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At Fancy's in Burlington, Chef Paul Trombly Delights in Vegetables

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At Fancy's in Burlington, Chef Paul Trombly Delights in Vegetables


click to enlarge
  • Daria Bishop
  • Clockwise from bottom left: Falafel-wrapped olives, smashed cucumber salad, Frisky Sour mocktail, sprouted cauliflower tostada, Look to the East mocktail and Korean rice cakes with celtuce and pea shoots

Thanks to Paul Trombly, it’s easier than ever to eat your vegetables. The 44-year-old Burlington chef opened his first solo brick-and-mortar venture on April 24 in the cozy Oak Street restaurant space he shares with lunchtime counterpart Poppy café and market. At Fancy’s, the former Honey Road chef and Mister Foods Fancy food truck owner puts vegetables at the center of most of his plates, spotlighting ingredients that often play second fiddle.

Guided by Trombly’s deft creativity, a small team elevates the freshest seasonal and local produce with global techniques and flavors gleaned from the chef’s two-decade-plus culinary career. While Fancy’s is not exclusively vegetarian, as Mister Foods Fancy was, plants dominate the menu, which frequently shifts in response to local farmers’ harvests.

“A lot of people say they’re seasonally inspired, but for Paul, it’s literal,” said North Ferrisburgh farmer Hilary Gifford of Farmer Hil’s, who has sold vegetables to Trombly since the chef worked at Honey Road. “He really celebrates vegetables. He gives them his full attention.”

click to enlarge Paul Trombly holding a chocolate cake and a toasted coconut creemee with candied sesame seeds - DARIA BISHOP
  • Daria Bishop
  • Paul Trombly holding a chocolate cake and a toasted coconut creemee with candied sesame seeds

Last week, the finely diced stalks and blanched greens of Farmer Hil’s celtuce, a thick-stemmed Asian lettuce, starred in a salad dressed with toasted sesame oil, mirin and a touch of preserved lemon, paired with chewy, roasted Korean rice cakes coated in gochujang chile paste ($14).

For another new dish, Trombly rubbed Gifford’s sprouting cauliflower with Turkish red pepper paste before roasting it and stacking it in a seven-layer tostada ($16) with locally made corn tortillas, refried lentils, creamy pumpkin seed sauce, pickled apricot salsa and olive-herb chermoula sauce.

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Both dishes were vegan and gluten-free. Much of Fancy’s menu is vegan, and other items can be lightly tweaked to be so. There are a couple of well-executed meat and fish offerings, but most omnivores will find themselves satiated by Trombly’s varied, palate-stimulating vegetables, as two recent meals demonstrated.

For my inaugural Fancy’s experience, in early May, I perched on a stool at the small bar with my husband and son. Between refreshing sips of a pear-and-cardamom brandy and tea cocktail ($13), I enthusiastically dragged my teeth down charred pea pods ($8), as Trombly had instructed.

The pods were sprinkled liberally with housemade everything spice, which seasoned each luminously green orb as it popped into my mouth. Falafel-encased olives ($12), one of the few menu staples, looked like small brown eggs nestled beside an herb-rich tahini sauce. A twist on Italy’s fried, sausage-wrapped olives, they cracked open to reveal briny centers cradling thick whipped feta.

click to enlarge The stuffed focaccia sandwich - DARIA BISHOP
  • Daria Bishop
  • The stuffed focaccia sandwich

A memorable bowl of carrot “mochi” ($15) — served with a mass of tiny black lentils and wisps of fresh herbs — presented earthy, intensely carroty dumplings that were similar to gnocchi but delightfully bouncy due to the use of glutinous rice flour. Sadly, though carrots remain in season, summer humidity renders the moisture-sensitive gnocchi too difficult to make, Trombly told me later.

I didn’t know when we received the crispy rice pancakes ($12) that the trio of golden-brown, chewy, lightly tangy rounds was made with a fermented batter of ground rice and lentils modeled on uttapam from South India. I did know that they were deliciously complemented by vegetable condiments, including a spicy Middle Eastern-inspired pea-and-herb dip, jammy Indian beet chutney, and fresh mango slaw with a warm hit of chile flakes.

Along with the duck breast special ($28), perfectly cooked and presented on a bright bed of beets and strewn with herbs and cherries, we ordered the intriguing pastrami yuba sandwich ($17). Thin, folded sheaves of tofu skin stood in beautifully for the meat, right at home with the pickles, sauerkraut, soft Muenster cheese and abundant lashings of mustard.

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The 20-seat restaurant hummed with energy as it filled up on a Friday evening. Friends caught up, and parents bounced babies between bites. My son ordered a glass of rosé ($10), which came in a juice glass. “It makes me feel like I’m at home,” he said.

Trombly pointed out that, although Fancy’s logo features a stemmed wineglass and root vegetables nestled in a pair of slippers, the restaurant does not own a single proper wineglass. Sharp-eyed locals might recognize the green-rimmed plates as hand-me-downs from now-closed Penny Cluse Café.

The restaurant feels far homier than fancy, which is part of the inside joke. When living in an activist collective in his early twenties, Trombly cooked free community meals, he explained. Friends teased him for carefully plating and garnishing everything he served, dubbing him “Mr. Fancy Chef Man.”

Trombly’s food could easily be served in a fancier environment, but he wants everyone to feel welcome. On that early May evening, a local farmer I know well sat down at the bar while two thirtysomething friends of mine nabbed seats by the window. All live within walking distance.

My friends said they were very happy to have another good neighborhood restaurant. One, a vegan, said she felt gratified to be able to order almost anything from the menu without special instructions. The other avoids gluten and welcomed the many naturally gluten-free choices. Plus, she added, the frequently changing menu “will keep my curious palate coming back.”

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click to enlarge The smashed cucumber salad - MELISSA PASANEN
  • Melissa Pasanen
  • The smashed cucumber salad

A couple of weeks later, my own curious palate returned for an excellently tangy turmeric lemonade with spiced hibiscus syrup ($10) from the compelling list of mocktails. Poppy owner Abby Portman had strongly endorsed the smashed cucumber salad ($13), and it exceeded my expectations. Each bite exploded on my tongue, zippy with lime and soy; crunchy with puffed, curry-dusted rice and candied cashews; and sweet-spicy with mango and house-pickled hot peppers.

Spring’s first tender asparagus ($15) were dressed elegantly with a creamy, chamomile-infused almond sauce; velvety pansies; and rosy, unsweetened rhubarb; they came with a whimsical popcorn garnish. In a riff on saag paneer ($15), Trombly used squeaky cubes of Cypriot halloumi cheese (“a little naughtier,” he said, than the usual mild, soft Indian paneer), and kale joined spinach in the silky, dark green coconut- and cashew-milk gravy. A localized, seasonal rhubarb version of the fermented mango condiment called amba brought golden tartness to each bite.

From the concise all-vegan dessert menu of cake and creemees (made with an oat milk base), I enjoyed the savory whisper in a not-too-sweet miso caramel creemee ($6).

Mix and match is part of the fun at Fancy’s. “I don’t really stick to one cuisine,” the chef said. “Food in America has taken from a lot of cultures.”

That unexpected popcorn garnish for the asparagus, for example, has been tucked in Trombly’s brain since his four years cooking at Oleana, a Turkish restaurant in Cambridge, Mass., before he moved to Vermont in 2017. Oleana is also where Trombly met chef Cara Chigazola Tobin, who gets credit for drawing him to Burlington to help launch Honey Road.

Oleana and Honey Road are among the many restaurants from which Trombly has squirreled away ideas and inspiration since the age of 14, when the Detroit native started cooking.

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Influenced by punk-rock culture, Trombly had decided to become vegan, flummoxing his mom’s efforts to feed her son. “Veganism wasn’t really a thing” back in the mid-1990s, Trombly said. To supplement cheese-less Taco Bell tostadas and Little Caesars pizzas, he said, “I just started reading cookbooks.”

click to enlarge Fancy's - DARIA BISHOP

At 15, he began busing tables at a vegetarian restaurant. The teen also discovered he could eat well in Detroit’s abundant Lebanese restaurants and learned about Indian food through the Hare Krishna, who offered free Sunday meals at their temple.

Even as Trombly tried out different careers as a young man — from running a nonprofit that taught kids to repair bikes to completing a three-year program in violin making and repair — he felt a continued pull to food.

“I always came back to cooking,” he said, reflecting that he enjoys flexing his creativity and making something he can share with people.

In his early twenties, Trombly spent a month cooking in Tamil Nadu in South India, where he learned to make the uttapam on which Fancy’s rice pancakes are based. Later, he traveled to London for short stints at a trio of well-regarded restaurants: Yotam Ottolenghi’s NOPI; Oklava, a now-shuttered Cypriot and Turkish restaurant; and Morito, a tapas spot.

Trombly is no longer vegan but still eats mostly vegetarian. He described Fancy’s menu as “what I like cooking the most [and] a reflection of what I like to eat.” Meat is easy, Trombly said, while “it’s kind of fun to play with vegetables more.”

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The chef has dreamed of opening his own restaurant since he was 16, he said, but the financial hurdles were “daunting.” He called the two years he ran his food truck a “stepping stone.”

After seriously considering a few locations in or closer to downtown Burlington, Trombly decided that sharing the Oak Street space felt most manageable. He lives nearby with his partner and young daughter. “I’ve always wanted a neighborhood spot,” he said.

Now that dinner service is established, Trombly will add Saturday lunch starting on June 22 with a short menu of Mister Foods Fancy classics, such as the popular crispy potato wedges, falafel burgers and halloumi burgers. The following week, Fancy’s will launch a predinner snack menu deal Thursdays through Saturdays. Trombly said he is happy that neighbors have started popping by for evening creemees.

We should all be lucky enough to have Mr. Fancy Chef Man set up shop in our neighborhood.



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Thousands voice their anger at Trump at ‘No Kings’ events around Vermont

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Thousands voice their anger at Trump at ‘No Kings’ events around Vermont


Thousands of Vermonters took to the streets Saturday, condemning the actions and policies of President Donald Trump in peaceful protests at dozens of locations.

They lined up on Main Street in Newport and on Creamery Row in Hardwick, on the village green in Fair Haven and in towns from Burlington to Brattleboro. In all, around 50 “No Kings” demonstrations were held.

Nina Keck

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Castleton resident Robert Revell came to Rutland
Saturday to show his anger at the Trump Administration. “We have a war that we’re not supposed to be in, we have a president who does nothing but lie… I am just fed up,” said Revell.

Castleton resident Robert Revell stood along Route 7 in Rutland with hundreds of others.

“I’m just so angry,” said Revell, who held a three dimensional sign that incorporated a blow-up planet Earth with words below that read “Mother DEMANDS NO kings, no pedos and no liars.”

“We have a war that we’re not supposed to be in, we have a president who does nothing but lie,” he said. “I am just fed up. I’m 73 in a couple weeks and I lived through the Nixon thing and I’m just here to protest and share my heart.”

Around him, throngs of people, many in costume, lined several blocks along Route 7 waving flags and handmade signs. Some rang cow bells or thumped tambourines. Many passing motorists responded with staccato horn blasts.

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Nationwide, more than 3,000 protests were planned for Saturday in large cities and small towns. They have been organized by national and local groups, including well-known progressive coalitions such as Indivisible, 50501 and MoveOn.

Hannah Abrams, of Mendon (in blue jacket) was among hundreds of protestors who stood along route seven in Rutland Saturday. This was her third NoKings protest. "I'm not tired of protesting," she said, "but I'm really tired of the current administration."

Nina Keck

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Vermont Public

Hannah Abrams, of Mendon (in blue jacket) was among hundreds of protestors who stood along route seven in Rutland Saturday. This was her third NoKings protest. “I’m not tired of protesting,” she said, “but I’m really tired of the current administration.”

“For me, it boils down to the cruelty I’m seeing in the world right now,” said Hannah Abrams, of Mendon. “I think that our president instills a lot of cruelty among the people he doesn’t like. And actually for the people who do vote for him too, because they’re not any better off with him in office.”

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“There are a lot of people who say this is not America,” Abrams added. “And I would like to say, it’s exactly America, it’s just targeting different people now … Sadly, this is not new.”

A woman in a wheel chair and her mother behind her protest in Rutland with a sign calling to impeach the president

Nina Keck

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Vermont Public

Stephanie Brush and her 89-year-old mother Mary Jane Demko (in wheelchair) of Rutland Town came out to protest President Trump on Saturday in Rutland. Said Denko, “I couldn’t stay in, he’s too evil.”

Mary Jane Demko, 89, of Rutland, showed up to her local protest in a wheelchair driven by her daughter, Stephanie Brush. Demko carried a sign on her lap that read “IMPEACH THE SOB!”

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“I couldn’t stay in and not be part of this,” Demko said. “He’s too evil.”

Karen Lorentz of Shrewsbury said she too couldn’t stay away. At 80, she said Saturday’s event in Rutland was her first protest. She held a handmade sign she said a friend had helped her make.

“I’m really old and when the Vietnam War was on I was a new teacher and I didn’t have time,” she said. “But I felt strongly that I needed to be here today.”





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VT Lottery Mega Millions, Gimme 5 results for March 27, 2026

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Powerball, Mega Millions jackpots: What to know in case you win

Here’s what to know in case you win the Powerball or Mega Millions jackpot.

Just the FAQs, USA TODAY

The Vermont Lottery offers several draw games for those willing to make a bet to win big.

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Those who want to play can enter the MegaBucks and Lucky for Life games as well as the national Powerball and Mega Millions games. Vermont also partners with New Hampshire and Maine for the Tri-State Lottery, which includes the Mega Bucks, Gimme 5 as well as the Pick 3 and Pick 4.

Drawings are held at regular days and times, check the end of this story to see the schedule.

Here’s a look at March 27, 2026, results for each game:

Winning Vermont Mega Millions numbers from March 27 drawing

13-27-28-41-62, Mega Ball: 16

Check Vermont Mega Millions payouts and previous drawings here.

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Winning Gimme 5 numbers from March 27 drawing

05-10-18-38-39

Check Gimme 5 payouts and previous drawings here.

Winning Pick 3 numbers from March 27 drawing

Day: 0-0-8

Evening: 7-6-3

Check Pick 3 payouts and previous drawings here.

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Winning Pick 4 numbers from March 27 drawing

Day: 3-5-4-1

Evening: 9-5-7-6

Check Pick 4 payouts and previous drawings here.

Winning Millionaire for Life numbers from March 27 drawing

06-09-28-33-46, Bonus: 04

Check Millionaire for Life payouts and previous drawings here.

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Feeling lucky? Explore the latest lottery news & results

Are you a winner? Here’s how to claim your lottery prize

For Vermont Lottery prizes up to $499, winners can claim their prize at any authorized Vermont Lottery retailer or at the Vermont Lottery Headquarters by presenting the signed winning ticket for validation. Prizes between $500 and $5,000 can be claimed at any M&T Bank location in Vermont during the Vermont Lottery Office’s business hours, which are 8a.m.-4p.m. Monday through Friday, except state holidays.

For prizes over $5,000, claims must be made in person at the Vermont Lottery headquarters. In addition to signing your ticket, you will need to bring a government-issued photo ID, and a completed claim form.

All prize claims must be submitted within one year of the drawing date. For more information on prize claims or to download a Vermont Lottery Claim Form, visit the Vermont Lottery’s FAQ page or contact their customer service line at (802) 479-5686.

Vermont Lottery Headquarters

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1311 US Route 302, Suite 100

Barre, VT

05641

When are the Vermont Lottery drawings held?

  • Powerball: 10:59 p.m. Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday.
  • Mega Millions: 11 p.m. Tuesday and Friday.
  • Gimme 5: 6:55 p.m. Monday through Friday.
  • Lucky for Life: 10:38 p.m. daily.
  • Pick 3 Day: 1:10 p.m. daily.
  • Pick 4 Day: 1:10 p.m. daily.
  • Pick 3 Evening: 6:55 p.m. daily.
  • Pick 4 Evening: 6:55 p.m. daily.
  • Megabucks: 7:59 p.m. Monday, Wednesday and Saturday.
  • Millionaire for Life: 11:15 p.m. daily

What is Vermont Lottery Second Chance?

Vermont’s 2nd Chance lottery lets players enter eligible non-winning instant scratch tickets into a drawing to win cash and/or other prizes. Players must register through the state’s official Lottery website or app. The drawings are held quarterly or are part of an additional promotion, and are done at Pollard Banknote Limited in Winnipeg, MB, Canada.

This results page was generated automatically using information from TinBu and a template written and reviewed by a Vermont editor. You can send feedback using this form.

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Capitol Recap: Act 181 debate pokes at the heart of Vermont’s rural-urban dynamics

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Capitol Recap: Act 181 debate pokes at the heart of Vermont’s rural-urban dynamics


This story, by Report for America corps member Carly Berlin, was produced through a partnership between VTDigger and Vermont Public.

The Vermont Senate passed a bill on Thursday that will delay the implementation of Act 181, a contentious 2024 law that overhauled the state’s land use permitting system.

But that vote followed several rounds of heated debate over rolling back or further postponing land conservation measures, fueled by a Tuesday protest attended by hundreds of rural landowners who called on lawmakers to repeal the law altogether.

The sparring over Act 181 has surfaced a rural-urban divide at the Statehouse. Rural conservatives argue that the law’s benefits flow only to Vermont’s larger cities and towns, and that its conservation rules place an undue burden on private property owners. Democrats have defended the law’s goals to both boost housing in downtowns and villages and increase environmental protections elsewhere, though they’ve heeded calls to pump the brakes.

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Details: Vermont is overhauling Act 250. Here’s what the development maps look like so far

On the Senate floor, Republicans contended that new development regulations set forth in Act 181, which bolster protections over sensitive ecosystems, effectively undermine personal property rights. Sen. Steve Heffernan, R-Addison, framed the issue around affordability — wealthy second home-owners can afford more land-use permits, he said, but regular Vermonters can’t.

“We must ask ourselves … are we protecting Vermont’s lands, or pricing Vermonters out of it?” Heffernan said.

Brian Stevenson

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Sen. Steve Heffernan, R-Addison, photographed in January 2025. Heffernan framed the Act 181 issue around affordability.

Democrats, who control the chamber, countered that the new rules are critical for preserving Vermont’s landscape for the good of the broader community.

“Future generations may not have the same ecosystems that we have access to because of development,” said Sen. Becca White, D-Windsor.

The bill in question, S.325, is a set of tweaks to Act 181, which the Legislature passed over Republican Gov. Phil Scott’s objections two years ago.

Act 181 aimed to encourage more homebuilding in already-developed areas of Vermont by removing state level review under Act 250, Vermont’s signature land use law. At the same time, the law beefed up protections for to-be-determined critical natural resources.

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The 2024 law mandated a first-of-its-kind mapping effort that will essentially dictate where future development will be subject to Act 250 scrutiny, and where it won’t be, through a tiered land-use classification system.

That mapping process is still underway, and the board overseeing it has asked for more time to complete its work — in part because of feedback from municipal officials and rural residents who objected to early drafts.

S.325 would postpone the implementation of many pieces of Act 181. It would extend temporary housing exemptions, delay the start of a new “road rule” that would require a permit for private road construction over a certain length in much of the state until 2030 and pushes out the beginning of new “Tier 3” rules. These rules would heighten scrutiny over building near headwater streams, habitat connectors and rare natural communities.

A man wearing a suit sits at the end of a table. Two other men can be seen in the foreground

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Sen. Russ Ingalls, R-Essex District, chairs a meeting of the Senate Committee on Agriculture on Jan. 28, 2025.

The fate of Tier 3 garnered the most attention on the Senate floor. Republicans backed an amendment on Wednesday to scrap the tier entirely.

Sen. Russ Ingalls, R-Essex, a cosponsor of the amendment and an organizer of Tuesday’s rally, argued that the entirety of his Northeast Kingdom district would fall into the tier and suggested that a majority of Vermonters currently live in Tier 3 areas.

“We should be able to live like the rest of Vermont does, and not be restricted,” Ingalls said.

Yet the bounds of Tier 3 have not yet been set, and the Land Use Review Board, which is creating its boundaries, has said the tier will only make up a small portion of land in Vermont. The board is also looking to limit what kinds of construction would trigger the need for an Act 250 permit in these zones.

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“It may be that a single house, for instance, depending on where it is, doesn’t even matter. It won’t be counted,” said Sen. Seth Bongartz, D-Bennington, one of the architects of Act 181 when he served in the House.

The amendment to roll back Tier 3 ultimately failed in a party-line vote on Wednesday. A separate amendment to further delay its implementation failed on Thursday. Another Republican-backed amendment that was adopted eases state regulations for housing in rural areas that lack local zoning.

“We absolutely hear the concerns from different corners of the state of Vermont and we take those seriously.”

House Speaker Jill Krowinski, D-Burlington

Scott, Act 181’s longest-standing detractor, vetoed the legislation in 2024, arguing that it was a “conservation bill” that did little to boost housing growth in rural areas. The governor said at a Thursday press conference that he thinks the bill to delay its implementation is “moving in the right direction, but we need more.”

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Scott was pleased to see protesters this week heeding his message.

“I’ve said this before: this hurts rural Vermont. And now they’re just waking up to the fact that, yes, indeed, it will,” Scott said.

The bill now heads to the House. House Speaker Jill Krowinski, D-Burlington, said she sees the need to delay Act 181 — and that she hears the upswell of pushback against the law from beyond the Statehouse.

“We absolutely hear the concerns from different corners of the state of Vermont and we take those seriously,” Krowinski said.

A woman sits at a table

Brian Stevenson

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Rep. Amy Sheldon, D-Middlebury, is chair of the House Committee on Environment. Photographed at the Statehouse on Feb. 5, 2025.

S.325 will land in the House environment committee, helmed by Rep. Amy Sheldon, D-Middlebury, one of Act 181’s initial drafters. Sheldon understands the rationale to postpone pieces of its implementation, she said in a Wednesday interview. But she is not open to rolling back elements of the 2024 law.

Sheldon believes that some of the arguments raised by opponents of the law are overstated and misguided. She still stands by the core aims of the law, she said, gesturing toward Vermont’s state motto.

“We’re balancing freedom and unity, right? That’s what we do,” Sheldon said.

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