/DPI/ CDO/Amendments. NOTICE OF SALE CITY OF WINOOSKI, VERMONT MAIN STREET REVITALIZATION PROJECT BOND The City of Winooski (the “City”) undersigned will receive sealed bid proposals until 10:00 A.M. Eastern Time on March 18, 2024, at the offices of Municipal Capital Markets Group, Inc., 8400 East

Prentice Avenue, Suite 500, Greenwood Village, Colorado 80111, for the purchase of its SIXTEEN MILLION EIGHT HUNDRED TWENTY THOUSAND DOLLAR ($16,820,000) General Obligation Capital Improvement Bond, Main Street Revitalization Project (the “Bond”). The Bond is being issued to provide interim financing for capital improvements for the City’s Main Street Revitalization Project, consisting of water system improvements, wastewater improvements, and community facilities, street and sidewalk reconstruction and improvements.

Responses Due By: March 7th, 2024 Response must be submitted electronically Please confirm our receipt of your submission immediately through the contact shown below:

The City will not be preparing a disclosure document in connection with the Bond.

PROJECT: Post Apartments 176 South Winooski Avenue Burlington, VT

The Bond will be payable with semiannual installments of interest only, expected to commence within 9 months of the date of issuance, and principal at maturity of three years from date of issuance. The City requests bids with a stated fixed rate of interest. The City will consider bids, however, at a variable rate of interest. The Bond will be issued on a tax-exempt basis.

OWNERS: Post Apartments Housing Limited Partnership 100 Bank Street, Suite 400 Burlington, VT 05401

The principal amount of the Bond and any accrued interest will be payable on the maturity date of three years from the date of issuance (expected April 1, 2027), with the proceeds of three long-term bonds to be issued to the U.S. Department of Agricultural, Rural Development (“Rural Development”) for the water system improvements, sewer system improvements, and community facilities road improvements. Right is reserved to prepay the Bond in part or in full without premium or penalty on or after two years from the date of issuance when the conditions for the Rural Development loan or loans have been satisfied. The Bond will be payable at such place as the registered holder may designate. Each bid submitted must state the purchase price, which must not be less than the par amount of the Bond. Please e-mail a PDF version of the bid proposal by 10:00 AM EASTERN TIME on March 18, 2024 to Chris Perlitz at cperlitz@municapital.com, Municipal Capital Markets Group, Inc., 8400 East Prentice Avenue, Suite 500, Greenwood Village, Colorado 80111. Please state the period for which your rate and fee quotes are firm and any closing conditions that are assumed. Please provide any additional information that you regard as relevant to your proposal. Requests for bid materials and questions should be directed to Chris Perlitz at cperlitz@municapital.com. Thereafter, at the regular meeting of the City Council to be held at 6:00 P.M. Eastern Time on March 18, 2024, bid proposals will be considered. No proposal will be received after 10:00 A.M. Eastern Time on March 18, 2024. The City and Municipal Capital Markets Group, Inc. will assume no liability for the inability of the bidder to reach Municipal Capital Markets Group, Inc. prior to the time of sale specified above. The right is reserved to reject any and all bids. If all bids are rejected, the City may engage in discussions and negotiations with one or more institutions that submit proposals or bids. Dated: March 6, 2024 MOUNT MANSFIELD UNIFIED UNION SCHOOL DISTRICT (MMUUSD) REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS - SUMMER EDUCATION CAMP Your company/program is invited to submit a competitive proposal for a Summer Education Camp to serve students who require Summer Learning Services. Issue Date: February 16th, 2024

Proposals, Correspondence and Questions should be sent to: Galen Perkins, Special Services Coordinator galen.perkins@mmuusd.org 802-434-7321 INVITATION TO BIDDERS

Champlain Housing Trust, Inc. 88 King Street Burlington, VT 05401 ARCHITECT: Duncan-Wisniewski Architecture 255 South Champlain Street Burlington, VT 05401 CONSTRUCTION MANAGER: Wright & Morrissey, Inc. 99 Swift Street, Suite 100 South Burlington, VT 05403 Phone: 802-863-4541 Cell: 802-363-8474 Email: dyoung@wmorrissey.com Fax: 802-865-1253 BID DUE: March 19th, 2024 @ 2:00 PM. Wright & Morrissey, Inc. is seeking qualified subcontractor bids for all trades for the above reference project. Women and minority owned businesses, small locally owned businesses and Section 3 businesses are strongly encouraged to apply. Contract security in a form acceptable to the Construction Manager may be required. All potential bidders shall demonstrate the ability to provide such security. This project is subject to all requirements of the City of Burlington, MBE/ WBE/Section 3, Burlington Livable Wage, Davis Bacon, Certified Payroll/ WACTO/Section 3 Monthly Reporting, CDBG/HOME/HTF/VCDP/VHCB Grant funding, WACTO, Certification for Contracts, Grants, Loans & Cooperative Agreements, Certification Regarding Debarment, Suspension, Ineligibility and Voluntary Exclusion, and Certification of Lobbying Activities. This project involves the new construction of a 38-unit, 4 story multi-family housing building built on a podium slab with commercial spaces underneath, a partial below grade storage/mechanical space and associated site work. Contact Wright & Morrissey, Inc. for bid packages. Any bidding subcontractor without a prior working history with Wright & Morrissey, Inc. is asked to submit an AIA-305 Contractors Qualification Statement or equivalent references sufficient to indicate the bidding subcontractor is qualified to perform the work being bid.

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71 MARCH 6-13, 2024

ATTENTION RECRUITERS: POST YOUR JOBS AT: PRINT DEADLINE: FOR RATES & INFO:

JOBS.SEVENDAYSVT.COM/POST-A-JOB NOON ON MONDAYS (INCLUDING HOLIDAYS) MICHELLE BROWN, 802-865-1020 X121, MICHELLE@SEVENDAYSVT.COM

YOUR TRUSTED LOCAL SOURCE. JOBS.SEVENDAYSVT.COM JOIN OUR TEAM! Operations Director AFT Vermont is looking for an Operations Director to support our Union as we continue to grow and build power for our members. Full job description: vt.aft.org/ operations-director

Shared Living Provider Looking for a skilled Shared Living provider to assist a cultured gentleman. Collaborate as part of a team to establish the perfect living setup. Offering a generous annual stipend of $66,000. The role involves assisting a young man with developmental disabilities in acquiring skills for independent living and enhancing his ability to cope with strong emotions. He takes pleasure in discussing historical topics, enjoying music, and savoring Mexican cuisine. He thrives in a calm and predictable setting, making someone with a relaxed and easygoing demeanor an excellent fit. The ideal candidate should be patient and affirming.

MULTIPLE POSITIONS OPEN! Are you our next Guest Services Representative? Buyer? Produce Associate? Scan to see all open positions!

Trauma-informed preferred, but training can be provided. For more information call (802) 373-8862.

howardcenter.org • 802-488-6500

STAFF CURATED BENEFITS Apply online at healthylivingmarket.com/careers 4t-HealthyLiving020922 1

Join the Flynn and be part of a team striving to make the community better through the arts. All backgrounds encouraged to apply.

Security Guard Chocolate Thunder Security - Seven Daysies recipient for Best Bar Bouncer in 2021, 22, and 23 - is looking for a few good people to fill out our ranks of trained and state licensed security guards. We will train you in verbal de-escalation techniques, patrolling, site management, basic investigation, crowd control and reporting. After completing our training you will be certified in CPR, basic first aid, and will become licensed as a Security Guard with the State of Vermont. Paid training, signing bonuses, and hourly rates starting at $20 an hour. Apply online: bit.ly/ChocThunderJobs.

Front of House Manager This is a full-time, benefited, in-person position.

The FOH Manager is responsible for the Flynn’s customer-facing operations for all performances, ensuring a safe and enjoyable experience for guests, employees, artists, and patrons both across our campus and for all Flynn produced events off campus. This position will manage the team responsible for all front-of-house operations, including house managers, bartenders, and volunteers. This position also partners with operations, facilities, marketing, development, and security to provide a seamless experience that acknowledges, answers, and foresees the diverse needs of everyone who attends any Flynn event. Visit our website for complete job details:

flynnvt.org/About-Us/ Employment-and-Internship-Opportunities No phone calls, please. E.O.E.

2/2/22 4:58 PM

Are you passionate about making a difference? Wake Robin is seeking enthusiastic individuals in all departments to join our vibrant community! We are currently HIRING:

• Security Officer (Environmental Services) • HR Generalist (Human Resources) • Staff Nurse (RN, LPN), Licensed Nursing Assistants (LNA) (Health Services) • General Manager, Floor Managers, Healthcare Hospitality Assistants, Servers, Dining Operations Coordinator, Cooks, & Dishwashers (Dining Services) • Housekeepers (Environmental Services) At Wake Robin, we are committed to your professional development and career growth, making your experience with us not only rewarding but also a significant step in your career. Wake Robin offers competitive benefits & believes in supporting a livable wage for all Vermonters.

Visit wakerobin.com/contact-us/employment and apply today to join a team & caring community where your work truly makes a difference in the lives of others!


YOUR JOBS AT JOBS.SEVENDAYSVT.COM FOR FAST RESULTS, OR ATTENTION RECRUITERS: POST CONTACT MICHELLE BROWN: MICHELLE@SEVENDAYSVT.COM

72 MARCH 6-13, 2024

Public Works Crew (FTE) Town of Fairfax, VT The Town of Fairfax seeks to add full-time, year-round members to our Crew. We take pride in maintaining the Town’s equipment, roads, and facilities and creating improvements where we can. The successful applicants will be team players willing to do their best and learn along the way. Candidates are required to hold a VT Driver’s License, be able to respond to the Town Garage within 30 minutes of being called-in, successfully pass a background check, and participate in drug testing.

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These positions have excellent benefits including VT Municipal Retirement, health care, and a competitive compensation package. Pay range starts at $25 per hour with pay commensurate with experience. These positions are eligible for overtime. A CDL and three years of related 2/23/24 3:55 PM experience is preferred. To review the entire job description and download an application visit the Town’s website at: fairfax-vt.gov/jobs. Mail or return your application to: Town of Fairfax, Attn. Human Resources, 12 Buck Hollow Road, Fairfax, VT 05454.

This “working” foreman position requires experience with personnel management, all aspects of highway and bridge construction and maintenance, employee and contractor oversight, equipment operation and maintenance, job safety, mechanical ability, record keeping and communication skills, budget development, and any other tasks assigned by the Town Administrator. The position is full-time and requires a flexible schedule which will include nights, weekends, and holidays. This position is hourly and starting wage is dependent on qualifications commensurate with experience. An excellent benefits package is also offered. You can find the application and job description on our website at www.jerichovt.org at the top of the page under current job opportunities. To apply, please email a confidential cover letter, resume, and three references to pcarrier@jerichovt.gov with Jericho Road Foreman Search in the subject line or send to: Paula Carrier, Personnel Assistant P.O. Box 39, Jericho, VT 05465 Application materials will be accepted until the position is filled.

Scan the QR code to view job descriptions & apply.

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3/5/24 12:01 PM

Carpenter Apprentice

Applications will be reviewed as received with the position open until filled. E.O.E.

Enjoy working outside? Like working with a small crew? Willing to learn and apply your knowledge? Attention to detail with good communication skills?

Program Manager

Come and learn residential construction and be rewarded for your hard work.

HIGHWAY ROAD FOREMAN The Town of Jericho is seeking qualified candidates for the position of Road Foreman to manage a six-person Highway Department. Jericho (pop. 5,005) is a rural bedroom community in close proximity to Burlington with 61 miles of town highways.

If you have a passion for working with youth, we have the career opportunities for you!

True North is seeking a Program Manager to join our team. The ideal candidate is an adaptable team player, with a positive attitude and leadership skills who is willing to work both indoors and outdoors. The Program Manager will be working closely with all departments at True North to help facilitate daily programming for the students, coordinate and execute schedules, supervise and train guides (direct care staff), and support the therapeutic goals for students. Candidates must be willing to work weekends and occasional evenings.

Operations Support

Non-smoker, needs transportation and will work Monday to Thursday schedule with 3 days off. E-mail resume and cover letter to davidcone23@comcast.net for consideration.

LOOKING FOR A COOLER OPPORTUNITY?

True North Evolution is seeking a full-time, year-round Operations Support person. The ideal candidate is an adaptable team player with a positive attitude who is willing to work both indoors and outdoors performing a variety of tasks associated with the logistics of running our program. Tasks include food packing and rationing, gear outfitting, transportation, and facilities maintenance. Candidates must be willing to work weekends and occasional evenings. A clean and valid driver’s license is required. Competitive salary and comprehensive benefits offered. Benefits include health, dental, vision and accident insurance, an employee assistance program, a Wellness Fund, student loan repayment reimbursement, and a SIMPLE IRA. Please apply at: truenorthevolution.com/careers.

jobs.sevendaysvt.com


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NEW JOBS POSTED DAILY! JOBS.SEVENDAYSVT.COM

73 MARCH 6-13, 2024

We did it again! Line Cook/Food Prep The Avocado Pit is a small business in Stowe, VT. We are professional, agile, fun and our goal is to provide a fresh farm-to-table take on fastcasual Mexican dining. This position offers the opportunity to work in a dynamic kitchen environment, gain valuable experience in the food industry, and contribute to the success of our establishment. If you are passionate about cooking, have a strong work ethic, and a desire to showcase your customer service skills while working in a teamoriented setting, we would love to hear from you. We offer competitive pay rates plus pooled tips, flexible schedules, opportunities for growth, and a positive work environment. Send resumes to: kristi. tatro@avocadopit.com.

Technical Director Lance Smith Inc. dba Vermont SportsCar, Milton, VT: Dsgn, dvlp, & modify competition race cars & associated components; Coord work prod of engg & dsgn depts; Establish & maint budgets; Monitor safety specs; Establish testing sessions & scheds based on perf; Eval & make decisions on proposed engg changes to competition cars; Travel 25% Domestic & Int’l. Reqts: 8 yrs dvlp'g Rally & Rallycross engines (engine spec dvlpmnt, software/electronic dvlpmnt, dsgn & testing, engine perf spec, & chassis integration) per regs of sport governing bodies; managing engine dsgn projs; building & testing Rally & Rallycross competition cars, & technically directing dsgn engrs, technicians, & engine engrs. Apply to: lgange@vtcar.com or Lars Gange, VT SportsCar, 85 Gonyeau Rd., Milton, VT 05468.

Explore opportunities like:

Groundskeeper/ Landscaper champlain.edu/careers Scan code for more information.

Journeyman LINE WORKER Morrisville Water and Light is seeking a qualified, reliable, safety minded individual(s) to fill a Journeyman Line Worker vacancy(s). This position will be responsible for building, maintaining and repairing overhead and underground power transmission and distribution lines in a safe and effective manner within the established guidelines of industry work practices.

Champlain Community Services has been voted one of the Best Places to Work in Vermont for the sixth year in a row and we would love to have you as part of our team.

JOIN US! Work at CCS and support our mission to build a community where everyone participates and belongs. E.O.E.

Visit ccs-vt.org and apply today!

Applicants must also be able to meet the physical demands of the position, live within 30 minutes of the office and be in an on-call rotation. Submit cover letter and resume to Morrisville Water & Light, 857 Elmore Street, Morrisville, VT 05661 or dheller@mwlvt.com. No phone calls please. E.O.E.

Real Estate Paralegal Gravel & Shea PC seeks an experienced paralegal to join our commercial real estate practice in Burlington, VT. The ideal candidate will have at least three to five years of title search and real estate closing experience. Candidates must have the following skills: excellent independent research and analytical skills; willingness to adapt quickly to challenging and stimulating assignments; excellent writing and communication skills; and the ability to meet deadlines. This is a detail-oriented position that requires the ability to work with others both inside and outside the firm. Candidate must have a valid driver’s license. Adaptability to technology and advanced experience with Microsoft Office software is also important. We offer a competitive salary and a comprehensive benefits package including health insurance, 401(k) and Profit Sharing. Interested applicants should submit cover letter, résumé and references to: cgaynor@gravelshea.com. All inquiries are held in the strictest confidence. gravelshea.com/careers.

LEGAL PROJECT MANAGER Are you a legal support professional seeking a collaborative work environment that values communication and growth? We are seeking candidates with 1-3 years of legal experience who can: • Support our team by managing transactions in a fast-paced, mission-driven organization • Work collaboratively and independently, with keen attention to detail, and clear communication within and across teams • Bring passion and commitment to furthering our mission The starting salary for this position is $64,729, plus a generous benefits package equivalent to $24,344 per year to cover the cost of health care and other benefits. Additional benefits include 6 weeks of time off, a retirement plan with match, and flexible/hybrid work schedules. Learn more and apply at vlt.org/employment. The position will remain open until March 22, 2024. The Vermont Land Trust is an Equal Opportunity Employer. We honor & invite people of all backgrounds & life experiences to apply.


YOUR JOBS AT JOBS.SEVENDAYSVT.COM FOR FAST RESULTS, OR ATTENTION RECRUITERS: POST CONTACT MICHELLE BROWN: MICHELLE@SEVENDAYSVT.COM

74 MARCH 6-13, 2024

Operations Manager Montpelier, 20 hours

Statewide literacy organization seeks detail-oriented, organized person to manage office administration & bookkeeping. In person/remote. Flexible schedule. More information & job description: everybodywinsvermont.org. Apply with cover letter/resume to info@everybodywinsvermont.org. Equal Opportunity Employer

THE CITY OF BURLINGTON

Job & Internship Fair Friday, March 22nd, 12-4PM City Hall, 149 Church Street Contois Auditorium (2nd floor) This is your opportunity to meet with our City department representatives and apply for any of our open positions. Explore career opportunities for full-time and part-time, temporary, seasonal roles and internships.

We offer a competitive and comprehensive benefit package, including health, dental, life insurance, retirement plan, FSA and much more! We believe in promoting a culture that reveres diversity and equity. The City of Burlington is proud to be an equal opportunity employer, and we are strongly committed to creating a dynamic and equitable work force. No advanced registration required; register upon arrival.

burlingtonvt.gov/HR/jobfair

THE GRIND GOT YOU DOWN? See who’s hiring at jobs.sevendaysvt.com

Exam Proctoring Center (EPC) Support Specialist (2 positions) The Exam Proctoring Center (EPC) Support Specialist provides day-to-day administrative functions for SAS Services to ensure that students with disabilities receive exam accommodations, such as extended time on tests. Administrative functions include records maintenance for the EPC; coordinating personnel and technological logistics for exams; administering accommodations for tests; interfacing with students and faculty to schedule exams; facilitation of exam return to faculty; assisting with student employee supervision including training sessions for students; and general office management duties within the Exam Proctoring Center (EPC). The EPC Support Specialist is responsible for fostering an inclusive and welcoming environment for students from diverse backgrounds. This position will also support the Technical Support Specialist to coordinate disability services for students to include electronic books, note taking, captioning, and adaptive tech programs. Coordinate day-to-day management and application of various services and adaptive technologies to ensure students with disabilities receive the necessary accommodations to access University coursework, programs, and facilities. It will also maintain knowledge of federal regulations, the ADA, Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, and FERPA, to maintain support for students with disabilities. The EPC Support Specialist ensures designated accommodations are arranged according to established procedures, with due concern for security of exams and students’ confidentiality; the person in this position assists in University efforts to provide effective, timely accommodations to students with disabilities. Interaction with people at different levels of University administration, faculty and staff is a daily aspect of the position. Specific day-to-day tasks & responsibilities will be determined by the EPC Administrative Coordinator and are subject to change to meet daily needs. Coordination

and interaction with the EPC Administrative Coordinator, the other EPC Support Specialist, and Student Accessibility Services (SAS) Specialists will be a regular expectation. The EPC Support Specialist also assists the EPC Administrative Coordinator and other EPC Support Specialist to recruit, hire, train, and supervise EPC student staff by ensuring that staff are multiculturally competent and able to interact comfortably with a diverse student body. The EPC Support Specialist is expected to be familiar with and able to use technology, software, and equipment in order to facilitate equal access for students utilizing the EPC. The EPC Support Specialist requires knowledge of the federal regulations to maintain support for students with disabilities. As a member of the CFAS team, the Specialist helps carry out the mission of CFAS, which includes a commitment to diversity, social justice, and to fostering a collaborative, multicultural environment. The EPC Support Specialist is administratively supervised by the SAS Assistant Program Director and functionally supervised by the EPC Administrative Coordinator. Minimum Qualifications: Associate’s Degree with a minimum of two- three years’ office experience in human services, higher education or related field. Knowledge of word-processing, applicable technology, adaptive software, and database management skills required. Effective communication, interpersonal and conflict resolutions skills are required with a commitment to serving diverse populations. Strong organizational and time management skills, ability to give attention to detail and to maintain confidentiality of information required. Comfort with and demonstrated commitment to diversity/social justice and to fostering a collaborative environment required. E.O.E. For full job details and to apply: Position 1: uvmjobs.com/postings/70726 Position 2: uvmjobs.com/postings/70730

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Data Entry/ Customer Service Specialist Part-Time Local educational publishing company seeks a detailoriented Data Entry/ Customer Support Specialist to work 20-25 hours/week. Responsibilities include onboarding customers, uploading customer data, and performing quality control checks. This position also provides customer service, assists with bookkeeping, works on special projects, and provides general office support. Exceptional organizational skills, flexibility, and a “can-do” attitude are a must. Sick time and annual vacation provided. To apply, please send a cover letter and resume to hiring@exemplars.com.

NEW JOBS POSTED DAILY! JOBS.SEVENDAYSVT.COM

75 MARCH 6-13, 2024

Navigate New Possibilities™ Your Career at NDI is Waiting

Executive Director HOPE Works, Vermont’s oldest and largest 501c3 nonprofit serving survivors of sexual violence in Chittenden County, VT, is seeking an experienced, dynamic Executive Director to lead a small, dedicated group of staff and volunteers. The Executive Director is responsible for the internal operations of H.O.P.E. Works, while serving as the primary contact and spokesperson. The ideal candidate must have experience with budget development and management, knowledge of grant administration, and familiarity with financial statements. They must demonstrate experience with managing staff and volunteers, as well as developing relationships with community partners and the public. Understanding of sexual violence issues is required. A Master’s degree and/ or equivalent experience is necessary. Knowledge of strategic planning and non-profit experience is helpful. Please see our website Internships and Employment — HOPE Works (hopeworksvt.org) for the full job description. This position is a 32 hr/wk salaried exempt position. Starting salary range is $75k-82k annual salary with full health, dental, and vision insurance. HOPE Works offers generous paid time off, flexible hybrid work environment, as well as paid respite leave and ongoing professional development opportunities. Interested candidates should submit a resume and cover letter to HOPE Works Board of Directors at board@hopeworksvt.org. Applications will be accepted until the position is filled. People with diverse lived experiences encouraged to apply. H.O.P.E. Works is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

Senior Project Manager At NDI we are driven by our belief that advanced spatial measurement solutions can help our customers in their aim to improve medical procedures and patient lives.

Full descriptions and to apply: bit.ly/NDIfall2022

Community Bankers BUILDERS | MAKERS | DOERS® There is no better time to join NSB’s team! Northfield Savings Bank, founded in 1867, is the largest LOCAL BANK in Vermont. We are committed to providing a welcoming work environment for all. Consider joining our team as a Community Banker at our Waitsfield, Taft Corners, or Richmond location!

PSYCHOTHERAPIST The Vermont Center for Anxiety Care (VCAC), a private psychotherapy practice on the Burlington waterfront, has an opening for a psychotherapist (licensed or post-masters or post-doctoral degree). Specialties in family therapy, adolescents, children or parenting are welcome as well as disordered eating and addictions. Opportunities for group therapy. Clinical supervision towards licensure provided as needed. VCAC is a collaborative group with holistic approach and multiple specialties. Visit vtcenterforanxietycare.com. Send resume and cover letter describing professional interests and goals to Paul Foxman, Ph.D., 86 Lake Street, Burlington, VT 05401 or email: paulfoxman@aol.com.

Master Plumber Silver Maple Construction has recently launched a new mechanical division that focuses on providing excellent customer service and specializes in the execution of complex and innovative residential HVAC and plumbing systems. To help us achieve our goals, we are currently seeking a skilled and experienced Master Plumber to become part of our team. At Silver Maple, we strongly believe in offering equal growth opportunities to all of our employees and providing them with inspiring work while maintaining a flexible and manageable work schedule, which is unlike what many other companies in this field offer. Total Rewards:

• Competitive Weekly Pay (based on experience) • Comprehensive Medical, Dental, and Vision Plans • 401k Retirement Plan + Company Match • 15 days Paid Time Off, 7 Paid Holidays • Commuter + Mileage Reimbursement • Life, Disability And Accident Insurance • Paid Parental Leave And MORE! To learn more, please visit silvermapleconstruction.com, email hr@ silvermapleconstruction.com, or call our office at (802) 989-7677.

Relevant Skills: • Customer Service, Cash Handling (we’ll train you!) • Even better… if you have prior banking experience, we encourage you to apply! • If you are 18 or older and have a high school diploma, general education (GED) degree, or equivalent, consider joining NSB! Opportunity for Growth NSB has training opportunities to engage employees and assist with professional development within our company. The average years of service for an NSB employee is 9! If you’re looking for a career in an environment that promotes growth, join our team! What NSB Can Offer You: • Competitive compensation based on experience. • Well-rounded benefits package, Profit-Sharing opportunity. • Excellent 401(k) matching retirement program. • Commitment to professional development. • Opportunities to volunteer and support our communities. Work-Life balance! Please send an NSB Application & your resume in confidence to: Careers@nsbvt.com. E.O.E. / Member FDIC


YOUR JOBS AT JOBS.SEVENDAYSVT.COM FOR FAST RESULTS, OR ATTENTION RECRUITERS: POST CONTACT MICHELLE BROWN: MICHELLE@SEVENDAYSVT.COM

76 MARCH 6-13, 2024

New GRAD RN program helps ensure success!

Office & Medication Administrator

Are you looking for an innovative, dynamic, and collaborative place to work?

Kick-start your nursing career at Northeastern Vermont Regional Hospital (NVRH) with our innovative Nurse Residency Program. Designed for passionate new grads, the program offers wrap-a-round support for long-term career excellence. Beginning in summer 2024, full-time positions will be available in departments such as Med Surg, Emergency and more. Applicants need a Vermont or multi-state RN licenses, BLS certification, and to be a graduate of an accredited nursing program. Program pillars include Leadership, Patient Outcomes, and Professional Roles. New grads are provided daily support and collaborative guidance. Join NVRH for competitive compensation, benefits, and a supportive environment where patients, community and employees thrive. St. Johnsbury, Vermont.

True North is actively hiring for an Office and Medication Administrator who can assist in day-to-day office administrative tasks, organize & pack student medications, and effectively communicate and collaborate with parents, doctors, and various True North departments. The ideal candidate is an organized, flexible team player with a warm and friendly personality. This is an in-person, Monday through Friday 8 a.m. - 4 p.m. position. Competitive salary and comprehensive benefits offered.

Join us at Lake Champlain Waldorf School to deliver a holistic and developmental approach to education.

Apply now at www.nvrh.org/careers.

Please apply at: truenorthevolution.com/careers.

Open Positions: • Mixed-Age Kindergarten Lead Teacher • Kindergarten Assistant • Spanish Teacher (part-time)

Benefits include health, dental, vision, accident insurance, an employee assistance program, SIMPLE IRA, access to an employee wellness fund, and the opportunity for student loan payment reimbursement.

www.lakechamplainwaldorfschool.org

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Vermont Housing &

GOT A CASE OF THE

Conservation Board

Part-Time Dispatch Switchboard Operator

Executive Assistant & Office Manager The Executive Assistant and Office Manager is a dynamic and energetic role that is central to internal communications, support for the Executive Director, and the management of daily administrative duties necessary to meet VHCB’s mission. VHCB is an Equal Opportunity Employer and we strongly encourage candidates from diverse backgrounds to apply. This position is open until filled. To learn more, visit vhcb.org/about-us/jobs. To apply, send a cover letter and resume to: jobs@vhcb.org

PRESIDENT

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The Public Safety/Fire & Rescue Departments at Saint Michael’s College are inviting applications for a Part-Time Dispatch Switchboard Operator to dispatch radio calls and operate the College switchboard. The successful candidate will be responsible for answering all incoming calls and directing calls to the appropriate party quickly, accurately, and professionally. This role receives all emergency calls for SMC campus and the surrounding community and dispatches emergency personnel accordingly. Dispatch, switchboard, and emergency services experience desirable, but we will provide training for a motivated and dependable person with demonstrated aptitude.

SUNDAY SCARIES?

Find a job that makes it easier to sleep at night.

For job description, benefits information and to apply, please visit: bit.ly/SMCM23PTD.

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The Vermont Chamber of Commerce is seeking a visionary and strategic executive as President to lead the organization into the future. Reporting to the Board of Directors, the President will embrace the organization’s mission to advance Vermont’s economy. Trusted by the businesses that make living, working, and thriving in Vermont possible, we prioritize collaboration and uphold the core values that define our state, incorporating diversity, equity and inclusion principles. As the preeminent not-for-profit business organization, we advocate, build community, and provide resources for businesses statewide. Managing a $2 million budget and a dedicated team of 13 employees, the President will set the non-partisan tone of the organization, evaluate and enhance programs, and ensure financial viability. Key responsibilities include advocating for a businessfocused legislative agenda, cultivating relationships with government officials and stakeholders, and expanding the Chamber’s network. The ideal candidate brings 5+ years of experience in association management, legislative affairs, or a related field, along with proven expertise in organizational growth and non-profit leadership. For a detailed description of the position, qualifications, or to apply, visit: vtchamber.com/executive-hiring. Please note that all inquiries/applications will be held in strict confidence.

3/5/24 10:43 AM

3/1/24 4:35 PM

SEEKING DYNAMIC EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR The Executive Director provides visionary leadership to guide Vermont Adult Learning, a nonprofit organization with a $5+ million budget and a staff of approximately 80, through a rapidly changing and uncertain environment. Responsibilities: The ED oversees the organization’s administration, programs, and strategic plan with a statewide reach. Other key duties include fundraising, marketing, community outreach, and advocacy.

Browse 100+ new job postings each week from trusted, local employers.

Requires: Bachelor’s degree with five or more years of transparent and high-integrity nonprofit management experience. Proven leadership, coaching, relationship management experience, and fiscal management skills. Concrete, demonstrable commitment to social justice and equity. For full job description go to vtadultlearning.org/about-us/#careers This position is a remote-from-home position with occasional travel to meet with staff across the state. May require some weekend and evening hours. Preference will be given to someone with a demonstrable connection to Vermont. Send resume, cover letter and salary requirements to: tfarrell@vtadultlearning.org Join our team and support educators making a difference in the lives of adult learners!

Full-time, competitive salary, excellent benefits.

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See who’s hiring at jobs.sevendaysvt.com

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8/25/21 12:51 PM


NEW JOBS POSTED DAILY!

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JOBS.SEVENDAYSVT.COM

77 MARCH 6-13, 2024

SENIOR MANAGER NORTHWESTERN VERMONT

Visiting Assistant Professor of Analytical or Organic Chemistry Saint Michael’s College is inviting applications for a full-time, Visiting Assistant Professor in either Analytical or Organic Chemistry. This is a oneyear position beginning in August 2024. The individual will have a Ph.D. (or A.B.D.) in Analytical Chemistry or Organic chemistry or closely related fields. The teaching load is 3-3, with labs counting as a full course. Teaching responsibilities for the Analytical applicant would be a chemical analysis course and associated lab in the fall and an instrumental analysis course and associated lab in the spring. Other teaching responsibilities would be based on the applicant’s expertise. Teaching responsibilities for the Organic applicant would be a combination of organic chemistry lectures and laboratories. Our department is approved by the American Chemical Society and has a strong commitment to undergraduate research. Modest funds & space to support the visitor in mentoring student research are available. For job description, benefits and to apply, please visit: bit.ly/SMCVAPAOC.

The Vermont Judiciary seeks experienced manager and leader to oversee four courthouses across Franklin, Lamoille and Grand Isle counties. This position oversees a team of 3 managers, 30 employees and a multi-million-dollar budget. As a member of the senior management team, this manager will be vital to strategic planning, organizational development, and continuous improvement. Must maintain public confidence in the courts during a time of change through high standards of transparency and accountability. The ideal candidate will have a bachelor’s degree and eight or more years of proven experience or a similar legal management role. Starting pay is 100k or higher depending upon experience. Go to vermontjudiciary.exacthire.com/job/122139 for more details and how to apply (position is listed as Regional Superior Court Clerk). This position is open until filled. The Vermont Judiciary is an equal opportunity employer.

Coordinator Vermont Interfaith Power & Light Vermont Interfaith Power & Light (VTIPL), is a non-profit that provides a religious response to our climate crisis. Working with faith and spiritual communities throughout Vermont, VTIPL provides education, advocacy and financial assistance to help these communities reduce their carbon emissions.

WE’RE HIRING! • Program Clinicians • Residential Counselors & Mental Health Workers • Overnight Counselors

VTIPL has an opening for a Coordinator. This is a parttime (12-15 hours per week), remote-work position at $20$22 per hour, depending on qualifications and experience.

• Case Managers

Job Responsibilities: • Communications • Fundraising and Event Planning • Administrative

• Family Engagement Specialists and Community Skills Workers

Go to VTIPL.org for a detailed job description. Submit resumes, qualifications, questions to: info@vtipl.org.

NFI VT is a private, nonprofit, specialized service agency within the Vermont statewide mental health system. We are a healing organization, grounded in trauma-informed care. We are hiring for Full-Time, Part-Time and Relief positions. Regular positions of 30+ hours per week are eligible for our generous benefits package, which includes competitive salary and tuition reimbursement. Please apply online at: nfivermont.org/careers.

• Teachers and Special Educators • Classroom Counselors & One to One Staff

• Youth Program Coordinators

NFI VT is an Equal Opportunity Employer and, as such, prohibits discrimination against any employee or applicant based on race, color, religion, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, age, ethnic background, disability, or other non-work-related personal trait or characteristic to the extent protected by law.

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10/29/19 12:12 PM

Director of Human Resources WCMHS has a fantastic opportunity for a committed leader who is seeking a new senior management role in Human Resources. This position is ideal for HR professionals with 10+ years of experience leading HR teams and strategizing with organizational leadership to achieve strong employee growth, retention, and performance outcomes. The WCMHS workforce comprises over 600 employees that deliver high quality, client-focused services in very dynamic and innovative workplace settings and we are aspiring to become the most soughtafter mental health, substance use treatment, and developmental disability services employer in Vermont. We firmly believe that our people are the driving force behind our success, and we are seeking an HR leader who knows what this means and how to translate that knowledge into tangible actions that help us cultivate a workplace that thrives on mutual respect, creativity, diversity and having a can-do attitude every day. Qualifications: • Bachelor’s degree in HR, Business Administration, Social Sciences such as Psychology or related field required. • Strong knowledge of State and Federal employment laws. • Strong knowledge of data driven performance management processes and how HR supports service delivery outcomes. • Minimum of ten (10) years’ progressive leadership experience • Minimum of ten (10) years’ HR experience. • SHRM-CP required. Preferred: • Master’s Degree preferred, SHRM-SCP preferred.

Send letter of interest and resume to apply: wcmhs.org/careers. Or email cover letter/resume: recruitment@wcmhs.org. E.O.E.


YOUR JOBS AT JOBS.SEVENDAYSVT.COM FOR FAST RESULTS, OR ATTENTION RECRUITERS: POST CONTACT MICHELLE BROWN: MICHELLE@SEVENDAYSVT.COM

78 MARCH 6-13, 2024

Operations Coordinator The Vermont Captive Insurance Association (VCIA), the largest captive trade association in the world, seeks a reliable self-starter to join our tight-knit team. This position supports the Senior Director of Finance with bookkeeping, and provides assistance to all staff through database entry, customer service, and office administration.We offer a competitive salary and benefits, a fully remote working environment and the opportunity for personal and career development in a growing industry. ESSENTIAL REQUIREMENTS •

Must be located in Vermont with ability to travel for meetings, conferences, and other events

Versatile problem solver who can recognize ways to improve operations

Resourceful, and can thrive in remote working environment while collaborating with staff

College degree and experience in bookkeeping software preferred

OFFICE ADMINISTRATOR Local private optometry practice seeking an outgoing, friendly person to support our growing team. The ideal candidate will have experience working in a busy optical practice. A positive, laidback attitude with the willingness and drive to go above and beyond for our patients as well as the rest of the team. Strong customer service and communication skills are a must. We are willing to train the right candidate.

ESSENTIAL DUTIES AND SKILLS •

Data entry, creation & managing events in the database; as well as generating database reports

Excellent computer skills including database/spreadsheet skills, accounting software, MS Office.

Handle accounts payable/receivable; monitor batches; perform monthly bank reconciliations

Write minutes of various committees with great attention to detail; provide assistance to Board

Manage VCIA’s general inbox and provide excellent customer service

Take lead on all conference registrations, and in general excel in time management

Primary duties include answering the phones, scheduling appointments, handling cash transactions, looking up insurances, and other general office related tasks. Other duties may include completing patient work ups, such as pretesting, visual field screenings, OCT, color testings, contact lens I & R's, and any other tests and procedures dictated by the optometrist. Competitive salary based on experience. Please forward your resume with a cover letter. No phone calls please. Salary: $17.00 - $22.00 per hour

TO APPLY:

Benefits: Health and Dental insurance, Employee discount

Provide minimum salary requirement in cover letter. Send cover letter, resume and any other relevant information to: Kevin Mead, VCIA CEO, kmead@vcia.com. Full job description at vcia.com

Schedule: Full-time, 8 hour shift, Monday to Friday

Deadline to apply: End of Business Tuesday, March 19th, 2024.

Work Location: In person

Education: High school or equivalent (Preferred) Please send resume/cover letter to chromaoptics@gmail.com.

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WHERE YOU AND YOUR WORK MATTER MATTER...

2/23/24 3:25 PM

ADMINIS TRATIVE SERVICE COORDIN ATOR II - MONTPELIER

When you work for the State of Vermont, you and your work matter. A career with the State puts you on a rich and rewarding professional path. You’ll find jobs in dozens of fields – not to mention an outstanding total compensation package. A G R I C U LT U R A L D E V E L O P M E N T D I V I S I O N A S S I S T A N T – W I L L I S T O N

As Agricultural Development Division Assistant Director, you will contribute to statelevel agricultural future discussions and support economic development program operations and staff. In this collaborative position, you will manage the integration and coordination of programs; lead budget and strategic systems development; support an equitable and balanced work culture; and support staff leadership with coaching and mentorship. For more information, contact Abbey Willard at Abbey.Willard@vermont. gov. Department: Agriculture, Food & Markets. Location: Williston. Status: Full Time. Job ID #49422. Application Deadline: March 11, 2024.

The Retirement Division’s front office Administrative Coordinator II requires extensive customer service skills and the ability to multitask within multiple computer systems to deliver accurate information in a professional manner. This position provides frontline customer service to the VT State Retirement Systems by phone, email, and in person. Additional experience with website updates, newsletters, and medical and dental insurance rules and plans is preferred. For more information, contact Nicole Weidman at nicole.weidman@vermont.gov. Department: State Treasurer’s Office. Location: Montpelier. Status: Full Time. Job ID #48178. Application Deadline: March 13, 2024.

C H I L D R E N ’ S M E N T A L H E A LT H C A R E M A N A G E R – W A T E R B U R Y

Ready to shift from direct service and make an impact on the broader system of care? Join our team to provide consultation and technical assistance to help children access the appropriate level of mental health care. Significant work facilitating complex family situations & helping teams identify the best course of treatment. Quality oversight of community mental health system. Help address gaps, improve treatment options, and support statewide initiatives. For more information, contact Dana Robson at dana. robson@vermont.gov. Department: Mental Health. Location: Waterbury with partial telework option. Status: Full Time. Job ID #47831. Application Deadline: March 13, 2024.

CONTRACT AND GRANTS SPECIALIST – MONTPELIER

Develop your skills in grant and contract management. The Agriculture Development Division is hiring a Contract and Grants Specialist I. The person filling this role would gain experience administering a grants management system, managing contracting processes and procedures, preparing and processing agreements and amendments, and more while working with program management staff supporting the Resilient Food Systems Infrastructure Program and the Northeast Dairy Business Innovation Center. For more information, contact Rebecca Brockett at Rebecca.brockett@vermont. gov. Department: Agriculture, Food & Markets. Location: Montpelier. Status: Full Time, Limited Service. Job ID #49529. Application Deadline: March 11, 2024.

Learn more at: careers.vermont.gov 10h-VtDeptHumanResources030624 1

A G R I C U LT U R A L R E S O U R C E N A V I G A T O R I I – M O N T P E L I E R

The VT Agency of Agriculture is looking for a skilled navigator to help farmers and food producers find and leverage financial and technical assistance resources. This position will work directly with businesses and organizations in Vermont’s food system, helping them assess needs and connecting them with appropriate resources to help advance their organizational goals. For more information, contact Trevor Lowell at trevor.lowell@ vermont.gov. Department: Agriculture, Food & Markets. Location: Montpelier. Status: Full Time, Limited Service. Job ID #49507. Application Deadline: March 11, 2024.

The State of Vermont is an Equal Opportunity Employer 3/1/24 10:18 AM


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79 MARCH 6-13, 2024

Licensed Clinical Social Worker Legal Assistant Primmer Piper Eggleston & Cramer PC, a full-service law firm with offices in Vermont, New Hampshire, and Washington, DC, has an immediate opening for an experienced legal assistant in our Burlington, VT, office. This assistant will support our litigation practice area. In addition to strong technical and document production skills, essential requirements are the ability to prioritize, multitask, adapt to different work styles and apply independent judgment as needed. This position requires at least two years’ experience in a law firm setting and proficiency with MS Office products. The ideal candidate will also have welldeveloped interpersonal skills and litigation law experience. We offer a competitive salary and comprehensive benefits. Please submit letter of interest and resume to careers@primmer.com.

$70.00/hour

Manager of Nursing Services Oversee and facilitate the SLR response to health care needs of the residents under the direction of and in collaboration with the Prescriber/Psychiatric Prescriber and/or other medical practitioners involved in the care of residents in the Cuttingsville location of Spring Lake Ranch. Ensure compliance with licensing requirements for nursing services for Therapeutic Community Residences.

Work 8-16 hours per week at the Northlands Job Corps Center in Vergennes, VT. Hours flexible but no evenings or weekend work available. You choose amount of hours per week. Remote work a possibility. MUST be licensed in VT. Please call Dan W. Hauben ASAP at 888-552-1660.

ESSENTIAL FUNCTIONS OF THE POSITION: • Licensing/Compliance • Resident Care • Med Room Management • General Nursing Services QUALIFICATIONS: • Licensed as an RN by the State of Vermont • Psychiatric nursing experience is strongly preferred • Ability to work closely and respectfully with others • Strong interpersonal skills • Strong organizational skills • Conflict resolution skills • Must have a valid driver's license • Flexibility, ability to work with minimal supervision/direction Send resumes to: heatherm@springlakeranch.org.

POLICE OFFICERS Full-Time, Up to $15,000 Sign-On Bonus FOR VERMONT CERTIFIED OFFICERS The Stowe Police Department is seeking full-time police officer positions to help fulfill its mission to provide quality service in a professional, respectful & ethical manner. Stowe is a vibrant four season resort community offering world-class outdoor recreation. The community has 5,200 year round residents and can have over 15,000 visitors during peak periods. Stowe Police operates throughout the Town’s 72 square miles which includes over 90 miles of roadways. Stowe Police Department is committed to excellence in law enforcement and dedicated to the people, traditions, and diversity of our town. We work in partnership with the community to preserve and improve the quality of life, making the town a safer, more pleasant place to live, work, and visit. Up to $15,000 sign-on bonus for Vermont certified officers, with half paid upon hire and half after one year. Minimum starting pay for a certified officer is $30.05 per hour as of July 1, 2024 and may be higher depending on qualifications and experience. Applicants must be 21 years of age, a U.S. citizen, possess a High School diploma or equivalent, and possess a valid Driver’s License. Applicant must be able to perform all the essential functions involved with police duties. The hiring process includes a physical fitness examination, polygraph, oral board, written exam, medical exam, fingerprint check, and extensive background check. The Town of Stowe currently offers an excellent benefit package including BCBS health plans with low premium share, dental insurance, generous paid leave including 13 holidays, VMERS D pension plan, life insurance and more. With questions, please call Chief Donald Hull at (802) 253-4329 or e-mail at dhull@stowevt.gov. Job descriptions and employment application can be obtained at: townofstowevt.org. Submit application, letter of interest and resume to: Town of Stowe, c/o HR Director, PO Box 730, Stowe, VT 05672 or by email at recruit@stowevt.gov. Applications will be accepted until the position is filled. The Town of Stowe is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

Receptionist/Legal Support Staff Legal Services Vermont is looking to fill a full-time Receptionist/ Support Staff position. We are an innovative non-profit law firm that provides civil legal services to a broad spectrum of low-income clients in a high volume practice. Our advocates represent individual clients, participate in court clinics and also staff our helpline to screen new clients and provide legal advice. Working closely with Vermont Legal Aid, we help low-income Vermonters resolve their civil legal issues. We are seeking a Receptionist/Support Staff who will have primary responsibility for our front office, located in Burlington. Duties include greeting clients and other members of the public, assessing basic legal issues presented by members of the public, answering incoming phone calls and messages, handling mail and other correspondence and messaging, coordinating with other staff members to support clients, supporting telephone and on-line Helpline and case intake activities, supporting attorneys and paralegals with case activities, and assisting with other front office management tasks. We are looking for candidates with strong interpersonal, spoken communication and writing skills, the ability to handle a large workload, a demonstrated commitment to community engagement and public interest work, the ability to work empathetically with low-income and marginalized communities, and a collaborative work style. Qualified candidates should be proficient in Microsoft Office applications and be comfortable with online office management systems, office machines and telephone systems, have the ability to work independently and collaboratively, and be sensitive to the diverse language and cultural needs of our clients. We are an equal opportunity employer committed to building a diverse and culturally competent staff to serve our increasingly diverse client community. We encourage applicants from a broad range of backgrounds, and welcome information about how your experience can contribute to serving our client communities. Base starting salary is $42,480, with salary credit given for relevant experience, and an excellent benefits package. The position is in-person in our Burlington office. Application deadline is March 22, 2024. Your application should include a cover letter and resume, sent as a single PDF. Send your application by e-mail to Sara Zeno at szeno@legalservicesvt.org with the subject line “Support Staff Hiring Opportunity.” Please let us know how you heard about this position. legalservicesvt.org

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3/1/24 4:53 PM


YOUR JOBS AT JOBS.SEVENDAYSVT.COM FOR FAST RESULTS, OR ATTENTION RECRUITERS: POST CONTACT MICHELLE BROWN: MICHELLE@SEVENDAYSVT.COM

80 MARCH 6-13, 2024

Communications Manager

A complete farm-to-plate experience:

Care about the environment? Want to support Vermont land stewards in their efforts to protect water quality, improve soil health, and build climate resilience? Bring your creative skills to VACD!

Food & Nourishment Leader Cook in our organic farm’s commercial kitchen with fresh harvest. Plan meals based on what’s growing right

The Vermont Association of Conservation Districts (VACD) seeks a full-time, homebased COMMUNICATIONS MANAGER who will support the missions of Vermont’s 14 Natural Resources Conservation Districts (NRCDs), VACD, and the State Natural Resources Conservation Council (NRCC). The Communications Manager is a member of the VACD/NRCC leadership team and facilitates internal communications among NRCDs, VACD and NRCC; leads and supports external communications with our customers, partners, and the public; supports legislative advocacy efforts; organizes logistics for key events; manages VACD’s communications infrastructure; provides technical expertise, training and communications guidance to NRCDs, VACD and NRCC; and performs other duties as required.

outside the kitchen. Guide teens and young adults in making a daily shared lunch. This is an AmeriCorps position based in Richmond March 20 - Oct 25

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Starting salary is $55,000-$57,000 per year, depending upon experience. Benefits include paid vacation, sick and holiday leave, health benefits, and a 401k-retirement plan. Visit vacd.org for detailed job description. To apply, send cover letter, resume, three professional references, brief writing samples, and copies of (or links to) communications products developed in a single pdf file to lina.smith@vacd.org by 8 am Monday, March 18th. VACD is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

3/4/24 11:06 AM

Seeking a responsible, creative, kind, spirited, initiative-taking individual to help my son continue to improve his living, recreation and communication skills. Alternating weekends each month, Friday 5:00 pm — Saturday 5:00 pm, $500 per day.

Send resume to sk@kieselaw.com.

Find this & more opportunities at vycc.org/positions

This is a hands-on position requiring excellent written and verbal communications skills, research and/or journalism experience, website design and content management skills, graphic design, and utilization of social media and other software such as word processing, PowerPoint, ArcGIS StoryMaps, MS Publisher, Google docs, etc. The successful candidate has a high level of technical skills, is comfortable learning and teaching new technologies, is diplomatic and enjoys working with diverse groups and individuals, can work independently and in a team, and is familiar with Vermont’s efforts to protect water quality and build climate resilience. 3-5 years of experience and Central Vermont location are preferred.

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Monday to Friday 8:00 - 4:30

WINGPERSON FOR YOUNG MAN WITH AUTISM

2/23/24 5:23 PM

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CALCOKU & SUDOKU (P.67) CROSSWORD (P.67)

fun stuff

JEN SORENSEN

HARRY BLISS

SEVEN DAYS MARCH 6-13, 2024

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fun stuff KRISTEN SHULL

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is

Making it is not :( Keep this newspaper free for all. Join the Seven Days Super Readers at sevendaysvt.com/super-readers or call us at 802-864-5684.

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7/14/20 3:32 PM


FREE WILL ASTROLOGY BY ROB BREZSNY REAL MARCH 7-13 plant on the planet, enabling people to light their homes with the new invention. That was a revolutionary advance in a very short time. Dear Taurus, the innovations you have been making and I hope will continue to make are not as monumental as Edison’s. But I suspect they rank high among the best and brightest in your personal life history. Don’t slack off now. There’s more work to be done — interesting, exciting work!

GEMINI (May 21-Jun. 20): I watched as the

PISCES (FEB. 19-MAR. 20)

I invite you to entertain the following theory: Certain environments, companions and influences enhance your intelligence, health and ability to love — while others either do the opposite or have a neutral effect. If that’s true, it makes good sense for you to put yourself in the presence of environments, companions and influences that enhance you. The coming weeks will be an excellent time to test this theory. I hope you will do extensive research and then initiate changes that implement your findings.

ARIES (Mar. 21-Apr. 19): “Everyone has talent. What is rare is the courage to follow talent to the dark place where it leads.” So wrote Aries author Erica Jong. Is that true? Is it hard to access the fullness of our talents? Must we summon rare courage and explore dark places? Sometimes, yes. To overcome obstacles that interfere with ripening our talents, there may be tough work to do. I suspect the coming weeks and months will be one of those phases for you, Aries. But here’s the good news: I predict you will succeed. TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20): In October 1879, Thomas Edison and his research team produced the first electric light bulb that was viable enough to be of practical use. In September 1882, Edison opened the first power

Thai snake charmer kissed a poisonous cobra, taming the beast’s danger with her dancing hands. I beheld the paramedic dangling precariously from a helicopter to snag the woman and child stranded on a rooftop during a flood. And in my dream, I witnessed three of my Gemini friends singing a dragon to sleep, enabling them to ramble freely across the bridge the creature had previously forbidden them to traverse.

CANCER (Jun. 21-Jul. 22): The horoscopes you are reading have been syndicated in publications all over the world: in the U.S., Italy, France, Japan, Canada, Mexico, Australia, Netherlands, Russia, Cambodia, Singapore, Hong Kong, Venezuela, Ireland and Finland. Yet they have never appeared in a publication in the UK, where there are more than 52 million people whose first language is English — the same as mine. But I predict that will change in the coming months: I bet a British newspaper or website will finally print Free Will Astrology. I prophesy comparable expansions in your life, too, fellow Cancerian. What new audiences or influences or communities do you want to be part of? Make it happen! LEO (Jul. 23-Aug. 22): Author Jean-Dom-

inique Bauby wrote, “Today it seems to me that my whole life was nothing but a string of small near misses.” If you have endured anything resembling that frustration, Leo, I have good news: The coming months won’t bring you a string of small near misses. Indeed, the number of small near misses will be very few, maybe even zero. Instead, I predict you will gather an array of big, satisfying completions. Life will honor you with bull’s-eyes, direct hits and master strokes. Here’s the best way you can respond to your good fortune and ensure

the arrival of even more good fortune: Share your wealth!

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep. 22): Virgo advice expert Cheryl Strayed wrote some rather pushy directions I will borrow and use for your horoscope. She and I say, “You will never have my permission to close yourself off to love and give up. Never. You must do everything you can to get what you want and need, to find ‘that type of love.’ It’s there for you.” I especially want you to hear and meditate on this guidance right now, Virgo. Why? Because I believe you are in urgent need of rededicating yourself to your heart’s desire. You have a sacred duty to intensify your imagination and deepen your willpower as you define what kind of love and tenderness and togetherness you want most. LIBRA (Sep. 23-Oct. 22): Author Adam Alter writes, “Perfect success is boring and uninspiring, and abject failure is exhausting and demoralizing. Somewhere between these extremes is a sweet spot that maximizes long-term progress.” And what is the magic formula? Alter says it’s when you make mistakes an average of 16 percent of the time and are successful 84 percent. Mistakes can be good because they help you learn and grow. Judging from your current astrological omens, Libra, I’m guessing you’re in a phase when your mistake rate is higher than usual — about 30 percent. (Though you’re still 70 percent successful!) That means you are experiencing expanded opportunities to learn all you can from studying what doesn’t work well. (Adam Alter’s book is Anatomy of a Breakthrough: How to Get Unstuck When It Matters Most.) SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Sometimes you Scorpios are indeed secretive, as traditional astrologers assert. You understand that knowledge is power, and you build your potency by gathering information other people don’t have the savvy or resources to access. But it’s also true that you may appear to be secretive when, in fact, you have simply perceived and intuited more than everyone else wants to know. They might be overwhelmed by the deep, rich intelligence you have acquired — and would actually prefer to be ignorant of it. So you’re basically hiding stuff they want you to hide. Anyway, Scorpio, I suspect now is a time when you are

loading up even more than usual with juicy gossip, inside scoops, tantalizing mysteries, taboo news and practical wisdom that few others would be capable of managing. Please use your superpowers with kindness and wisdom.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Here’s

a little-known fact about me: I am the priest, wizard, rabbi and pope of Parish #31025 in the Universal Life Church. One of my privileges in this role is to perform legal marriages. It has been a few years since I presided over anyone’s wedding, but I am coming out of semiretirement to consecrate an unprecedented union. It’s between two aspects of yourself that have not been blended but should be blended. Do you know what I’m referring to? Before you read further, please identify these two aspects. Ready? I now pronounce you husband and wife, or husband and husband, or wife and wife, or spouse and spouse — or whatever you want to be pronounced.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): “You don’t have to suffer to be a poet,” poet John Ciardi said. “Adolescence is enough suffering for anyone.” I will add that adolescence is enough suffering for everyone, even if they’re not a poet. For most of us, our teenage years brought us streams of angst, self-doubt, confusion and fear — sufficient to last a lifetime. That’s the bad news, Capricorn. The good news is that the coming months will be one of the best times ever for you to heal the wounds left over from your adolescence. You may not be able to get a total cure, but 65 percent is very possible. Seventy-five percent isn’t out of the question. Get started! AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): A psychic

once predicted that I would win a Grammy Award for my music. She said my dad and mom would be in the audience, smiling proudly. Well, my dad died four years ago, and I haven’t produced a new album of songs in more than ten years. So that Grammy prophecy is looking less and less likely. I should probably give up hope that it will come to pass. What about you, Aquarius? Is there any dream or fantasy you should consider abandoning? The coming weeks would be a good time to do so. It could open your mind and heart to a bright future possibility now hovering on the horizon.

CHECK OUT ROB BREZSNY’S EXPANDED WEEKLY AUDIO HOROSCOPES & DAILY TEXT MESSAGE HOROSCOPES: REALASTROLOGY.COM OR 1-877-873-4888.

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HELLO, BEAUTIFUL If you are looking for perfect, well, sorry to say, but that isn’t me. If you want someone who is loving, caring, happy, funny, down-to-earth, fun-loving, who will adore you and cherish you, is openminded, loyal, trustworthy, that would be me! nhpoohdot, 55, seeking: W, l

Respond to these people online: dating.sevendaysvt.com WOMEN seeking... INTROVERTED EXTROVERT TO DANCE Are you a grown-up and still curious, playful, inquisitive, ever learning? I thrive outdoors in every season and relish reflective company, solitude and togetherness, sharing ideas and inspiration, and desires to love in a way that we feel free. I see that many of us here wonder how to describe themselves. Aren’t we all more than we can say? esmeflying, 60, seeking: M, l STARTING A NEW CHAPTER I’m going to college. I love reading and writing fiction. I love horror, movies and AHS. No chick flicks. I love playing pool, live music and dance. Can’t work but can play. I have love and kindness to offer the right person. I’m loyal, brave and supportive. I’m adventurous, definitely curious in all areas of life. Get to know me! salingersunrise, 42, seeking: M, W, Q, NC, NBP, Cp, l NATURE GIRL New to the area and looking for friends and dates for the first time in my life. I feel weird even doing this (does everyone say that?). I’m in my 50s but slim and fit and honestly look younger than I am. Prefer slim, tall men but honestly don’t care much as long as you’re open-minded, fun and a good conversationalist. Highmeadows, 58, seeking: M, W, NC SMART, SELF-AWARE, KIND SEEKS SAME Smart, self-aware and kind seeking same. AnneShirley, 47, seeking: M

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You read Seven Days, these people read Seven Days — you already have at least one thing in common! All the action is online. Create an account or login to browse hundreds of singles with profiles including photos, habits, desires, views and more. It’s free to place your own profile online. photos of l See 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

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SEVEN DAYS MARCH 6-13, 2024

WHAT’S BEHIND DOOR NO. 1? I am a nature-loving, creative soul with a spiritual side who is a trusting, fun-loving, very healthy, energetic, welltraveled, loving soul. I am looking for a kindhearted, handsome “I can do it” guy, who is educated, trusting, innovative, creative/handy, with a fun-loving side who can laugh at himself, with freedom to travel and take time to hike and camp. FairyFunny, 62, seeking: M HONEST, EASYGOING, STRAIGHTFORWARD Vermonter retired from dairy farming, looking for a friend to share lunch, to get to know each other — what likes and dislikes we have in common, and what type of relationship we are looking for together. retired70, 76, seeking: M INTEGRITY FIRST I live a very positive life, and I’m truly happy with where I am. I’m here, hoping to find someone to add to my happiness. I am a mother to two teenage boys in high school, a business professional, a very independent woman and love my family/friends who surround my life. Integrity, 41, seeking: M, l THIS COULD BE GREAT, RIGHT? Calm, peaceful woman hoping to connect with a kind, smart, liberal, dog-loving guy. I work in a medical practice and also have a small business and live in northern New York. I am a widow but so ready for a great second chapter! Julie2085, 66, seeking: M, l CURIOUS, QUIET, SILLY, CONTENT I’m looking to enhance my life, not complete it. Curiosity about others, kindness and generosity are essential. It’s important to me that a partner be able to share thoughts and emotions kindly, have a sharp intellect and a ready sense of humor. (PS: If Trump is for you, you’re not for me, but I wish you well.) Elaine, 59, seeking: M, l NO-DRAMA RIVER LOVER Seeking conversations, hikes and walks, sharing a meal. Compatibility with where we each are in life. Hanging out with friends, watching a movie, just talking. Love learning about science, metaphysics, new music but also appreciate dad jokes to send to my grandkids, watching podcasts and reading mystery books. What are you serious about, and what makes you laugh? greentara, 65, seeking: M, l LOYAL, DEPENDABLE, DIFFERENT, LOVING I am a mature, single woman of color who is open-minded, real and comfortable in my uniqueness. I am looking for white mature man for companionship and friendship. I value peace, joy and am not interested in any drama. Mami8, 40, seeking: M MUST LOVE DOGS I’ve been unattached for several years but feel this is the time to start looking. I’m getting ready to retire, and I will have more time to devote to a relationship. I love to travel and would love a companion for these adventures. Bunique316, 69, seeking: M, l

OLD FIDDLES MAKE SWEET TUNES Independent and creative. Looking for someone to hang out with on the weekend. More of a temperate weather person — considering a move in a few years where it’s warm in the winter. If we ever get some snow, would love to find a good sledding hill. summerchild, 63, seeking: M, l INDEPENDENT, HONEST, OUTDOORSY, FUNNY, CREATIVE I am an active person who values honesty, integrity and positivity and enjoys all that life has to offer. I enjoy music of all types, especially live music. I am looking for a positive, drama-free gent who enjoys and appreciates life and is interested in travel, arts and culture and is kind to the environment, people and animals. Bella2024, 66, seeking: M, l SOUND MIND AND SOUND BODY This international type prioritizes friendship because it’s more easily achieved than romance, and because some of the most rewarding romances emerge unexpectedly when people get to know each other in a relaxed manner, over time. I’m drawn to cerebral, ethical people with a sense of humor who want to share athletics, a love of nature, culture and/or thoughtful, spirited debate. Mireya, 63, seeking: M, l CLASSY, WARM, INTELLIGENT, NICE-LOOKING LADY Seeking a warm, intelligent, active, health-conscious, reasonably attractive man (70 to 80) with whom to share my beautiful home on the lake. Of course, dating relationship and love must come first! AnnieL, 75, seeking: M, l KIND, GARDENER, CURIOUS, CREATIVE, ACTIVE I love the Vermont outdoors. Spend my time with family and friends, gardening, creating, cross-country skiing, swimming, kayaking, walking my dogs, playing tennis and molding clay. I live intentionally and have a healthy, active lifestyle. I am hoping to share experiences with new friends and have good conversations. Lovesdogs, 67, seeking: M, l

MEN seeking... CHILL, LOVING DUDE FROM IOWA Hello! I recently moved back to Vermont and brought my little tea company with me. I am a kindhearted little dude hoping to meet a sweet-hearted woman I can learn, grow and explore with. I am both gentle and excitable but mostly pour my excitement into my creative endeavors and exploring the great outdoors. JungleJim, 41, seeking: W, l HELLO FROM SOUTH BURLINGTON I am a human services worker and a college graduate. Have traveled to 47 states. I am definitely an outdoors person and also like to attend a wide variety of events. I recently ended a 23-year relationship and am ready to move on. Looking for a sincere woman, preferably in Chittenden County, for dating and a long-term relationship. kevinvermont, 63, seeking: W, l

SINGLE AND LOOKING I’m 70 and live alone in Burlington. I’m looking for a woman to come to my apartment and have a little bedroom fun. kenny65, 72, seeking: W, l NATIVE VERMONTER, ADVENTUROUS AND KIND I’m an active, somewhat handsome, intelligent, artistic man whom takes care of himself. I live in and love nature. Looking for a fit, well-hung man, or men, who would enjoy taking care of my mostly submissive nature! Happygolucki1, 68, seeking: M, Cp YOU, ME, ROMANTIC CANDLELIGHT DINNER? Hi. Newly divorced guy just looking to meet someone to get to know, have fun with and more. I am a romantic at heart, passionate and have an offbeat sense of humor, but I can be somewhat shy at first. I enjoy cooking, gardening, reading and antiquing. Not a partier. I’d rather spend an evening with that special someone. Maybe you? attaboydavey, 54, seeking: M, W, TW, l WHERE ARE WE IN TIME? Brutally honest, self-dedicated to helping and openly truthful. What can I say? I am a man, always and foremost. It’s what I do best. Have I or you not learned a lot in 68 years about life? Where are you going next? ManInTime, 68, seeking: W, l ADVENTURE IS OUT THERE, LOVE I’m housebroken, thoughtful, adventurous, kind. I love being helpful and doing my part to take care of Mother Earth! I’m learning to sailboat in my driveway and working on my flight classes. SouthHero, 38, seeking: W ENJOY TIME WITH FRIENDS I like to try new things, but I also keep the things that have worked well for me in the past the same. I enjoy dinner out with my friends, and I enjoy watching a movie with my dog. I enjoy hockey and football and target shooting. I love to cook. natedog1961, 63, seeking: W EASYGOING GUY Hi. Just looking to see what is out there. I love animals and love my family. I enjoy watching movies and chilling at home. During the summer, I love to be outside. I have lived in Vermont my whole life. Would love to find a relationship with someone. Jman85, 36, seeking: W INTUITIVE EXPLORATION Hello! I’m a CNC maintenance technician, very simple and to the point. I enjoy working on mechanics, good food, good company. I like to be outside whenever I can and enjoy the sunshine! I’m looking for a woman who likes to have fun most of all, can carry a conversation, enjoys life and has great energy. JerimiahD, 35, seeking: W, l GREENONE Hello! GreenOne, 45, seeking: W, Cp EASYGOING SUGAR DADDY Sugar daddy. Single, fit, clean, healthy man. Easygoing, happy with life, generous, spontaneous. I enjoy fishing, occasional movies, road trips, cooking. I would like to meet a fun, open-minded sugar babe who would also like to meet a generous sugar daddy. Bluej, 53, seeking: W

NO CELLPHONES, SPORTS OR BEER Widower, 66. Advanced degree, college instructor, psychotherapist. Published author: novels, nonfiction. Drinks, no drugs, “conservatarian” politics. Interests: antiques, history, literature, art and photography. Blind since mid-’90s, think/act like a sighted person. Seek attractive woman, well read, intelligent, articulate, sense of humor. Ideally, great conversation and companionship will lead to someone I can pamper and spoil. 121nyv, 66, seeking: W, l EASYGOING, SINCERE NATURE LOVER OK, here goes: I’m a fit hard worker who likes to be out in the fresh air and sunshine doing most activities. Responsible and loyal, I’m a realist. Life is fun but can be difficult alone. I would love to have a best friend to come home to every night. Thanks for your time. Drafthorse_50, 50, seeking: W, l SERIOUSLY SEARCHING FOR SUCCESSFUL SERENDIPITY Searching for the Katia to my Maurice. Traveled all around the world. Visited 48 states and really spent time getting to know them and their people. Been all over Europe, backpacked through the Balkans, lived in Italy, hiked across Britain. Been to New Zealand as well and plan to trek across Asia someday. Musician, chef, philosopher, the oldest of souls. RobMarch, 33, seeking: W, l HONEST, OPEN PERFECTIONIST Easygoing, open-minded, quick to help. Young at heart. Looking for a significant other who makes me whole. Lots of acquaintances, but best friends are a breed apart and special to me. Prefer rural versus urban. Try to learn something new each day. Skier10, 81, seeking: W, l

TRANS WOMEN seeking... RECENTLY RELOCATED, ADVENTUROUS, FREE SPIRIT I’m a gorgeous, white, 100 percent passable trans lady who is 57 and could pass as 30 — yes, 30! I long for love, laughter and romance, along with loving nature. I want a man who’s all man, rugged, handsome, well built but prefers a woman like myself. It’s as simple as that. We meet, fall in love and live happily ever after. Sammijo, 58, seeking: M, l ARE YOU EXPERIENCED? I hope to find someone that wants to get out into the world and share experiences in food, music, indoor activities, riding bikes or kayaking, and travel. I like to get dressed up but I can dress down too. Looking for companionship, and a kind gentle heart. love is a wonderful thing. Luv2BaGurl, 64, seeking: M, l

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NEWSBOY CAP CUTIE! I first saw you in line at Trials of Cato and Talisk. Was a bop, eh? You looked at me several times and had the cutest cap. Just wanted to inform you that you look like some 1920s dreamboat. Sigh! When: Saturday, January 27, 2024. Where: Higher Ground. You: Man. Me: Woman. #915961 RE: LOOKING FOR A COMPANION That’s what I’m talking about! Glad you found someone who respects you. Dating is hard. As the folks from America said, “Don’t give up until you drink from the silver cup.” When: Saturday, March 2, 2024. Where: Seven Days I Spy. You: Woman. Me: Man. #915960 LOOKING FOR A COMPANION? A membership with Seven Days. An interesting experience. Learned a lot. I fell in love. Had my heart broken. I was naïve. Too trusting. Sought to understand. Heart broken again. Met with someone. Tender, understanding, loving. Respected who I am. I will not renew a membership to Seven Days. Bars and bingo. Thanks to all I flirted with and hooked up with. When: Friday, March 1, 2024. Where: Seven Days Personals. You: Group. Me: Woman. #915959

PAULA ON MATCH Seen your ad on Match. St. Albans, early 60s, woman. Like your photo, nicelooking gal. Wanted to write and say hi, but your ad was gone. Miss seeing you. Looking for long-term friendship. Are you coming back to Match? We could chat or have a date. I sent you a like. Your secret admirer. When: Thursday, January 25, 2024. Where: Match.com. You: Woman. Me: Man. #915957 CONDUCTOR BUMBLE Hi, Conductor Bumble! Thanks for a nice ride to NYC — or maybe you got off in Albany with the “crew changes.” Your smile and overall pleasant demeanor made the trip more delightful. Just stay out of the maple-flavored “goodies.” When: Saturday, February 24, 2024. Where: Amtrak, Ethan Allen Line. You: Man. Me: Woman. #915956 SAW YOU AT TRADER JOE’S We crossed paths by the vegetables, where we made eye contact. You had glasses, as did I, and you were wearing a black coat. I was in blue. Instead of approaching you, I froze after the smile exchange. Would love to get a chance to meet you again. When: Friday, February 23, 2024. Where: Trader Joe’s. You: Woman. Me: Man. #915955

LOVE YOU I feel like I’m getting onto a boat for a long journey, but all I want is to go back to the shore to live with you. I believe firmly that my heart, mind and soul always were and still are with you. When: Thursday, February 29, 2024. Where: life. You: Woman. Me: Man. #915958

FAT-BIKE FLIRT Erica, it was fun meeting you on Perry Hill. I was so giddy when the groomer passed us above S’mores. The best part of my day was talking to you. May I join you on your next ride? When: Sunday, February 18, 2024. Where: Waterbury. You: Woman. Me: Man. #915953

RE: FRIENDLY KENNEDY DR. WAVE I’m glad that I could make your day, and yes, I would love to meet you for a coffee or drink — just name the place! When: Saturday, February 3, 2024. Where: Kennedy Dr. You: Woman. Me: Man. #915954

LOOKING FOR LOVE Trying to reach user “Kate.” Thought it could be here in the I Spy. Any chance you would like to get a coffee? I am a bit south of your age range, though. When: Sunday, February 11, 2024. Where: I Spy. You: Woman. Me: Man. #915948

Ask REVEREND 

Irreverent counsel on life’s conundrums

Dear Reverend,

I met a guy on a dating app, and we really hit it off chatting via text and on the phone, so we decided to meet up for a coffee. He was handsome and funny, and I really liked him a lot. Except for one thing: He was wearing way too much cologne. I would like to see him again, but not if it’s going to make my eyes water. How can I tell him without being rude? Should I say I’m allergic?

Ollie Factree

(WOMAN, 53)

BUMBLESTUMBLE We were doing really well, I thought, but I had a family emergency and you ended our chat. You have my number and my name. Please reach out, and we can keep growing? When: Monday, February 12, 2024. Where: Bumble. You: Woman. Me: Man. #915952

SHAW’S, VERGENNES, ROASTED CHICKEN Attractive blonde at checkout. We discussed the convenience of buying a roasted chicken. The teller chimed in with a soup suggestion. Let’s make soup together. When: Saturday, February 3, 2024. Where: Shaw’s, Vergennes. You: Woman. Me: Man. #915944

KIND WORDS WITH NICK Nick and your adorable pooch: Thank you for your kind conversation while walking up the hill at the waterfront. I hope to see you at the plunge next year! When: Saturday, February 10, 2024. Where: Burlington waterfront (I was asking for directions). You: Man. Me: Woman. #915951

FRIENDLY KENNEDY DRIVE INTERACTION WAVE You and I were waiting at a traffic light at the intersection of Kennedy Drive and Route 116 around 3. You were in a silver GMC pickup truck, and I was in a white SUV Acura. You gave me a friendly wave, and it made my day. Reach out if you would like to meet for a coffee/ drink! When: Saturday, February 3, 2024. Where: Kennedy Dr., South Burlington. You: Man. Me: Woman. #915942

FRIDAY AT DUNKIN’ 8:30 a.m. We exchanged glances multiple times at the Shelburne Road Dunkin’, both of us waiting for our drinks. You: blonde, jacket, black yoga pants, Sorels, sunglasses. Me: brown hair, jeans, blue jacket. Can I buy you coffee next time over conversation? When: Friday, February 9, 2024. Where: Dunkin’. You: Woman. Me: Man. #915949 THE LAMP SHOP IN BURLINGTON I was browsing, and you offered to help me a couple of times. You were confused because I didn’t seem very interested in the lamps, until I told you I was with a friend who was shopping. I liked your look and your confident energy. I’m intrigued. When: Saturday, February 3, 2024. Where: the Lamp Shop, Burlington. You: Woman. Me: Woman. #915946 HAPPY BORN DAY! The happiest born day to my love. I look at you and see all the possibilities of our future together. The laughs and inside jokes. The way you look at my stupid face with so much love and compassion. So grab your flannel panties and let’s explore this journey called life together. In my heart and thoughts always. When: Saturday, February 10, 2024. Where: Calais. You: Woman. Me: Man. #915943 NICE GUY AT ECLECTIC VT I enjoyed our brief encounter at checkout. That Texas/Vermont connection is real. Wish I could have met your senior dog. They are the best. Maybe next time. When: Saturday, February 3, 2024. Where: Eclectic VT, Church St. You: Man. Me: Woman. #915945

Dear Ollie Factree,

YOU ALWAYS MAKE MY DAY To the dark- aired customer service associate whose kindness always makes my day better: You smiled so warmly when you told me how you appreciated what I said; dare I hope that may have been more than courtesy? I’m respectful enough to accept whatever you wish, and you’re intriguing enough that I’m fine with whatever that is. When: Thursday, February 1, 2024. Where: City Market. You: Woman. Me: Man. #915938

BLACK FLANNEL BAR, SATURDAY 2/3 6 to 7ish. I was at the corner of the bar with a friend. You were directly across from me wearing a black knit hat. Caught your eye a few times; something about you caught my interest. Care to chat? When: Saturday, February 3, 2024. Where: Black Flannel. You: Man. Me: Woman. #915941 CRYING AT COMEDY WOLF You were onstage at Comedy Wolf this week talking about crying in public. I’m the one who guessed your sign after the show, then forgot to leave you my number before running away into the night. Funny, pretty and a water sign? What a dream! Get in touch if you want to cry in public together sometime. When: Thursday, February 1, 2024. Where: Radio Bean. You: Non-binary person. Me: Non-binary person. #915940 DEB, LONG AGO, DAVID, 1999 I miss you, Deb. This is David from 25 years ago. We had many nice times but fell apart, and now we are older. Wiser? Love to see you again. I lived in Berkshire, and you in Montpelier. Shall we share some words? Perhaps even a kiss? When: Saturday, February 2, 2019. Where: Montpelier and Berkshire. You: Woman. Me: Man. #915939 CITY MARKET I was at a cooler in a tan jacket. You walked by toward the wine section, maybe on your phone. Didn’t see much except your eyes. When: Monday, January 29, 2024. Where: City Market, Flynn Ave. You: Woman. Me: Man. #915936

I had an old family friend who used to wear so much cologne that if I hugged him in the morning, I’d smell like him for the rest of the day — sometimes even after I took a shower. My sisters and I used to rib him about it, but he never changed his ways. So I think your best bet is to be straightforward with this fella. You shouldn’t tell him that you’re allergic because that would be a lie — never a good thing, especially at the beginning of a relationship. Colognes and scents aren’t really allergens, because they don’t cause a reaction from your immune system. However, strong fragrances can be irritants that trigger sneezing and watery eyes in some people. Honesty really is the

SUSHI AND SOMERSAULTS To the elegant woman in stripes having sushi with a friend: I couldn’t help but overhear you tell the story of your gymnastic reawakening, and it reminded me of a septuagenarian gymnast I knew who designed her home around a set of rings, upon which she could be found swinging every night. So, you go, girl! When: Tuesday, January 30, 2024. Where: Sakura Sushi & Kitchen. You: Woman. Me: Man. #915937 45 YEARS AGO At the mall with my sisters. You with your girlfriend. After what seemed like forever, you yelled “ED.” I believe I yelled back. You were a distance away at this point. Though we did not meet, I have had the privilege of hearing you call out my name. I responded, and dreams of you through years keep me going. TY. When: Monday, July 1, 2019. Where: at the mall. You: Woman. Me: Man. #915935 MATURE BLOND EMPLOYEE, LOWE’S, ESSEX You’re a mature blonde, wear a blue Lowe’s vest, usually have your hair in a ponytail. Have seen you multiple times during my visits to Lowe’s. I get the impression you’d be interested in meeting. Let me know! When: Friday, January 26, 2024. Where: Lowe’s, Essex. You: Woman. Me: Man. #915934 PEOPLE EVERYWHERE Please give ear to my words. If you love someone deeply, don’t let petty or juvenile things come between you both. Be gentle, kind and brave. Listen well. Be supportive and nurturing. Be strong and vulnerable and fight for one another. True love is too rare and valuable to treat as though it’s disposable. Broken hearts are not easily mended. When: Wednesday, January 24, 2024. Where: everywhere I go. You: Group. Me: Woman. #915933

best policy, and even though it may seem particularly awkward in a hygiene-related situation, it still applies. The longer you hem and haw, the more awkward it will get. The next time you talk to this guy, cut to the chase — gently. You could say something like, “I’m really looking forward to seeing you again, but I should have mentioned that I’m a bit sensitive to some colognes. Could you not wear any on our next date?” He will likely appreciate your honesty, and he may actually be relieved. Some men only wear cologne because they think the ladies like it. If for some reason he says he can’t live without his signature scent, you’ll have to decide if you would rather go fragrance-free. Good luck and God bless,

The Reverend

What’s your problem? Send it to asktherev@sevendaysvt.com. SEVEN DAYS MARCH 6-13, 2024

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I’m a 62-y/o female who wants a male companion to have fun with, maybe go for some drinks or smoke a bowl. Young in spirit, but I’m not into the romantic part of relationships anymore. Simply looking for a goofy friend to take me out on the town. #L1730

Not a romantic/sexual request! Young, handsome woman seeking butch mentor (25 to 45) for guidance in self-expression, strength and intersocietal relations. #L1735 I’m a woman, 80 y/o, seeking a man, 70 to 80 y/o. I want friendship as well as a companion. Also like the outdoors in the summer. Swimming, boating and just reading at home. Like going out to eat once in a while. #L1734 I am a 25-y/o male forager, tinkerer and dumpster diver seeking like-minded empathetic woman of a similar age. #L1729

I’m a 67-y/o woman seeking a 55- to 76-y/o man. I am looking for a man to enjoy inside and outside — one who finds time to be a companion, is not a couch potato, and enjoys the outdoors, traveling, golf, fishing, etc. Leave your cell number. #L1733 Let’s do some things — coffee at Black Cap Coffee, dinner, the Green Mountain Film Festival, live music at Hugo’s or Bent Nails Bistro. Woman, early 70s, seeking man of similar age to explore common interests. #L1732 Kind, loving and sincere 72y/o woman looking for a male companion/friend to spend time with and get to know. #L1726

HOW TO REPLY TO THESE LOVE LETTERS: Seal your reply — including your preferred contact info — inside an envelope. Write your pen pal’s box number on the outside of that envelope and place it inside another envelope with payment. Responses for Love Letters must begin with the #L box number. MAIL TO: Seven Days Love Letters

PO Box 1164, Burlington, VT 05402

PAYMENT: $5/response. Include cash or check

(made out to “Seven Days”) in the outer envelope. To send unlimited replies for only $15/month, call us at 802-865-1020, ext. 161 for a membership (credit accepted).

PUBLISH YOUR MESSAGE ON THIS PAGE!

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Submit your FREE message at sevendaysvt.com/loveletters or use the handy form at right.

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We’ll publish as many messages as we can in the Love Letters section above.

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Interested readers will send you letters in the mail. No internet required!

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SEVEN DAYS MARCH 6-13, 2024

Internet-Free Dating!

Reply to these messages with real, honest-to-goodness letters. DETAILS BELOW.

I’m a lifelong good-looking senior Vermonter. BA at Saint Michael’s College. Had a 750 Honda for 10 years to explore Arizona and Vermont. Live with my cat. Regular gardening indoor and out. Seeking a companion who is caring and honest for love and sexual experiences. #L1725

SWF, mid-60s, slender. Loves: wildlife safety, non-predator pets, honest ones, kept-real dynamics and excellence with style. Hates: psychos and phonies, tech-obsesseds and scams. ISO of well-established guy, 60s to 70s — rather saintly. Also, hates old buildings — I like new! #L1722

56-y/o single, sincere gentleman looking for one female partner for fun/ experiences in St. J. Healthy, fit, humorous, not bad looking. Honest, tolerant, respectful. Open mind/heart. Just a tad lonely, and that is a good thing for us. #L1727

I am a 25-y/o female looking for a sugar-daddy male (50 to 70). Not for a sexual relationship; more of a companionship. #L1723 I’m a 73-y/o woman seeking a male age 68 to 78. Would like to spend my birthday with a friend. I am trying to pare down my things. Lots of antiques and family treasures. And I’m still working — need a break — midFebruary. I like sports — football, etc. Reading and movies. Please write me with your thoughts and phone number. #L1720

I’m a man, 34, seeking a woman, 20s to 30s. Make something out of me. I am full of potential. I work and was born in Vermont. Looking for a partner in life. #L1724 I’m 47, seeking a male. I’m 5’6, 206 pounds, looking for someone to marry me and who is very wealthy. Please respond ASAP. #L1728

I am a 35-y/o M, thirsty for love. I am looking for a good-hearted woman who will accept that I am her ADAM. I promise to give you my best. You will never be disappointed. #L1721

I’m a 72-y/o male who would love to sensually experience a mature woman in her 70s or 80s. Phone number, please. #L1719 I’m a single female, 47, 5’6, red hair, blue eyes, 206 pounds, looking for the one who will marry me and is very well off financially wealthy to fulfill my dreams with. #L1716 I’m a 65-y/o male seeking a 55- to 65-y/o female. I am a hardworking man, loving and kind. I enjoy gardening (vegetables and flowers), snuggling by a campfire/ camping, cooking, hunting and fishing. Seeking a woman who is honest and caring. Someone to spend time with and see where it goes. #L1717 For 55-y/o M wannabe geek: I’m your huckleberry. Intense discussions and companionship are my game. Say when. My fave character. Demure, not exactly; yes, down to earth. You said intense — I’m your girl! I’m 55 also. Hope to hear back. #L1715

Describe yourself and who you’re looking for in 40 words below:

Required confidential info:

(OR, ATTACH A SEPARATE PIECE OF PAPER.)

__________________________________________

I’m a _________________________________________________ __ ____

NAME

AGE + GENDER (OPTIONAL)

seeking a____________________________________________ ___________ AGE + GENDER (OPTIONAL)

_______________________________________________________

__________________________________________ ADDRESS

__________________________________________ ADDRESS (MORE)

_______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________

__________________________________________ CITY/STATE

__________________________________________ ZIP

__________________________________________ PHONE

_______________________________________________________ MAIL TO: SEVEN DAYS LOVE LETTERS • PO BOX 1164, BURLINGTON, VT 05402 OPTIONAL WEB FORM: SEVENDAYSVT.COM/LOVELETTERS HELP: 802-865-1020, EXT. 161, LOVELETTERS@SEVENDAYSVT.COM

THIS FORM IS FOR LOVE LETTERS ONLY. Messages for the Personals and I-Spy sections must be submitted online at dating.sevendaysvt.com.


Living With Loss: A Gathering for the Grieving

Female Founders Speaker Series: B Corps

Jon McBride’s Big Easy With Special Guest Ali McGuirk

Eggstatic! (for kids!)

WED., MAR. 6 ONLINE

WED., MAR. 6 THE PHOENIX, WATERBURY

Old Spokes Home Bike Mechanics 101 Winter Series THU., MAR. 7 OLD SPOKES HOME, BURLINGTON

WED., MAR. 13 BIRDS OF VERMONT MUSEUM, HUNTINGTON

Bleu x Vermont Fresh Network Dinner

SOLD OUT

THU., MAR. 14 BLEU NORTHEAST KITCHEN, BURLINGTON

The Radiance With Hard Copies

New Orleans Community Dinner

Andriana Chobot

Cacio e Pepe & Amaretti Cookies Featuring Cooking With Stephanie

Homemade Ramen Bowls & Dumplings

Tracy Grammer

The Rough & Tumble With Special Guest Geoff Goodhue Trio

Songs for the River and the Moon

Burlington Civic Symphony Spring Concert

Edna Residency

Sugar on Tap: Burlesque Variety Show

Prydein

Va-et-vient Concert

Non-Alcoholic Pop-Up Bottle Shop & Tasting

FRI., MAR. 8 THE UNDERGROUND, RANDOLPH

THU., MAR. 14 STOWE STREET CAFE, WATERBURY

FRI., MAR. 8 THE PHOENIX, WATERBURY

FRI., MAR. 15 RED POPPY CAKERY, WATERBURY

SAT., MAR. 9 RICHMOND COMMUNITY KITCHEN, RICHMOND

FRI., MAR. 15 ROOTS & WINGS COFFEEHOUSE AT UUCUV, NORWICH

SAT., MAR. 9 THE TOWN HALL, FAIRLEE

FRI., MAR. 15 CITY HALL AUDITORIUM ARTS CENTER, MONTPELIER

FRI., MAR. 15 OPERA HOUSE AT ENOSBURG FALLS

SAT., MAR. 9 MAIN STREET LANDING, BURLINGTON

SUN., MAR. 10 FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH, ESSEX

FIND EVEN MORE EVENTS ONLINE AT SEVENDAYSTICKETS.COM

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FRI., MAR. 15 THE PHOENIX, WATERBURY

SAT., MAR. 9 ELLEY-LONG MUSIC CENTER, COLCHESTER

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MON., MAR. 11 HOTEL VERMONT, BURLINGTON

SAT., MAR. 16 GUINEP, SOUTH BURLINGTON

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3/5/24 5:08 PM


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