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This Week’s Headlines, August 25, 2016

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Read these stories and more on the eEdition, new edition available Wednesday nights, pick it up a copy on the newsstands Thursdays or subscribe.

Ruin to Renewal

The Pingree sugarhouse on Route 100 was severely damages in Tropical Storm Irene. (Anne Brown Photo)

The Pingree sugarhouse on Route 100 was severely damages in Tropical Storm Irene. (Anne Brown Photo)


Documentary Chronicles Aftermath of Irene in Plymouth
by Cassie Horner, Special to the Standard

Top Stories

Five Years Later, Irene Still Lingers
by Katy Savage, Standard Staff

RES Hires W.Windsor Resident to Be Principal
Staff Report

WSESU Narrows Its Consolidation Options
Staff Report

History: Up, Up and Away in the Upper Valley
by Curt Peterson, Standard Correspondent

Resident Requests Memorial for Founder of Historical Society
by Virginia Dean, Standard Correspondent

Mr. Blish Goes to Washington, Police Chief Learns About Social Media at the White House
by Michelle Fields, Standard Correspondent

Tennis Tourney to Honor Cate Stratton’s Memory
by Curt Peterson, Standard Correspondent

Keeping the Scottish Tradition Alive
by Virginia Dean, Standard Correspondent

WCSU New Educators Ready For Challenges

Off The Grid Summer Camp Offer Kids New Experiences
by Chloe Powell, Barnard News

French Photographer Featured in Opening of Hood’s New Exhibition Space

Editorial: There’s More to Our National Park Than You Know

OBITUARIES
Gilbert ‘Gibby’ Wood
John ‘Pops’ LaMountain
Judianne Wood
Vivienne Wakefield


PHOTO GALLERIES all photo galleries

Bridgewater Celebration
The annual celebration put on by the Bridgewater Volunteer Fire Department was held in Bridgewater with a barbecue, games, fireworks and activities.

Naked Table Lunch
This annual Sustainable Woodstock and ShackletonThomas event has participants building tables from local wood and then uses the tables on the Middle Bridge in Woodstock to serve lunch on for the participants and some of the community.

Under Glass Art Show, Laurel Tobiason
The Norman Williams Public Library held an artist opening reception for the artwork now on display on the Mezzanine at the library.

Under The Tree 5K, Race 2016
The annual fundraising event for the Hartland Christmas Project. The race this year was part of the Upper Valley Runners Series and brought in a much larger crowd than in previous years.

Little Ascutney, Guided Hike, 2016
Weathersfield Parks and Recreation Guided Hikes continued on Saturday, Aug 20 with a trek up Little Ascutney.


Pet Photo Contest Winner & Submissions 2016

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Congratulation to Lauren Carvalho of East Barnard .  TheVermontStandard.com readers voted over the past week and chose Lauren’s photo as the Grand Prize Winner with 51.5% of the votes (486) out of 944.

GRAND PRIZE WINNER 2016 - Golden Retriever Milo, taken by Lauren Carvalho in East Barnard.

GRAND PRIZE WINNER 2016 – Golden Retriever Milo, taken by Lauren Carvalho in East Barnard.


Thank you to all the participants. Congratulations to all the winners. Please contact the Vermont Standard to claim your prize(s) 802-457-1313.  Click on an image to view larger.

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Quechee Highland Festival, Keeping the Scottish Tradition Alive

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By Virginia Dean, Standard Correspondent

The Quechee Games – formerly known as the Quechee Scottish Festival – is up and running this year and will offer not only the same events but more, according to overseer Lezlie Webster of sponsor Scottish Arts, Inc. of New Hampshire.

“The Scottish Games continue because we feel they are important in our competition and Highland Games season,” said Webster. “We’re excited and have made some great changes to what people want to have in addition to what was already there. The games will go on as usual with many of the same faces.”

With gates opening on Saturday, Aug. 27 at 9 a.m., some of the same popular events include the Vermont Sheepdog Trials, the welly toss, ladies’ rolling pin toss, kilted mile race, solo bag pipe and chanter competition, Highland dancing competition, Scottish arts and crafts, Highland athletics and Scottish wares.

“This year, we’re adding a fiddle competition, a petting zoo for instruments, Scottish ceilidh dancing for everyone, eating a Scotch egg, putting on a kilt, learning about a clan’s history, and two scavenger hunts around the games for prizes,” said Webster. “Salt Hill Pub of various locations in New Hampshire is providing the food, and we have entertainment in the beer tent.”

The scavenger hunts include one for children under 12 and one for teens and adults, Webster said. Prizes include gifts from vendors and supporters of the games.

The festival, which has attracted people from all over New England and Canada as well as other parts of the world for over 40 years, is being sponsored by Scottish Arts, Inc., headquartered in Manchester, New Hampshire, and presided over by piper and Highland dancer Webster.

There are also at least eight individual committees that have helped to organize the event, she noted. Aside from the Scottish Arts, sponsors include the St. Andrews Dancers of Vermont; the St. Andrews Vermont Pipe Band; Jack Tulley — Tulley BMW, Ian Bowker — Icon Broadcast; Holiday Inn Express, White River Junction; Hampton Inn, White River Junction; White River Inn and Suites, White River Junction; and the Quechee Club, Quechee.

“This is a completely communal effort by all of us who have fronted the money,” said Webster. “It’s a very Vermont way of thinking, to be communal. We’ll put a rainy day fund together for the event to happen next year if we make a profit this year. The rest goes into the bands to keep the competitors and groups going.”

Some of the events include open stone, Braemar stone put, heavy weight for distance, light weight for distance, heavy hammer, caber toss, sheaf toss, and weight for height. Some of the pipe bands are the St. Andrews of Vermont Pipes and Drums (grade 5), NH Pipes and Drums (grades 4-5), North Shore Pipe Band (grade 4), Catamount (grade 5), Clan MacPherson Pipe Band (grade 5), Mystic Highland Pipe Band (grade 5), NH Police Association Pipes and Drums (grade 5) and the Highland Light Pipe Band (grade 5).

“Clans are thrilled to know they are returning to their favorite games,” said Webster. “Competitors are glad to have the event on the calendar. We’re bringing our A game onto the field.”

Some of the vendors attendants can look forward to include Gibson Bagpipes, Highland Leatherwork, Metals and Pieces, Neal’s Yard Remedies, The Wee Piper, Faire Isles Trading Company, Patricia Smith and Judith Sullivan kiltmakers, and Thistles and Things.

Some of the nearly 25 clans being represented include Shaw, Gunn, Stewart, Johnstone, Mackintosh, Chattan, Rose, Campbell, MacLean, Davidson and MacInnes.

“The festival gives everybody a glimpse of the richness and complexity of the Scottish culture,” said Webster. “It’s not just about the colors of the beautiful tartans, but the amazing music, food, and fun activities. It’s all such an incredible tradition. We have very accomplished performers, and everyone’s so friendly. It’s a lot to take in, but we ask people to be Scottish for the day and to be proud of it.”

Up until this year, the festival relied on the owner of Scotland by the Yard, Don Ransom, to continue to function. Ransom became involved with the retail business in 1975 primarily to help at the festival that was established four years earlier, just after the store’s first opening.

Ransom, however, has since retired, closing his business and all its amenities.

Just relisted with Williamson Group Sotheby’s International Realty, the $395,000 price tag includes the shop building, three-bay oversized garage barn, sheep run-in shed and the yellow 2,000-square foot house that sits above the store on five acres overlooking Route 4, according to Ransom.

Tickets are $15 for regular admission; $10 for seniors 65-plus; and children under 12 free. The festival takes place at the Quechee polo field. Gates close at 5 p.m.

Driver of Dead River Co. Van Injured in Route 4 Accident

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Staff report

A driver of a Dead River Company van was seriously injured in a head-on collision on Route 4 near the White Cottage Snack Bar on Friday afternoon.

The Dead River van driver was taken by Woodstock ambulance with unknown injuries around 5 p.m. to the Woodstock Union High School campus — where officials planned to wait for a medical helicopter to take the man to Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center.

The Dead River van was traveling east on Route 4 when the driver of a white pickup truck crossed the center line heading west, according to preliminary police investigation, Woodstock Police Chief Robbie Blish said. The driver of the pickup truck had a small cut on his face but appeared to be OK, before emergency officials put the man in an ambulance. The cause of the accident is still under investigation and the names of those involved will be released, according to police.

Traffic was backed up for more than an hour as crews cleaned up the scene.

Board Not Worried About Chief’s Lack of Certification

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By Curt Peterson, Standard Correspondent

Although Killington Police Chief Whit Montgomery was awarded his position by the select board in 2013 on the condition that he would complete the Level III Vermont Police Academy training, the selectmen and town manager say they participated in the decision to skip the course this year.

“We looked into the matter very thoroughly,” selectman Chris Bianchi said. “Whit has taken all of the courses in that training program, at the same school, during his career.”

He said the board is looking into having Montgomery certified at Level III on that basis. Both Bianchi and select board chair Patty McGrath are confident they will be able to convince the Police Academy to recognize Montgomery’s piecemeal participation in the course as evidence he has earned certification.

But the Level III certification isn’t the only complication facing Killington.

Until last month, the police department included Chief Montgomery, a part-time officer named Jay Riehl, and Brent Howard, who was a fulltime officer. Howard left under unexplained circumstances in July, leaving the town’s law enforcement down to Montgomery and Riehl.

“Not enrolling Chief Montgomery in the program at this time was the best thing for the town,” McGrath said. “Otherwise our chief would be gone for four months and we’d be down to one part-time officer.”

Riehl has the Level III certification, which, if he were the case manager in a criminal investigation, would allow Montgomery to participate in the process.

In 2015 Montgomery left the four-month residential training session halfway through the course, explaining that he had come down with the flu. Although some residents called for his resignation for lack of credentials, the select board said the training and authority he had at the time was adequate for the demands made on him in this resort town of 800 fulltime residents. His Level II training qualifies him to investigate minor criminal action, such as breaking local and traffic laws, drug possession, domestic disputes and disturbing the peace.

Last year Montgomery told the Vermont Standard he was qualified to handle situations that he actually faces, and would call in the state police for more serious investigations such as homicide or drug distribution anyway, as they have the manpower, training and labs necessary to deal with the more egregious felonies. He indicated that he intended to obtain the certification when he had the next opportunity.

The course is given twice a year, starting in February and again in August, but Montgomery has not enrolled in either session.

He is one of very few Vermont chiefs of police who have not achieved the Level III certification, according to an academy spokesperson.

In other business, all three selectmen agreed to form a golf foursome with one of Bianchi’s sons to participate in the Vermont League of Cities and Towns Golf Tournament on Aug. 24 at the Green Mountain International Golf Course. Schwartz agreed to drive one of their carts, as she has yet to take up the game.

Whimsically, Jim Hoff, the only member of the public present at the meeting, suggested the board should officially “warn” a meeting of the board for the golf event, as they would all be together. The public has to know when that occurs, he noted, so they can attend if they want to. Otherwise it’s a “secret meeting.”

“You wouldn’t want that to come back and bite you some day,” Hoff said.

The board took his suggestion seriously and voted to warn the Board would be meeting at the golf outing.

“I hope the course has enough carts for members of the public who might show up,” Bianchi said.

This article first appeared in the August 18, 2016 edition of the Vermont Standard.

Reading Elementary School Hires W. Windsor Resident to Be Principal

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Staff Report

Cathy Knight knew in sixth grade when her teacher said, “you can do anything, be anything you want” that she wanted to be a teacher.

Knight went home and played “school” with her dolls, teaching them lessons she learned in school.

“My sixth-grade teacher used to tell me as long as you’re learning, you’re alive. As soon as you stop learning, you die.” Knight said. “School embodies that thirst for learning…It’s just a matter of igniting that passion for learning.”

Now Knight, 57, is grown up and has students of her own. Knight is the new principal at Reading Elementary School, hoping to ignite that passion in the 60 or so students there.

Knight is the type who listens to children’s books in her car so she can recommend books for her students to read.

“(Learning is) such a doorway to the world,” she said. “I’ve always been a teacher, I’m a teacher at heart.”

Knight worked her way up from community college to the University of Maryland to Johns Hopkins University, as her finances allowed.

Knight is returning to the school she taught fourth and fifth grade at 10 years ago. Knight was a full-time teacher at Reading from 2005-2007. She ran the summer program in 2006. Then left the school in 2007 to become the principal at Albert Bridge School.

Former Principal Zooey Zullo’s resignation was accepted when the school board released her from her contract July 15.

John Fike, a former Reading school board member was “pleasantly surprised” by Knight’s return.

Fike hasn’t spoken to her and wasn’t part of the decision to hire her, but he remembers her being a good teacher.

Knight lives in West Windsor. She was most recently the principal at the Rochester School, a K-12 school, where she spent three years.

“I was driving an hour-and-a-half each way to work,” she said. “Last December on one day it took me three hours. I decided I was tired of the commute.”

She handed in her resignation then.

“I gave my heart and soul and I feel that there’s a lot I could offer here,” she said.

Her commute to work is now 15 minutes.

She’ll be at Reading four days a week—three days as principal overseeing the staff and students and the other day she’ll be the librarian, integrating technology into classroom assignments.

“I’m very techie,” she said.

Attempts to reach Zullo, who was hired in 2014, by phone weren’t successful. Phone calls to the three Reading Elementary school board members also weren’t returned. As a part-time principal, Zullo was paid a salary of $47,393 in the 2014-15 school year, according to the Reading town report. Attempts to obtain salary figures for Knight’s contract were unsuccessful, though the office of the principal budget (which includes an administrative assistant) totals $114,822 with a $49,792 salary for the principal, documents show.

Knight is upgrading the school website and plans to write a weekly blog.

Knight’s focus is on sustainability — in this case, sustainable learning and making sure that children who grow up in Vermont stay in Vermont, or at least are able to come back.

“I’m going to do all I can to sustain the learning,” Knight said.

Knight starts to miss school around this time every year. She kept in touch with her sixth-grade teacher until the teacher died five years ago. The lessons that teacher taught her are still with her.

This article first appeared in the August 25, 2016 edition of the Vermont Standard.

WCSU New Educators Ready for Challenges

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A handful of new teachers and administrative staff are coming to the schools of Windsor Central Supervisory Union. The Vermont Standard talked with five of them:

Hannah Leland

Hannah Leland

Hannah Leland
Hannah Leland loves learning so much that she hasn’t stopped since she graduated from Johnson State College. She earned a master’s degree from Plymouth State University in 2009 and now she’s working on her certificate of advanced graduate studies in secondary school administration and plans to earn her doctorate within the next 10 years.

“I love school. I love learning new things! So I have always planned to continue my education and one day acquire my doctorate. I also am doing it to show my daughter the importance of education and that if you want something bad enough, you can achieve it with enough effort,” she said in an email.

Leland is the new dean of students at Woodstock Union High School.

She will oversee student discipline at WUHS, taking over the position from Jeff Thomas.

Leland was the curriculum, instruction and assessment coordinator at the Hartford Area Career and Technology Center. She has eight years of experience teaching English. She taught sophomore English at Mascoma Valley Regional High School in Canaan, New Hampshire and before that taught at the Caledonia School in St. Johnsbury. Outside of learning, she loves community. She’s the director of the North Haverhill Fair, a fair she started volunteering at when she was 15, after being involved in 4-H and a competitor in the horse show.

“Without a strong community what do you have? You have to learn to give to others and do so selflessly. I grew up in the community where the fair is and have always felt a sense of pride being a part of that community,” she said.

Sarah Hahn

Sarah Hahn

Sarah Hahn
Sarah Hahn is a new science teacher at Woodstock Union High School.

The 28-year-old spent this past year teaching science in Leeds, England.

“I always wanted to teach abroad,” said Hahn.

Hahn grew as a teacher in the United Kingdom, where she said the education system is heavily geared toward testing. Before her stay in England, she taught for five years at Naperville Central High School in the suburbs of Chicago.

Hahn has a master’s degree in curriculum and instruction. She lives in Lebanon now.

“I wanted to come to WCSU because of the community and the passion and dedication of the teachers at WUHS. I’m really excited about the direction the science department is heading,” she said.

Katie Jacobsen and Ashley Stagner

Katie Jacobsen

Katie Jacobsen

Two new teachers, Katie Jacobsen and Ashley Stagner, taught at Hamilton Central School District in New York before they both coincidentally applied to the Windsor Central Supervisory Union at the same time.

Stagner, 28, is the new part-time art teacher at Woodstock Union High School and Jacobsen will teach first grade at Prosper Valley School.

“It was a delightful surprise,” Stagner said.

Ashley Stagner

Ashley Stagner

Stagner and Jacobsen were both at Hamilton Central for about three years. Stagner taught elementary, middle and high school art classes while Jacobsen taught third grade.

Last spring, Jacobsen, 27, was named one of PBS’ most innovative educators for her use of technology in the classroom.

Students in her class ran a blog, published their writing and created videos and podcasts, for example. Jacobsen views technology as a tool, “especially in a rural environment to bring the world to the classroom,” she said.

Allison Greene
Allison Greene is the new fifth grade teacher at Prosper Valley.

Greene, 33, is an avid trail runner, hiker and cross-country skier, spent two years teaching outdoor environmental education in Montana, California and Wyoming.

She has a master’s degree at Columbia University in New York City and had been a second and fourth grade teacher in Brooklyn before applying to the job in Pomfret.

“I love building strong communities in my classroom, getting kids excited about great books, playing math games, and teaching hands-on science,” said Greene, 33, who lives in Woodstock.

“I recently had a baby and my husband and I both love being outside, so we were ready to move out of the big city,” she said.

This article first appeared in the August 25, 2016 edition of the Vermont Standard.

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Mr. Blish Goes to Washington: Police Chief Learns About Social Media at the White House

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 Woodstock Police Chief Robbie Blish attended an event on technology and policing at the White House. (Woodstock Police Department Photo)

Woodstock Police Chief Robbie Blish attended an event on technology and policing at the White House. (Woodstock Police Department Photo)

By Michelle Fields, Standard Correspondent

Last week Woodstock Police Chief Robbie Blish traveled to the White House for a briefing on 21st Century Policing. What he discovered was that the Woodstock Police Force was already doing many of the things recommended by the President’s Task Force on 21st Century Policing.

“It is gratifying to know that you are on the right track,” Blish said.

The 96-page report of the task force says its mission is “to strengthen community policing and trust among law enforcement officers and the communities they serve— especially in light of recent events around the country that have underscored the need for and importance of lasting collaborative relationships between local police and the public.”

“I don’t think there has been a large review of policing since the 70s,” Blish says noting the need for the task force review. The task force initially conducted seven public listening sessions around the country in 2015 to gather input from community and faith leaders, law enforcement personnel, youth leaders and academics to gather the input needed to fuel their recommendations.

In order to improve those community relations, the White House has been inviting police chiefs from around the country to attend six-hour briefings about the report all summer. The discussions center around six primary pillars: building trust and legitimacy, policy and oversight, technology and social media, community policing and crime reduction, training and education, and officer wellness and safety.

Blish says the biggest aspect of establishing trust is transparency. One way they accomplish that in Woodstock is by maintaining a Facebook page with information and putting every incident on Twitter.

“If you do not have trust you do not have legitimate authority to get people to follow the law,” Blish says.

However, based on the briefing, Blish says he may add one more social media platform for the Woodstock police force – TUMBLR. “You can create a page and customize it,” Blish says of TUMBLR. “On Facebook if someone makes negative comments, there is not much you can do about it. On TUMBLR, it (those comments) go back to their (the writer’s) page.”

Another aspect of transparency emphasized at the briefing was the use of body cameras. “They say it can improve police practice,” Blish says noting that one challenge with these devices, even after purchase (the Woodstock police officers all wear them) is who pays for it?

“Data storage is expensive,” he says.

Blish learned at the briefing about a police data initiative that he is planning to take part in. He notes that police departments can enter data on a data.gov site in over 150 different data sets to keep track of everything from traffic stops to shootings. “It lays a foundation for problem solving in the community,” he said noting it gives the ability to look for trends in a new way.

Chief Blish emphasizes that his trip to the White House did not cost Woodstock residents anything. “I was actually there on behalf of the Vermont Association of Chiefs of Police.” He is currently the president of that organization.

Police chiefs from Colchester, Burlington, and Springfield, Vermont attended the same briefing and the Burlington chief gave a brief presentation about their online citizen complaint form. “They put it online because people may feel intimidated coming to the police station to complain,” Blish says. However, he notes this does not seem to be a problem in Woodstock. “Here they are pretty quick to tell me if they are not happy with something.”

Overall, Blish says he feels like it was a worthwhile trip. “Their recommendations were not concrete, it’s really kind of a best practices model.”

This article first appeared in the August 25, 2016 edition of the Vermont Standard.


This Week’s Headlines, September 1, 2016

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Read these stories and more on the eEdition, new edition available Wednesday nights, pick it up a copy on the newsstands Thursdays or subscribe.

Sneaking a Treat

J.J. Garrett’s dogs Harry and Bairdsly take a nibble at the Puppies and Pooches on Parade in Woodstock last weekend. Dogs circulated the Woodstock Green for the event hosted by friends of the Norman Williams Public Library.  (Rick Russell Photo)

J.J. Garrett’s dogs Harry and Bairdsly take a nibble at the Puppies and Pooches on Parade in Woodstock last weekend. Dogs circulated the Woodstock Green for the event hosted by friends of the Norman Williams Public Library.
(Rick Russell Photo)

Top Stories
School Board Approves Senegal Trip: HS Seeks Kidnapping Insurance
by Katy Savage, Standard Staff

Three Injured In Route 4 Crashes
Staff Report

VTF&W to ATV Riders: Avoid Road or Face Fines
by Curt Peterson, Standard Correspondent

Quite the Build-Up for Local Film
by Katy Savage, Standard Staff

WUMS Reveals New Dress Code
Staff Report

Locals Recall ‘Life-Changing’ Peace Corps Experiences
by Virginia Dean, Standard Correspondent

Town Wrestling with Evolving Recycling Systems, Costs
by Curt Peterson, Standard Correspondent

How Trashy Are You? A Look at America’s Waste Problem
by Elle O’Casey, Sustainable Woodstock

SPORTS

No Need for Speed: Woodstock Football Team Thinks Quickness Give It Advantage in ’16
by David Miles, Sports Correspondent

Bradley Enjoys Home After ‘Brutal’ Season
by Katy Savage, Standard Staff

OBITUARIES
Jacob Dayton
John Hazen
John Ketola
Rowena Gibson
Walter Morancy


PHOTO GALLERIES all photo galleries
Puppies and Pooches on Parade
The 2nd annual event held by the friends of the Norman Williams Public Library in Woodstock, Puppies and Pooches on Parade, took place on the Green.

Keegan Bradley Charity Golf Event
The annual Charity golf event put on my Keegan Bradley was held at the Woodstock Inn & Resort. The event benefitted the Pediatric Cancer Research Foundation, the Vermont Cancer Center and Vermont Children’s Hospital. Rick Russell Photos

100 Year Celebration at MBRNHP
The celebration of 100 Years of National Parks was held on Saturday, August 27 at the Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller National Historical Park in Woodstock.

Quechee Highland Games, Festival
The annual Scottish Festival, renamed Highland Games was held in Quechee.

WES First Day of School

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WSESU Narrows Its Consolidation Options

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Staff Report

Last month the Agency of Education established guidelines that would allow school districts to forego a merger. But local school officials say it won’t be that easy.

Each district would have to prove to the state that not merging is justified. In the state’s draft of “Guidance: Proposals by One or More Non-Merging Districts for an ‘Alternative Structure’ Under Act 46 (2015),” remaining the same is considered if a supervisory union proves it meets state education goals, including efficiency in spending, equity and quality. Alternate structure proposals are due by Nov. 30, 2017. Test scores, student-teacher ratio and the number of subjects offered are some criteria that would be considered.

It was one option — of a list of six — Windsor Southeast Supervisory Union is considering as it works to comply with Act 46, the school consolidation law. But the new guidelines make the status quo seem impossible, said Windsor Southeast Supervisory Union Superintendent David Baker.

“As I read through it I didn’t think there was a lot of hope for small school districts to get beyond those criteria,” Baker said. “I wish I felt more optimistic but I don’t.”

It’s a “complicated situation” at Windsor Southeast, where three towns have school choice and one doesn’t.

“(Merging) is a nice theory but I just don’t think it’s going to happen,” Baker said.

There’s a meeting Sept. 13 where the Act 46 study committee will decide to keep studying six merger proposals or disband so schools can join other districts.

West Windsor has talked with neighboring Windsor Central Supervisory Union. Hartland’s talked with Thetford. Reading’s talked with Springfield. Conversations have been informal so far, Baker said.

Every school is organized differently at Windsor Southeast. Hartland and Weathersfield have school choice, allowing students in grades 9-12 to pick their high schools. West Windsor has school choice for grades 7-12 while Windsor doesn’t offer school choice. When schools merge the law says they have to have the same organizational structure.

In all options the Windsor Southeast Act 46 study committee is considering, at least one school would lose something.

Besides staying the same, the following options are being considered:

• Windsor and West Windsor would merge and Hartland and Weathersfield would merge. West Windsor would lose school choice.

• Windsor and Weathersfield would merge separate from Hartland and West Windsor. Weathersfield would lose school choice.

• If Windsor merges with Hartland and Weathersfield merges with West Windsor, Hartland would lose school choice. West Windsor would lose school choice for the middle school or Weathersfield would have to offer school choice.

• Hartland, West Windsor and Weathersfield would merge and Windsor would be a separate district. Two school boards and one supervisory union would manage the separate districts. Weathersfield would school choice for middle school unless Hartland and West Windsor offer school choice.

• The unified district option puts all students, grades pre-K through 12, in one district with one school board and one budget. School choice options would disappear and students would go to the newly created regional high school, likely at the current Windsor High School.

“It’s been a bit frustrating because as a supervisory union we do all work together pretty well,” Windsor school board chair Amy McMullen said.

Windsor school board’s preferred option is the unified district.

“We would be able to provide a continuum of education services for kids pre-K-12,” McMullen said.

Up to 10 percent of the high school population would still be able to choose another high school under Act 129.

“It’s still very difficult to have these local towns have to make these difficult decisions about different operating structures,” Baker said.

If the towns do nothing, the state would take over in 2018.

“Maybe there will be some great awakening and the four towns that already work well together will see that it’s going to be more cost effective and we can build some quality in a unified system,” Baker said.

This article first appeared in the August 25, 2016 edition of the Vermont Standard.

New Suicide Six Chairlift, Work in Progress

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Work is under way on the ski lift at Suicide Six that is being replace before the start of the upcoming snow season. The 1976 chairlift will be replaced by a new $1.5 million chairlift. The new chairlift, manufactured by Leitner-Poma of America, Inc., in Colorado, will have four seats. It won’t move faster than the old lift but will be able to carry up to 1,800 people to the summit per hour — 600 more than the current carrying capacity.

This Week’s Headlines, September 9, 2016

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Read these stories and more on the eEdition, new edition available Wednesday nights, pick it up a copy on the newsstands Thursdays or subscribe.

Fran Lamb turns vintage glass into garden art. Lamb sands a hockey puck that she will use as a backing to hold up a flower. (Rick Russell Photo)

Fran Lamb turns vintage glass into garden art. Lamb sands a hockey puck that she will use as a backing to hold up a flower. (Rick Russell Photo)

Art Of Glass

Don’t Raze Your Glass: Give It to Fran Lamb
by Virginia Dean, Standard Correspondent

Top Stories

Gilbert’s Hill Saved: Public Invited to Event
Staff Report

‘Pickers’ Coming to Vermont
Staff Report

The Rise of Two-River Ottauquechee Regional Commission
by Tony Marquis, Standard Staff

Reading Give Land to Oil ‘God’
by Katy Savage, Standard Staff

Hartland Man Wants to Rename Mt. Ascutney
by Curt Peterson, Standard Correspondent

Weathersfield Residents Remember Romaine Tenney
by Nancy Nutile-McMenemy, Standard Correspondent

SPORTS

Wasps Rebound to Rout U-32: Woodstock Finds a ‘Taste for Scoring’ in 29-7 Win

by David Miles, Standard Correspondent

Girls Cross County Wins Thetford Meet
by David Miles, Sports Correspondent

Woodstock Field Hockey Defeats Cosmos
by George Calver, Standard Correspondent

OBITUARIES

Connie Tessier
Esther Maynes
Richard Weir


PHOTO GALLERIES all photo galleries
ScultpureFest Exhibit Opening
The art opening reception for “Grounding”, an exhibition of site specific land art curated by Jay Mead and Edyth Wright was hosted on the King Farm, part of SculptureFest in Woodstock.

WUHS Football Game vs U32 Raiders
In the opening match up Woodstock Union High School football team took on the U32 Raiders at home on Friday, September 2.

GMHA Distance Days & Events
Event held at Green Mountain Horse Association on September 2-4, celebrated the 80th 100 mile ride.

Plymouth Folk & Blues Festival
The annual event held at Plymouth Notch, Coolidge Historic Site, brings musicians together to play for two days for the Plymouth Folk and Blues Festival.

Hartland First Day of School

Reading First Day of School

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Murder Mystery Train Returns To Glory Days

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Where: White River Train station
When: Saturday, Sept. 10 from 4:30 to 8:30 p.m.
Ticket information: $65 per person with limited seating.
For info/reservations call 295-7500 or visit www.hartfordvtchamber.com

Hartland theatrical writer and producer RJ Crowley leaves the complicated forensics to television and works to make murdering people on a train fun again. (Eric Francis Photo)

Hartland theatrical writer and producer RJ Crowley leaves the complicated forensics to television and works to make murdering people on a train fun again.
(Eric Francis Photo)

By Eric Francis, Standard Correspondent

Cooking dinner for a hundred people on an excursion train can be murder, or at least it can be when Hartland’s RJ Crowley is in charge of the script.

For the second year now Crowley is writing, directing and producing one of his popular live audience-participation murder mysteries onboard a Green Mountain Railroad train traveling up the edge of the scenic Connecticut River from the Amtrak Depot in White River Junction.

The dinner theater jaunt is part of the 24th annual Glory Days of the Railroad festival and is being sponsored by the Hartford Chamber of Commerce in partnership with Mascoma Bank and Centurion Insurance.

“Glory Days celebrates White River Junction’s history as the primary rail artery in this region and that is actually a big deal to a lot of people who still, from a nostalgic point of view, have a great deal of reverence and love for the railroad which I’m just beginning to understand,” Crowley said this week.

This year’s production, which has been dubbed, “Loco-Motive for Murder; Part 2” with the sublime tag line “Just when you thought it was safe to get back on the train…” follows upon last year’s inaugural rail murder mystery which literally packed the train.

Think of a variety show farce, like an episode of the old “Carol Burnett Show,” rather than the grim purple flashlights of “CSI,” when you put the murder into one of Crowley’s mysteries.

“These are really humor-based and character-driven pieces of theater which are very interactive,” Crowley explained, “Out there in the world there’s a lot of darkness and gruesomeness in terms of violence and so the last thing that I want to do is perpetuate that in any way by creating realistic murders. My mysteries are a lot of fun. There’s not going to be a lot of forensic specialists taking hair samples and waving their spectrometers around to find out how much blood spatter there is.”

Creating the live mysteries that are put on at everything from private homes to themed “murder weekends” at hotels and bed and breakfasts has in recent years become something of a specialty for Crowley who’s been pursuing “parallel careers” as a restaurateur and theatrical type since he graduated from the American Academy of Dramatic Arts and then spent the next two years with the groundbreaking Groundlings in their ‘Character Lab’ and script writing school, also in New York City.

From there he launched on a tangled career path that has landed him and his two teenage daughters in Hartland for the past ten years after first owning a popular “Lou’s-like” breakfast cafe in the heart of Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island and tucking in an unexpected career as a radio commercial producer after he got to Vermont.

“I got into the radio business by accident at a now defunct ‘Oldies’ station that used to broadcast in Lebanon. It was my third day on the job when everybody but me and the program director were fired by the management. They asked me to do all of the production and I was like ‘But I’ve never done radio’ and they said ‘Doesn’t matter,’” Crowley said. “Now I love the radio business. I learned a whole new skill, how to produce commercials which was an education on par with learning a new language. There’s a real art form to it. It’s like ‘Theater of the Mind’ in 30- or 60-second increments. Now I write them all the time from home for radio stations around the county.”

Crowley also plunged back into the restaurant business in Vermont, doing great at the helm of the Farmer’s Diner in Timber Rail Village in Quechee…for all of four months… until Tropical Storm Irene inundated the region and Route 4 was almost completely shut down.

“It’s not that I was under capitalized but if no one comes into your store for three months…,” Crowley noted.

With his radio business still ongoing and the crazy schedule of a diner owner behind him, Crowley found himself drawn back to the murder mystery events he’d previously participated in as a student in New York.

“I kept thinking ‘Why not write these murder mysteries?,’ because back in New York as an actor I’d actually acted in a couple of them. We’d pile into a van and we’d go to the Poconos and do a murder mystery up in Borscht Belt.”

As RJ Crowley Productions took shape, Crowley found there was a running demand for the kind of zany scripts and professional production values he could bring to live mystery events.

“They are a lot of fun and I get a lot out of them but they are a lot of work,” Crowley said. “First I write them, then I cast them, then I direct the cast, then we put them up.”

“The characters that inhabit the landscape of my murder mysteries are definitely not your normal buttoned down characters. These people that my actors create are living life on a high wire, if you know what I mean, and they all have secrets that they are withholding from the audience and they all have motives to kill.”

“I’ve always done theater and different forms of theater because it’s part of who I am,” Crowley said. “It’s beginning to create a little bit of a buzz here in the Upper Valley because now I done two at Twin Farms in Barnard and I’ll be doing a third one with them at the end of August. That’s a four-star resort and they cater to the ‘One Percent.’ So I’m doing a murder mystery there that is going to take place over two nights on Halloween Weekend and it’s going to be a costume party. I’m work with the people at Stave Puzzles to create the clues which is a great deal of fun.”

Crowley pulls his actors from around the Upper Valley and says the once the various characters figure out the ‘framework of clues and red herrings’ he puts forward in his scripts, the rehearsal process becomes as much fun as putting on the finished product.

“The actors fill in the blanks and they are the ones that come up with a lot of the humor,” Crowley said, adding, “Improv is scary because you are creating characters on the spot but it also results in some very, very funny dialog.”

It’s one thing to put on a play atop a theater stage but a moving train brings its own set of challenges.

“Scenes onboard a train are really noisy. The train is riding up the rails and the guest are talking and I have two actors doing a scene inside a car and if you are 20 feet away you can’t hear what the actors are saying and so my actors are all trained to be exceeding loud,” Crowley said.

‘Pickers’ Coming to Vermont

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Staff Report

Mike Wolfe, Frank Fritz, and the team from the History Channel’s television show “American Pickers” are returning to Vermont and are looking for Vermont residents with large, private collections of antiques.

If you or someone you know has a large, collection or accumulation of antiques that the pickers can spend the better part of the day looking through, send your name, phone number, location and description of the collection with photos to: americanpickers@cineflix.com or call 855-OLD-RUST.

“American Pickers” is a documentary series that explores the fascinating world of antique “picking” on History. The hit show follows Mike and Frank, two of the most skilled pickers in the business, as they hunt for America’s most valuable antiques. They are always excited to find sizeable, unique collections and learn the interesting stories behind them.

The TV show plans to film episodes throughout the region this fall.

Quite the Build-Up for Local Film

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By Katy Savage, Standard Staff

Ujon Tokarski had 33 minutes. The first assistant director needed to have a cabin wall that weighed about 1,400 pounds up in that time.

Tokarski only had one shot to make it work.

Tokarski put his hands in prayer across his chest.

Then he used a pulley system attached to a tree to lift the heavy lumber. The wall was so heavy the weight of it made the tree sway.

About 20 people stood and watched Tokarski. It was silent except for the leaves rustling in the wind and the creaking of the wood being squeezed into place.

Two cameras zoomed in.

 Then the director yelled cut. And they all breathed a sigh of relief.

Another scene of the upcoming movie, “Major Arcana,” was done. The movie follows a man named Dink, who returns to the town he grew up in and builds a log cabin in the woods to prove himself. The majority of the film’s scenes are centered on this cabin being built at Fable Farm in Barnard.

The cabin in this movie wasn’t just another set piece and the main actor, Ujon Tokarski, wasn’t actually an actor.

Tokarski makes his living in carpentry. The 20-by-10-foot cabin at Fable Farm will be used for farm worker housing and it needed to be sturdy — an added twist to the filming and production schedule.

 “Usually you would (build) in reverse and it would be very easy,” Director Josh Melrod said. “I wanted it to be really real.”

Melrod lives in Barnard and works as a film editor. “Major Arcana” is the first feature film Melrod’s written and directed himself. He spent two-and-a-half years writing the script when the idea for the low-budget film came to him as he was driving through Vermont.

“I’ve wanted to make a movie of my own for a long time,” Melrod said.

But he wanted it to authentic. It’s so authentic the actor is essentially building his own set.

“I definitely thought from the beginning that I wanted the main character to be somebody who could really go out in the woods and chop down trees and drag them through the woods and make a cabin — somebody who, if push came to shove, could actually do all these things,” Melrod said.

“It’s definitely something none of us have done before,” said Producer Sarah Brennan Kolb.

The wall erection scene was the biggest challenge yet. It’s not uncommon for timber frame walls to bind when they’re being lifted into place. But there was no time for anything to go wrong with the wall. They had a production schedule to stick to.

Nicolas Moussallem, from Essex, New York, is building the cabin behind-the-scenes while Tokarski builds on camera.

 Moussallem has built other structures at Fable Farm before and he was picked for his experience with timber framing.

After Tokarski lifted the wall in place, Moussallem had five days to erect the other side of the wall, put in the rafters and build the entire frame before Tokarski returned to put final touches on the cabin for his part on camera.

“We have to just boogie tomorrow,” Moussallem said.

The crew of about 20 is shooting 12 hours a day until early September. They have filmed scenes in Pomfret, White River Junction, Woodstock but most of the film is at Fable Farm in Barnard.

“Vermont is so beautiful that it’s made up for the lack of cell phone service,” said Kolb. Most of the cast and crew come from Texas or New York.

There have been minor hiccups to working in the woods at Fable Farm.

“We do have to think about power, we have to constantly run a generator to power lights,” said cameraman Ramsey Findell, from New York City.

On the second day of filming it rained and the primary camera had an issue. On this day, there was a cable problem.

“I have to be a Boy Scout and bring two cameras,” Findell said.

With authenticity, the director has needed to make compromises.

Fable Farm’s Joe LaDouceur designed the cabin. He needed it to be resistant enough for housing while Melrod needed it to look good on camera.

 Where the builder wanted plywood on the ground to keep rodents out, Melrod wanted a finished floor.

The cabin is also being built at a different location from where Melrod originally wanted because of the logistics of construction.

The film is scheduled to be released as early as spring 2017.

Despite the challenges, Melrod’s gotten what he’s wanted so far.

This article first appeared in the September 1, 2016 edition of the Vermont Standard.


This Week’s Headlines, September 15, 2016

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Read these stories and more on the eEdition, new edition available Wednesday nights, pick it up a copy on the newsstands Thursdays or subscribe.


by Katy Savage, Standard Staff

The PYNK (People You Now Know) community established nine years ago, hold an annual event for now more than 200 people. (Katy Savage Photo)

The PYNK (People You Now Know) community established nine years ago, hold an annual event for now more than 200 people. (Katy Savage Photo)

Top Stories
Pentangle Plans $2.2M Project
by Katy Savage, Standard Staff

WSESU Consultant Proposes Magnet School Solution
by Katy Savage, Standard Staff

Village Employee Parking Spots Up for Grabs
by Michelle Fields, Standard Correspondent

Residents Question Need for Hartland Intersection
by Katy Savage, Standard Staff

Dick McCormack and Wife, Cindy Metcalf, Make Quite the Political Team
by Katy Savage, Standard Staff

Kevin Pearce Files Lawsuit Over Brain Foundation
by Mike Donoghue, Standard Correspondent

‘An Inspiration’ Hatland Resident Remembers Tessier
by Virginia Dean, Standard Correspondent

Jake’s Quechee Market and Cafe named MAPP Community Champion

Tons of Great Items Up for Auction at Coon Club Supper
by Tom Kenyon, West Windsor News

For One Evening, Where There’s Smoke, There’s Celebration
Stephen D’Agostino, The Reading Review

SPORTS

Wasps Football Crushes Cosmos
by David Miles, Sports Correspondent

Jillian Stacey Engaged To Keegan Bradley

Johnson’s Hat Trick Leads Field Hockey Team to 4-2 Win
by George Calver, Standard Correspondent

OBITUARIES

Committal – Jeannette DeGrasse
Sandy Acker
Cynthia Girard
Nedra Gramling


PHOTO GALLERIES all photo galleries
4th Annual Mac & Cheese Festival
The Vermont Farmstead Cheese Co, held its annual Mac and Cheese event. Local chefs prepare their best mac and cheese dish to a sold out crowd of 3000 people on Sunday, September 11 at Artisan Park in Windsor.

Ardmore Inn, Home Depot Shoot
A camera crew for Home Depot staged the front of the Ardmore Inn in Woodstock for the cover of the company’s magazine for employees. White material made to look like snow and holiday decorations covered the front of the inn on a hot early September afternoon.
Phil Camp Photos

Woodstock Art Festival
The annual event that fills the Green in Woodstock with artists and their works along the path took place on Saturday and Sunday Sept 10-11.

Sunday Makers Market at Artisan Park
The parking lots were filled Sunday at Artisan Way in Windsor for the Sunday Maker’s Market, hosted by The Cheese Board.

Gilbert’s Hill Celebration
A public ceremony and tour was held at Gilbert’s Hill in Woodstock. The Vermont Land Trust sold the 112-acre property along Route 12 to Mary Margaret Sloan and Howard Krum. The land is now protected for public recreation, historic preservation, and natural and scenic resources.

Bridgewater Neighbors Not Tickled About PYNK

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By Katy Savage, Standard Staff

BRIDGEWATER — The town is studying a noise ordinance after neighbors complained of a Route 100A “party house.”

A Vermont law allows state police to start shutting down loud parties and fining people up to $50 for “unnecessary and offensive” sounds between sunset and sunrise, but that hasn’t been enough to quiet the sound Cecelia Ryker hears next door at a community called PYNK (People You Now Know).

“I know that the Vermont thing is to let everyone do what they want to do and live with it,” said Ryker, who is considering retiring in Vermont. “We’re trying to figure out what, if anything, we can do.”

Another neighbor Bob Kancir hears the noise, too.

“I moved up here to the country, I moved up here for peace and quiet. I moved away from the loud noise,” Kancir said.

“We’ve tried to be reasonable and have tried to talk it out with the owner,” he said.

“He offered to buy my house,” said Kancir. “His goal is to buy up the whole valley.”

But Kancir doesn’t want to leave.

“We like it here, we moved here,” he said.

Like an elite camping retreat, PYNK started nine years ago, when leader Cheni Yerushalmi was looking for a community halfway between Woodstock and Killington, were he skis. There were 30 guests the first year at PYNK, now there are more than 200. They come domestically and internationally, from places like Brazil, Normandy, Spain, Amsterdam and Australia for one giant weekend celebration in August. They are life coaches, motivational speakers, entrepreneurs, doctors, lawyers, developers, students and retirees. They range in age from newborns to 60.

“All these people are leaders. That’s kind of what’s amazing about it,” Yerushalmi said. “We created a community of leadership where people are given the opportunity to take on projects and to lead a variety of different endeavors.”

The PYNKers co-own two pieces of land in Bridgewater — a total of 21 acres which has four bonfire pits, a house they call “the Cabin,” a giant 22-foot “sacred” teepee and a separate farmhouse. The property is worth about $825,000, according to the grand list, The annual weekend party costs $50-$70,000. All PYNK members split the cost and the time to build their retreat. T-shirts are sold separately.

 Jason Michael Wallace and Cheni Yerushalmi celebrate the annual event in Bridgewater for their PYNK community. (Photo Provided)

Jason Michael Wallace and Cheni Yerushalmi celebrate the annual event in Bridgewater for their PYNK community.
(Photo Provided)

On a recent Friday, they were preparing for the annual party.

They built teepees in the shallow stream, strung together with Christmas lights, with hammocks dangling below. A bar called the Creak Side Café would serve drinks into the night. A row of hay bales (the dinner table) stretched far into the distance. It would be where all 200 people would eat under the moon to the sound of violins and congas.

There were leather seats and couches outside beneath a tent, near a massage station and a group of glittering, half-naked bodies.

Brian Oreck built what looked like a jungle gym for adults — a wooden structure with two stories of hammocks (enough for 100 people to relax). They called it “The Love Matrix.”

They are connected by music, specifically electronic dance music, that’s so loud that the glass cups are kept in a box, separate from where the music plays in the living room, so they don’t break.

“The entire house shakes, it vibrates. It’s amazing,” said Jason Michael Wallace, a motivational speaker who is part of PYNK. “If you are anywhere within a one-mile radius, you’ll feel it.”

Yerushalmi grew up in Israel, before moving to the United States when he was 11. His brother, who had a genetic disease until he died at age 19, needed better medical care.

“I didn’t really have a strong family,” said Yerushalmi, whose parents are in the midst of a divorce that’s lasted 15 years.

So he created a family.

Yerushalmi, a start-up consultant in New York City, is known for his success in building communities. In 2001 he started a community office space in the city. In 2012 he co-founded the Sunshine Bronx Incubator, which connected 400 entrepreneurs with resources to launch their businesses.

PYNK is modeled after the Burning Man Festival, an annual festival that thousands of people, including celebrities, attend every year in Nevada.

Unlike Burning Man, PYNK is not advertised. Unlike Burning Man, you have to be invited to PYNK. To be a PYNKer you have to be a giver, health-conscious and selfless.

Through conversations, the leaders weed out who is appropriate for the community.

Wallace, a motivational speaker, who lives in New York City, was invited seven years ago.

On this day, he wore short shorts, pink shoes and a handmade robot helmet (a gift from a friend) that said “Mr. PYNK.” He wore no shirt.

“People jokingly call me Mr. PYNK and it’s because I’m just so in love with this idea,” Wallace said.

What happens at PYNK is hard to describe.

There’s a set-up committee, an orientation committee, a music committee, art committee and welcome committee. There are ceremonies and rituals and all-night dancing.

Everyone wears a handmade necklace that says his or her name. People dress in bohemian costumes. They sleep together in hammocks. There are performances throughout the day, such as exotic dancers and people who light hula hoops on fire. They dance to EDM, like that of DJ B3, all night.

There is no itinerary.

“People just go on feeling. Things just kind of work out the way they’re supposed to,” Wallace said. “To be honest people are not the most sober.”

The house they call the “cabin” sleeps 30 people. Inside is a room of giant beanbags where they are overhead lights that change the color of the entire room. They are set on red, but can change from green to blue at the touch of a button.

“To be honest some people don’t sleep,” Wallace said. “Everyone just experiences it how they want to experience it.”

The event is a celebration of friendships.

The PYNKers don’t shake hands, they hug.

“Our community is bound together by shared values of inclusion, generosity, environmental responsibility and mutual respect,” the website says.

They bring their skills in the professional world to the community.

Top chefs, such as Jenni Leigh, Malcom Hood and Noor Elashi, make their meals.

“You bring whatever gifts. You come to this community and this is where you share it,” said Josefina Bashout, a life coach and holistic healer from Los Angeles.

There are smaller events throughout the year.

PYNK had an event called Cabin 54 in the spring, named after the Studio 54 nightclub in New York City. The cabin was turned into a disco for a 1970s party. There was a bohemian brunch during the day with elaborate costumes.

When PYNK isn’t there, the organization rents the site for weddings and other events for $300-$500 per person.

PYNK has tried to appease the Bridgewater community. PYNK hosted a community day the Wednesday before the event. They’ll do the same again next year.

They don’t open the doors when the music is playing now after people complained about the noise their first couple years.

Yerushalmi has gone door to door to talk with neighbors.

“They’ve all been telling me, you really dialed it in,” Yerushalmi said.

This article first appeared in the September 15, 2016 edition of the Vermont Standard.

Reading Gives Land to Oil ‘God’

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By Katy Savage, Standard Staff

READING — Some remember the tiny triangle, where Tyson Road met Park Circle Road, as a space used for Fourth of July celebrations and other events.

“It was originally a public gathering ground,” said one longtime resident who declined to give her name. “It was central to the village of South Reading.”

It was town-owned, residents say, but when the property switched hands, the public land was forgotten.

Recently, the select board adopted the land, then quit claimed the 1/10acre parcel to Reading resident and prominent oil trader Andrew Hall, who purchased the property nearby from a resident who lost their home in a February fire.

“This was the best way for the town to handle it,” select board member Jim Peplau said. “Nobody caught the problem in time.”

Hall now owns about 2,400 acres in Reading — about a 12th of the total town land. It’s the most of any single landowner.

Residents interviewed have declined to speak about Hall with their names attached. Some don’t want to talk about him at all. Some locals fear offending him.

“Too much power in one person’s name,” said the longtime resident, “and should he choose to abuse his power, it could be disastrous to this area,” she said, adding, “Would you want to offend the biggest taxpayer… in town?”

Hall is buying up the town.

He has about 20 parcels of land valued at $13 million. He buys chunks and then combines them, making them eligible for the state’s current use program. Almost all his land is in current use, which in 2014, reduced his assessment by $6 million, records show.

“He buys a lot of continuous property to his land, what motivates him to buy, I have no idea,” Lister John Fike said.

Hall has been referred to as an oil “God” for his successful investments. He began trading oil in the 1980s. Hall’s name splashed across national headlines when Citigroup awarded him a $100 million bonus in 2008 for his success — the same year the federal government bailed out Citigroup for $45 billion. In 2008, Hall founded the hedge fund, Astenbeck Capital Management. The hedge fund, based in Connecticut, has gone up and down since the purchase. It was valued $4.8 billion in 2013, but it fell 36 percent in 2015 — the worst in the hedge fund’s history, Reuters reported. It fell another 4 percent in January 2016. But the hedge fund’s profits rebounded, up 24 percent from the start of the year through May until falling again 16 percent in August.

Hall has remained committed to the oil industry, appearing hopeful to investors that it will bounce back, according to reports. He also continues to buy land in Reading.

“He’s certainly improved the image of the town,” Lister Richard Sullivan said.

All of Hall’s properties in Reading are in pristine condition, many say. The locals don’t argue that his presence has improved Reading’s appearance. In some cases, he’s been generous. In 1994, Hall gave the town 4.5 acres on Route 106 to expand the school building.

Hall buys more property in Reading every year. Most of the land he owns is on Tyson Road and Grasshopper Lane (both of which are near his house).

It’s unclear why the oil investor has chosen to invest in Reading.

The people close to Hall are protective of his privacy. A woman who answered the phone at their home on Weld Cemetery Road said the Halls don’t give interviews.

Some have said the Halls live in Reading in the summers. The Halls appear to have a home in Palm Beach, Florida.

Sometimes Hall pays more than property is worth, sometimes he pays less.

Last December, Hall bought a log cabin with four acres from Jeremy and Gale Cross on Tyson Road, paying $190,000. Hall bought almost an acre of land from Heather Finlayson at 544 Route 106 in November 2015, paying $220,000. In March 2015 he bought 1.6 acres on Tyson Road, paying $77,000 for a shack Walter and Mary Wilkins owned.

Locals have differing reasons for selling their land to Hall.

Paul Mendoza sold Hall his house in 2010.

Mendoza’s father had just died and Mendoza, who grew up in the house, needed the money. He wanted the transaction to move quickly and knew Hall could provide a quick solution.

“They gave me my asking price, so it made it pretty simple,” said Mendoza, who lives in Connecticut now.

The house was sold for about $230,000, which was its market value, Mendoza said.

The house sat on three acres of land near the entrance of Hall’s driveway. It has since been taken down.

Some say Hall is gobbling up the affordable housing. Records indicate that Hall bought mobile trailers in the mid-2000s and took them down. Some say by taking down houses he lowers what he pays in property taxes, though listers say Hall’s presence hasn’t negatively impacted the grand list.

“A lot of the properties that he bought were properties that the locals could afford and now they can’t afford to live here,” said resident Carol Geise.

A 1815 brick home was destroyed by fire in February 2016 on Tyson Road in Reading.  Firefighters fought through sub-zero temperatures. The home was still smoldering the day after the fire on Sunday.  (Katy Savage Photo)

A 1815 brick home was destroyed by fire in February 2016 on Tyson Road in Reading. Firefighters fought through sub-zero temperatures. The home was still smoldering the day after the fire on Sunday. (Katy Savage Photo)

He bought the four-acre property on Tyson Road in March — about a month after a fire destroyed a historic brick house there. The house was built around 1815 by Marvin Robinson, a wealthy farmer whose son dedicated Robinson Town Hall to Reading in 1911.

Hall paid $200,000 for the land and the burnt house — $5,000 more than the grand list value.

“That was a very nice gesture,” Fike said.

There are mixed feelings about Hall’s gestures.

David Rushford lived in the house, which his mother owned until she sold it to Hall.

“I hate this,” said Rushford, who was injured trying rescue his belongings in the fire in the winter.

“We’re very broken hearted over this house being gone,” said Geise, a neighbor who is allowing Rushford and his wife to live on their property for the time being.

Hall came to Reading in 1989 and acquired a former farm on Weld Cemetery Road, now a 569-acre parcel where his home is, surrounded by his farm, Newhall Farm.

Newhall Farm has a private apple orchard that produces iced cider and apple brandy as well as honey, soaps and maple syrup. Hall has also established the Hall Art Foundation, acquiring a former cow barn, an old stone house and a machine shed with a leaky roof on Route 106 and turning it into a public art facility. The foundation is a nonprofit with $34 million in assets. The foundation is open to the public during the warmer months and rotates exhibits and sculptures by acclaimed artists. Hall and his wife Christine contributed $7.8 million to the foundation in 2014, records indicate.

Hall put locals Ted and Linda Fondulas in charge of his Reading operations about five years ago.

The Halls were frequent clients of their restaurant, formerly known as Hemingway’s, in Killington.

“I think they basically understood us, that we had a particular standard,” Ted said. “That’s where the relationship was built.”

After 30 years in business, Ted and Linda closed their four-star restaurant, which was in an 1860 farmat house, in 2011 after damage from Tropical Storm Irene.

It went to foreclosure sale for $55,000 in May 2013. The Fondulases owed $33,813 in back taxes and had two loans totaling $295,000 according to reports. That’s about the time they started working for the Halls.

“We did some consulting and we all sort of got along and they said, ‘Do you want to take over full time?’ And we said sure,” Ted said.

The Hall Art Foundation and Newhall Farm are separate entities. Linda is the Vermont director of operations of the Hall Art Foundation. Ted manages the farm.

hallart_sign“We tried to up the standards of the whole aesthetic of the farm,” Ted said.

There are about four full-time employees and eight seasonal employees at the farm.

“We hope that the town of Reading gets improved in many ways,” Linda said. “There’s no long-term plan, they take everything step by step.”

When asked about the Halls, Linda declined to answer.

“That’s too personal,” she said.

This article first appeared in the September 9, 2016 edition of the Vermont Standard.

The Rise of Twin-Rivers Ottauquechee Regional Commission

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By Tony Marquis, Standard Staff

Last year, the Two-Rivers Ottauquechee Regional Commission used its 10-member staff to help its 30 towns navigate complicated state regulations.

TRORC managed the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s home buyout program from Tropical Storm Irene, it conducted several transportation and environmental studies. It approved some town plans and helped others draft theirs.

It’s become a large organization, managing a $4.3 million budget last year, according to a 2015 audit.

“I see this as a positive thing that has evolved over the years,” said Don Bourdon, who was TRORC’s first executive director when the commission was formed in 1975. ”But it’s taken a while to get there.”

Not everyone sees the growth of TRORC as a positive.

Scott Milne, a Republican candidate for U.S. senator, has long questioned the authority of TRORC. His company, B& M Realty, is in a long fight over a mixed-use development in Hartford, called Quechee Highlands. The project’s future is pending a ruling from the state Supreme Court.

“If we win in court, I believe another valuable legacy of Quechee Highlands will be mandated improvements to the way organizations like Two Rivers operates,” he said in February.

The Advent of Planning

Planning wasn’t a focus for Vermonters until Gov. Phil Hoff established the Central Planning Office in 1963. Shortly after, in 1965, the legislature authorized the creation of regional planning commissions and by 1968, eight regional commissions were formed.

In the beginning, the regional planning commissions used United States Department of Housing and Urban Development money to conduct studies.

But everything changed in 1970, when Gov. Deane Davis signed the bill, which would become Act 250.

Bourdon started working at Two Rivers in 1973, before it became TRORC in 1975. Back then, the organization had a budget of about $100,000 and it handled small land-use planning issues for towns.

Toward the end of 1975, TRORC questioned Hawk Mountain Corporation’s development of 275 single-family units in Pittsfield. It was the first major project Bourdon was involved in. TRORC opposed the project.

“That was a big case,” said Bourdon. “I think we offered some good input.”

TRORC wasn’t alone. The state, the town, local utility companies and the U.S. Forest Service got involved in the case. There were 20 days of hearings before the project’s permits were denied.

Later, in 1984, TRORC — along with the town of Woodstock — opposed the construction of a mixed-use development on Route 4 (near where the Green Mountain Rock Climbing Center is now located in Quechee). The District Environmental Commission approved the project, but TRORC appealed the decision to the state Environmental Board and got the decision reversed.

TRORC stretched its budget thin to fight the project.

“It was tough because we didn’t have the resources for legal experts (or) outside consultants,” Bourdon said. “Today there’s a greater capacity within the organization — both in terms of professional staff and budget.

“But the project never went ahead, which I still think is the right decision.”

TRORC’s Growth Is ‘By Design’

Critics of TRORC says the organization has too much power and not enough checks and balances, even though its members are appointed by town select boards.

The organization is responsible for approval of town plans — and it can cost anywhere from $8,000 to $15,000 for TRORC’s assistance in rewriting a town plan. TRORC also works to put together a regional transportation project prioritization list, which it submits annually to the state Agency of Transportation.

In the past 20 years, the organizations’ core annual operating budget has grown to about $1.3 million, according to Executive Director Peter Gregory. TRORC’s total budget can fluctuate wildly due to grants and contracts ($2,929,355 in 2015 and $4,303,159 in 2014).

Gregory, who succeeded Bourdon in 1997, said the growth of TRORC is “by design.”

“We knew what committees were needing, with the complexity of the state regulations and laws and federal regulations and laws,” Gregory said. “So we wound up positioning ourselves to be that bridge between the two.”

Larger towns like Woodstock use TRORC’s services sparingly — though it did need the organization’s approval to update its town plan.

Preston Bristow works for four of the smaller towns in Windsor County (Barnard, Pomfret, Newbury and West Windsor) and serves as zoning administrator in some and administrative assistant in others.

Bristow says he’s noticed the recent growth of TRORC.

“It’s not necessarily driven by them, it’s the whole state law keeps changing and the directives from their apparent state agency, (that) kind of keeps stepping up their influence,” Bristow said.

This article first appeared in the September 9, 2016 edition of the Vermont Standard.

This Week’s Headlines, September 1, 2016

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Sneaking a Treat

J.J. Garrett’s dogs Harry and Bairdsly take a nibble at the Puppies and Pooches on Parade in Woodstock last weekend. Dogs circulated the Woodstock Green for the event hosted by friends of the Norman Williams Public Library.  (Rick Russell Photo)

J.J. Garrett’s dogs Harry and Bairdsly take a nibble at the Puppies and Pooches on Parade in Woodstock last weekend. Dogs circulated the Woodstock Green for the event hosted by friends of the Norman Williams Public Library.
(Rick Russell Photo)

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PHOTO GALLERIES all photo galleries
Puppies and Pooches on Parade
The 2nd annual event held by the friends of the Norman Williams Public Library in Woodstock, Puppies and Pooches on Parade, took place on the Green.

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The annual Charity golf event put on my Keegan Bradley was held at the Woodstock Inn & Resort. The event benefitted the Pediatric Cancer Research Foundation, the Vermont Cancer Center and Vermont Children’s Hospital. Rick Russell Photos

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The celebration of 100 Years of National Parks was held on Saturday, August 27 at the Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller National Historical Park in Woodstock.

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The annual Scottish Festival, renamed Highland Games was held in Quechee.

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