Issue #420

Dummerston briefs

WEST DUMMERSTON - The Lydia Taft Pratt Library is seeking a librarian to be in charge of the day-to-day operation of the public library of the town of Dummerston. The librarian is responsible for providing library services to adults and children, including maintaining the book and audio-visual collections, providing/arranging programs and outreach services, and continuing to expand and upgrade technology.

Candidates should have a bachelor's degree, library experience, and technology and organizational skills. The position is for 12 hours a week. To apply, submit a resume and the names of three references to the Board of Trustees by Aug. 15 at [email protected], or drop it off at the library, in the Dummerston Community Center on West Street.

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Marcel wins national business journalism award

Vermont Business Magazine has received three national awards for editorial excellence in 2016 from the Alliance of Area Business Publications at its annual Summer Conference in Dallas June 24. These are the highest awards available to VBM and regional business news publications in the United States. Contributing writer Joyce...

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NorthStar already at work on VY site

Company begins engineering, design work prior to regulators’ approval of sale

It will take a while for state and federal regulators to decide whether NorthStar Group Services can buy Vermont Yankee. But in the meantime, the New York company isn't just waiting around. New documents show NorthStar already has begun performing engineering and design work at Vermont Yankee under a...

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Help for witnesses to a path of destruction

There are many things today that, more than ever, take our children and other family members from us and from their own precious lives. As a mother who has watched her own children struggle with a myriad of addictions during the past 18 years, I have become committed to playing a role in helping other family members navigate through the devastation caused it causes and, in doing so, I have helped myself and my family. Accepting that addiction is a...

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Bus schedule redesign topic of public meeting

The Current, which operates the Brattleboro bus system, will hold its first round of public meetings on Thursday, Aug. 24, as part of its route improvement plan. Two meetings, each held at the Brattleboro Municipal Center's Selectnoard Meeting Room, are scheduled for 1 and 5:30 p.m. Anyone needing a free ride to and from the meetings may call The Current to schedule it at 802-460-7433. The meeting agenda is to solicit input from riders, non-riders, business owners, etc. on any...

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Milestones

College news • Alexandra Morrow, a sports management major from Townshend, graduated from Nichols College in Dudley, Mass., in May. She also achieved Dean's High Honors for the spring 2017 semester. • Halie Lange, an environmental studies major from Brattleboro, and Celia Feal-Staub, an art and visual culture and anthropology major from Putney, were both named to the Dean's List at Bates College in Lewiston, Maine, for the winter semester ending in April 2017. • Amelia Nick, a fine arts...

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Vermont blanks New Hampshire for Shrine win

On Aug. 5, Vermont's top high school graduates did something on the football field that hadn't been done by the Green Mountain Boys in four decades - win back-to-back Shrine games. New Hampshire had Vermont's number in the Shrine Maple Sugar Bowl for 15 straight years. But the Vermonters got a 50-2 win over the Granite Staters in last year's game to end that losing streak. Now, Vermont is working on a winning streak. Their 19-0 win in the 64th...

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Skipped tests an isolated incident, Entergy says

A Vermont Yankee employee's deliberate failure to check radiation exposure monitors was a “personal accountability issue,” and no other staffers engaged in such behavior, the company says. In a new filing with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Entergy says it conducted an extensive review after federal inspectors discovered that a staffer hadn't checked the functionality of personnel contamination monitors for eight months in 2016. The technician in question was fired, Entergy says. The company found no evidence of similar problems after...

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State will take longer to review VY sale

The state's review of the proposed Vermont Yankee sale will take months longer than originally expected. A revised schedule issued by the Vermont Public Utility Commission shows that a second public hearing on the plant sale has been pushed to January, four months later than initially planned. And it appears that the commission's review process could extend well beyond that, with technical hearings scheduled for late January in Montpelier and additional filings due at an undetermined, later date. Because there...

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Jazz Center marks end of workshops with concerts

The Vermont Jazz Center is in the midst of the 42nd iteration of its summer jazz workshop. The weeklong program takes place on the campus of The Putney School and offers an opportunity for intermediate- to professional-level students from down the street and around the world to polish their improvisational and musicianship skills. The workshop began in 1974 when famed Hungarian guitarist Attila Zoller formed the Attila Zoller Guitar Clinics. These informal programs were fundamental in the development of young...

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Newfane briefs

Selectboard awards contract for River Road Bridge repairsNEWFANE - At a special meeting on July 20, the Selectboard voted to award a contract to Daniels Construction for repairs to Bridge 38 on River Road. Last November, Agency of Transportation officials found deteriorated I-beams during a routine inspection. Since then, the Agency reduced the bridge's load limit to 8,000 pounds - forcing emergency vehicles and some delivery drivers to use a 4-mile detour when accessing homes on the south side of...

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Vernon briefs

Townwide Tag Sale is comingVERNON - The annual Townwide Tag Sale is set for Saturday, Sept. 9, and Sunday, Sept. 10, from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. The registration fee is $5, which gives sellers two weeks of advertising in local media, a yard sign to attract buyers, and inclusion on a map that lists all the sales sites in town that weekend. Forms are available on the unofficial Vernon Town Website at vernonvermont.org. Registration deadline is Aug. 25. Mums...

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BSD Dance Company presents ‘Summer Dances’

Enjoy an evening of dance with the BSD Dance Company as it presents 'Summer Dances' outdoors under the Vermont sky. The performance will take place at 7 p.m., on Friday, Aug. 11, and Sunday, Aug. 13, at the Rotary Ampitheater Stage located in Living Memorial Park. It will feature original works of modern and contemporary dance that inspire romance, expressiveness, and divine grace. Choreography will be by company members and Brattleboro School of Dance faculty, including Jamie Gehring, Sonya Marx,

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Around the Towns

Grant proposal writing workshop at Brooks Library BRATTLEBORO - The Brooks Memorial Library will host a free public workshop for grant seekers on Friday, Aug. 11, from 2 to 3:30 p.m. in the Library Meeting Room. Cynthia Nuara, Funding Information Network Specialist at The Foundation Center, will present “Intro to Proposal Writing,” a class designed for newcomers to the grant proposal process and experienced grant writers who want a quick refresher. She will provide an overview of how to write...

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MSA sets auditions for two musicals

Main Street Arts is holding auditions for two upcoming musical shows, Into the Woods and Jesus Christ Superstar. Auditions for Into the Woods will be held Saturday, Aug. 26, from 3 to 5 p.m. Rehearsals begin in early September, with performances the second and third weekends in November on the MSA stage in Saxtons River. Jesus Christ Superstar auditions are Friday, Sept. 8, from 6 to 9 p.m., and Saturday, Sept. 9, from 1 to 3 p.m. Performances in March...

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Brattleboro Literary Festival offers writing workshops

For aspiring writers and seasoned pros looking for a jolt of new inspiration, the Brattleboro Literary Fest is offering two workshops Aug. 19 with award winning professional writers Tim Weed and Suzanne Kingsbury. Weed will teach “Writing Immersive Fiction” from 9 a.m. to noon, where students will learn how to hook a reader's interest and keep it until the last page. Kingsbury offers “Finding Your Genius on the Page” from 1 to 4 p.m., where she'll show participants how to...

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Police station nearly complete; firehouse work on schedule

Within a few weeks, construction will be complete at the new police station at 62 Black Mountain Road, Town Manager Peter B. Elwell announced at the Aug. 1 regular Selectboard meeting. Work at the Central Fire Station continues apace, and if all goes as planned, the entire project will end with a surplus. “The next time we're together [...] the police department will have begun its phased move-in,” Elwell told the Board. The department will move in “unit-by-unit in the...

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Summery sweetness ends in a showery weekend

Good day to you, denizens of the Green Mountain State! While we still have a substantial portion of the summer to wade through, there are more cool indicators than warm ones for the month of August. In other words, I still am not seeing any heat waves coming to our shores anytime soon. So if you are a summer heat detester, this summer's for you! If you love the 90s, super humid air, and hazy skies, you have my sympathies.

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DPW gets new street sweeper, dump truck

The Selectboard unanimously approved two new purchases for the Department of Public Works at the Aug. 1 regular Board meeting. Both are included in the Fiscal Year 2017-18 highway capital budgets. DPW Water and Highway Superintendent Hannah Tyler told Board members the town's current street sweeper “has died.” The circa-2005 vehicle has “been in the shop many times and it's an optimal time to replace it,” she said. Town Manager Peter B. Elwell noted town staff looked into contracted street...

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An appreciation of Dr. Cheri Brodhurst, who always puts patients first

What a loss to the people of Brattleboro that Dr. Cheri Brodhurst has decided to discontinue the obstetric portion of her practice. I feel this loss, a sense of wonder, a huge admiration, and an infinite gratitude for this woman. Cheri came to us from St. Croix, where she was one of two girls to be the first to join her high-school band. That accomplishment led her to play at the New York World's Fair, where the bigger world opened...

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Rally to advocate reduction of prison population

No nation keeps such a high percentage of its people in prison as the USA. Europe's rate is a third of ours. In Vermont, 10 percent of prisoners are African American. Just 1 percent of Vermonters are black. In Brattleboro on Sept. 27, there will be a freedom march. The goal is to get politicians to reduce the prison population. The march starts at 5 p.m. at Pliny Park. Speaking at a 15-minute rally before the march will be Anna...

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Last phase of Gibson-Aiken Center window project approved

The Selectboard approved the third phase of the Gibson-Aiken Center's planned window replacement project. At the Aug. 1 regular Selectboard meeting, Town Manager Peter B. Elwell presented the Board with the three bids his office received for the work. Elwell explained this project is in its third - and final - major phase, with smaller components of the window replacement work possibly coming in the next fiscal year. The town budgeted $30,000 per year “to do this in affordable pieces,”

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Hydro dams’ owner must address erosion

Federal regulators say the owner of three Connecticut River hydroelectric dams needs to take another look at erosion issues. Great River Hydro is seeking renewed Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) licenses to operate the Wilder, Bellows Falls, and Vernon hydro dams. As part of that process, the Massachusetts-based company had submitted two years of erosion-monitoring data. But in a recent decision, federal officials said the company's analysis was “incomplete and inconsistent with what was required in the approved study plan.”

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Sweetback Sisters return to Brattleboro with new music — and a new outlook

It's been quite a while since The Sweetback Sisters have played a non-Christmas show in Brattleboro. But on Monday, Aug. 21, at 7 p.m., at the Stone Church at 210 Main St., they're coming back to town with a new show and a raft of new songs from their latest album. Emily Miller and Zara Bode hail from Brooklyn, N.Y. - not exactly a hotbed of country music. But in the 10 years they've been performing as The Sweetback Sisters,

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Flooding is still a problem on Flat Street

Every time there's a particularly heavy downpour, drivers coming down Flat Street may find Stanley Lynde knee-deep in water, directing traffic. Lynde's motorcycle repair shop, Lynde Motorsports, is on the little stretch of Flat Street that lies between the two branches of the north side of Elm Street. “There's a water problem that's been there since 19-... who knows?” Lynde told Board members at the June 20 Selectboard meeting. Lynde told them he has pictures of flooding at 79 Flat...

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Algiers Bridge reopens ahead of schedule

The detours and disruption in Algiers Village have ended. The Route 5 bridge is now open. Project information officer Jill Barrett said Aug. 4 that the newly constructed bridge was reopened to traffic that evening, four days ahead of schedule. Route 5 in Algiers Village had been closed since July 21 while the Vermont Agency of Transportation replaced the deteriorated 1925 bridge with a structure that has wider travel lanes and will better accommodate bicyclists and pedestrians. Bridge shoulders were...

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Farm to Ballet returns to Retreat Farm

Retreat Farm, 350 Linden St., will host the nonprofit Farm to Ballet Project for the second straight year. The Farm to Ballet Project is a dance collaborative designed to celebrate the unique culture of New England farms while introducing new audiences to the beauty of classical ballet. Set to Vivaldi's The Four Seasons, the Farm to Ballet dancers will present the story of life on a farm from the first planting to the harvest. The gate will open on Saturday,

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Maple maker wins at ‘Road Pitch’

In a food-infused entrepreneurial contest that included salsa, sriracha, syrup, and elderberries, it's probably no surprise that a guy who calls himself “Sugar Bob” ended up the winner. During an Aug. 2 stop in Brattleboro, a team of motorcycle-riding evaluators participating in a weeklong “Road Pitch” trip around Vermont decided that Rob Hausslein of Londonderry made the best case for expanding his business. That honor came with a $500 check, a leather-clad teddy bear, and a chance to move on...

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Marlboro Music finishes 67th season this weekend

Marlboro Music, Vermont's cherished chamber music retreat, closes its 67th season with three fascinating programs on Friday and Saturday, Aug. 11 and 12, at 8 p.m., and Sunday, Aug. 13, at 2:30 p.m., on the campus of Marlboro College, with most of the resident artists joining conductor Leon Fleisher in performances of Stravinsky's delightful “Pulcinella Suite” on Friday and Mozart's “Linz Symphony” on Sunday. Friday's program also includes Resident Composer Brett Dean's “Winter Songs” for tenor and woodwind quintet; George...

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Touching danger

Afterward, I wondered whether my father understood there was danger at the Afghan border. My father thrived on adventure. He had joined the Merchant Marine at age 16 and later driven his blue Alfa Romeo across Europe and a battered VW bus through the Serengeti. He was famous for making ill-considered decisions and delighted in emerging untouched from disaster. When I was a baby in England, he'd taken my mother out in a tiny sailboat and nearly capsized in a...

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A conversation with Mary Giamartino, owner, the Hotel Pharmacy

So you walk into this imposing Gothic church that must've been quite a star in the firmament of local houses of worship in its day. The vaulted ceiling alone is a spirit-lifter - especially since that's often what folks need if they're visiting a pharmacy. How many times at Hotel Pharmacy have I approached that counter and stood there for whatever's shorter than a nanosecond before hearing, “Would somebody please help Mr. Goldberg?” How many times have I approached that...

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