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August 27, 2016
Police investigate string of home burglaries From News & Staff Reports
Published by New Market Press, Inc.
Oral health care workshop hits a raw nerve
iron horSe
By Bruce Parker bparker@watchdog.org
lou@suncommunitynews.com
SHOREHAM — On Aug. 8, troopers from southern Addison County and northern Rutland County were dispatched to four different reports of home burglaries. Rutland County troopers responded to two residences on Lake Road in Benson and a residence on Main Road in West Haven. Addison County troopers responded to a residence on North Orwell Road in Shoreham. Investigations suggested that several homes were entered forcefully. Multiple items including family jewelry, wedding bands, watches, cutlery, coins and laptops were removed from the houses. Evidence was recovered at several residences and is pending submission to the Vermont Forensic Laboratory. All four burglaries were reported to have occurred during daytime hours and all four residences were unattended at the time they were entered. Anyone with information on suspicious activity in the area or information on one or all of the burglaries are encouraged to contact the Vermont State Police at 802-773-9101. Information can also be submitted anonymously online at www. vtips.info or text “CRIMES” (274637) to Keyword: VTIPS.
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MONTPELIER — States want to expand access to oral health care, but the debate over how to do it is provoking strong reactions from many within the dental community. When the American Dental Association’s Jane Grover spoke on improving access to oral health care at the American Legislative Exchange Council’s 43rd annual meeting recently, audience members weren’t expecting anything out of the ordinary, at least, not for a convention of state lawmakers. But the tensions that boiled over during the workshop’s question-and-answer session were anything but ordinary. “To what extent, in your opinion, can trained dental assistants or hygienists get out there independently without direction from a dentist and start filling cavities? And can I assume the ADA would, like, squash them?” asked Arizona state Sen. John Kavanagh, R-Fountain Hills, hitting Grover with a loaded question. “Oh let’s start a war,” an audience member blurted out in reply. In a room full of dentists and policymakers, Kavanagh’s question was a firebomb. Grover, a dentist, and the director of the Council on Access, Prevention and Interprofessional Relations for the ADA, had just finished singing the praises of the Community Dental Health Coordinator program. The ADA-backed initiative trains dental hygienists to help underserved people get access to quality dental care. Notably, the program does not train such professionals to fill cavities or extract teeth. “Doing a cavity prep and filling a tooth is a surgical procedure,” Grover told Kavanagh, insinuating that only dentists can do that work. CONTINUED ON PAGE 22
A group of internationally known artists joined hands to help create the West Rutland Sculpture Art Park. Included is a slice of Danby marble carved by Liliya Pobornoikova of Bulgaria. Bill and Barbara Carris opened their house to the artists, along with materials for their sculptures, in 2013. Included among the art works is a fantastic, iron locomotive sculpture. The park is located at 1450 Clarencon Ave. in West Rutland. You can find details on the park’s Facebook page. Photo by Jack Rogers
Local kids pictured on baseball cards By Lou Varricchio lou@suncommunitynews.com
FERRISBURGH — For baseball all-stars, getting your own baseball card is indication of making the grade. This Friday will be a special day for nine youngsters in Vermont, including residents of Ferrisburgh, West Rutland and Shelburne— all made the grade in the eyes of the professional players of Lake Monsters Minor League baseball team. Each youth will be honored and rewarded with an experience of a lifetime joining Champ the baseball team’s mascot along with Lake Monsters players. The children had their custom-made Lake Monsters baseball cards crafted by team manCONTINUED ON PAGE 21