Monday, may 13, 2019

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MONDAY EDITION

ADDISON COUNTY

INDEPENDENT

Vol. 30 No. 52

Kiley tied to Vt. landscape

• Sheldon Museum will host an exhibit & talks about an acclaimed Charlotte landscape architect. See Arts Beat, Page 10.

Learn more about Bristol’s past

Middlebury, Vermont

Ferrisburgh debates who to hire for traffic control Residents, board split on city, sheriff’s agencies By ANDY KIRKALDY FERRISBURGH — It’s an issue that has drawn dozens of residents to Ferrisburgh selectboard meetings, including a dozen at the May 7 gathering. Board members say they have also received a number of emails and phone calls, with opinions evenly

split about what is a $15,000-a-year decision. “We’ve heard from community members in many different ways,” Chairman Rick Ebel told residents at last week’s meeting. What’s at stake is whether the Addison County Sheriff’s (See Ferrisburgh, Page 31)

Monday, May 13, 2019

32 Pages

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New leader takes reins at Bristol’s Hub Teen Center By CHRISTOPHER ROSS BRISTOL — Taylor Welch just landed a dream job, and the Bristol Hub Teen Center just landed a new director with training in psychology and art. Harry Potter fans will also be pleased to learn that Welch, 25, has Quidditch experience. “I played Quidditch at UVM and I’ve asked some of my former

teammates if they’d be willing to come down a give a workshop,” she said. For uninitiated Muggles, Quidditch is a sport invented for the Harry Potter books by author J. K. Rowling. In the books (and subsequent films) it involves a lot of flying around on broomsticks. The nonfictional earthbound (See Welch, Page 17)

• The Bristol Historical Society has a series of speakers slated for this summer. See the Bristol Beat on Pages 14-15.

City helps fund business growth

• The Vergennes City Council has lent money to help a city brewer distribute its beer. See Page 2.

Enchanted evening Discs fly in new sport at MUHS • The Tiger Ultimate team hosted Vermont Commons in a competitive game on Thursday. See Page 18.

THE MUDDY BRANCH brook in Middlebury, fed by weeks of rain, nearly overflows its banks as it rushes through a misty valley at sunset this past Tuesday evening.

Independent photo/Sarah Pope

Midd Kids aid high schoolers with postgrad goals One-on-one mentoring program expands By CHRISTOPHER ROSS MIDDLEBURY — To get a sense of the pressure high school students and educators must feel about college prep, one needs only examine the methodology behind U.S. News & World Report’s 2019 rankings of the best high schools in the nation. “College readiness” is the single greatest factor in determining a school’s score, accounting for three times as much weight

as “graduation rate.” “College readiness” means a lot more than access to Advanced Placement classes or tests or test-prep courses, however, and it was with that in mind that Middlebury College student Megan Ernst founded Middlebury College Access Mentors (MiddCAM) six years ago. MiddCAM pairs college student mentors with Middlebury Union High School (MUHS) juniors who are primarily first-generation and/or low(See Mentors, Page 22)


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