Vermont
Planning fireworks? What you need to know to keep your family safe
MONTPELIER, Vt. (WCAX) – There are several fireworks shows across Vermont to celebrate the Fourth of July, but if you’re planning to light your own, you need to think about safety first and know the rules.
“My Fourth of July weekend plan is to hang out with some good friends. Maybe if it doesn’t rain, light some fireworks obviously,” said James Key of Bethel.
It’s the busiest time of the year for Northstar Fireworks in Montpelier. They have more than 100 professional shows across Vermont and other states, but they also help people with their at-home fireworks.
James Key of Bethel is a customer. He says he hasn’t bought fireworks in a long time, but when he does, he always considers safety.
“Always take safety precautions. Make sure there’s no one standing around that’s not aware about being safe. Also, make sure I have ample time. Also, there’s no obstructions on me getting away from whatever I light,” Key said.
You must have a permit to set off fireworks in Vermont. Once you get a permit, it’s not just about picking an open location to shoot them off. It’s also about having the right gear:
- Make sure your fireworks have a flat surface to sit on so they don’t tip over.
- Wear safety goggles, a pair of working gloves and a helmet.
- There must be a water source nearby like a hose or a water bucket or a fire extinguisher.
Northstar reminds everybody to follow the rules.
“In the state of Vermont, you do need a permit to possess and shoot fireworks. The catch is each town has its own ordinance. Some require a permit. Some want a longer application. Some don’t require it,” explained Tom Swenson of Northstar Fireworks.
According to the Vermont Division of Fire Safety, if not used correctly, fireworks can result in serious burns, hearing loss and other injuries.
Northstar says if you do it at home, you need to be safe.
“Fireworks are made to be enjoyed, made to celebrate. We’re here to celebrate our independence and that’s what we want to do. It’s not fun if you end your night in the hospital, you know. Nobody wants that, it’s not a fun night. So it’s important to take the safety precautions,” Swenson said.
Sparklers and novelty smoke devices are legal in the state, but the same rules apply. Make sure when you’re done with them you put them in a bucket of water.
When it comes to fireworks, some local firefighters say you should just leave it to the professionals.
“People that aren’t used to doing them, things like that. There’s significant fire dangers whether it be from them, you know, lighting off and catching into a structure. Or if it happens to be a dry area, it could turn into a brush fire,” Williston Fire Lt. Keith Baker said.
When you are done with your fireworks, douse them in water and leave them overnight before throwing them away in the trash.
Click here for more tips on fireworks safety.
Related Story:
Veterinarians share tips on how to keep pets calm and collected with fireworks
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Vermont
Granville man charged in Vermont triple homicide to remain in jail
The Granville man accused of killing his father, stepmother and stepbrother is likely to remain in jail until trial.
Brian Crossman Jr., 22, is charged with three counts of murder in the deaths of 46-year-old Brian Crossman Sr.; 41-year-old Erica (Pawlusiak) Crossman; and his 13-year-old stepbrother Colin Taft. The murders took place early on the morning of Sunday, Sept. 15 at the family home on Vermont Route 133 in Pawlet, which is just over the border from Granville.
Crossman was due in court on Wednesday, Oct. 30 for a “weight of the evidence hearing.” However, our media partners at The Post-Star report that Crossman’s attorney has waived the hearing.
Rutland County State’s Attorney Ian Sullivan told the paper that the waiver means that Crossman will remain in jail. Sullivan said Crossman’s defense attorney, Daniel Maguire, reserves the right to reschedule the hearing and seek to be released on bail at a later date.
The court scheduled a status conference for Dec. 9 at 3 p.m. to set the schedule for discovery process to prepare for trial.
Vermont
Phish raises millions of dollars to benefit Vermont-based addiction-recovery organization
The Burlington-born jam-rock group Phish raised more than $4 million last weekend at a trio of concerts to benefit the Vermont-based addiction-recovery organization founded by the band’s guitarist, Trey Anastasio.
The Oct. 25-27 concerts at the MVP Arena in Albany, New York raised money to kick off a $10 million fundraising campaign for the Divided Sky Residential Recovery Program in Ludlow. The money will help pay for capital improvements, property acquisition, staffing increases and a scholarship fund. Anastasio, who has been frank about his own experience with addiction, opened Divided Sky last year with co-founder Melanie Gulde.
“It’s hard to put into words how grateful we are to Phish and their fans for this generosity,” Gulde, who serves as Divided Sky’s program director, said in a news release announcing the fundraising result. “But this isn’t about words – it’s about action. And because of these concerts, we will be able to help many more people take charge of their lives and to recover from addictions.”
Money was raised at the concerts through ticket and merchandise sales and a pay-per-view livestream. According to the news release, 100% of net proceeds will support the Divided Sky Foundation.
The Divided Sky Residential Recovery Program focuses on helping people build life tools to maintain sobriety while staying active and involved in the outdoors and pursuing their personal passions, according to the news release. Nearly a dozen alumni who have completed the 30-day program were at the Albany concerts. More than 300 tickets were given to people who work in recovery or a related mental-health field.
This is the second straight year that the band that started at the University of Vermont in 1983 has raised money to benefit the state where Phish began. Last year, Phish played two benefit concerts at the Saratoga Performing Arts Center in New York that raised more than $3.5 million for flood-recovery efforts in Vermont and upstate New York, according to the news release.
Contact Brent Hallenbeck at bhallenbeck@freepressmedia.com.
Vermont
Vermont Community Fellows Program connects youth, adults to understand & address complex local issues – VTDigger
For years Conversations from the Open Road and Vermont Folklife have worked in tandem, supporting each other’s missions to understand how complex issues affect everyday people and challenge assumptions about what it means to be a Vermonter. Now, thanks to Senator Bernie Sanders, the youth engagement program and cultural research organization are joining forces on a unified effort: the Vermont Community Fellows Program. In Fiscal Year 2024, Senator Sanders secured $665,000 in Congressionally Directed Spending for this program through the National Historical Publications and Records Commission. Sanders was proud to secure this federal funding so that young people can help tell the story of Vermont for generations to come.
The Vermont Community Fellows Program will provide funding, practical skills, and ongoing mentorship to 7-10 Vermont residents ages 16+ to address shared needs through collaborative field research projects with the places, people and groups that matter to them. “Our goal,” says VT Folklife’s Kate Haughey, “is to foster a multi-generational network of skilled ethnographers and documentarians who will work with others to identify local concerns and explore solutions.” Applications for the program’s inaugural cohort are open from November 1 to December 15, 2024.
The twelve- to eighteen-month-long fellowships combine in-depth workshops, ongoing mentorship, and hands-on community engagement. Fellows will learn methods and ethics of collaborative ethnography including interviewing, audio recording, photography, and media editing. With these skills, they will seek out and document diverse viewpoints, examine past and present efforts to address issues of local concern, and work in partnership with community members to address these pressing issues.
What is “collaborative ethnography”?
The Vermont Community Fellows Program is built around the methods of collaborative ethnography—an approach to research that centers the knowledge and experience of individuals in communities, and intentionally disrupts common imbalances of power between outside researchers and the people with whom they work. “Collaborative ethnography’s central premise is that it is possible to find a common humanity among people otherwise divided by race, class, gender, place or culture” says Kate Haughey “it is uniquely suited to anti-oppression efforts.”
As a practice, this approach treats categories and labels as questions rather than answers, making it particularly useful for:
- Understanding problems that have no single explanation or solution
- Exploring the complex relationships between people and institutions
- Identifying the basic assumptions people make about something, and how those assumptions connect (or don’t connect) to the actions people take.
- Documenting formal and informal community interactions and events
- Identifying unexpected outcomes and unintended consequences
- Complementing or complicating quantitative data
Building from the ground up, Fellows will focus on the everyday lived experience of individuals in their communities in order to understand what matters most to them and how they see themselves in the future. Throughout the research process, Fellows will share what they’ve learned with their community and solicit and integrate feedback. They will then co-create a plan to envision and enact change, and work together to realize it.
“We believe all people have unique knowledge of their own experience,” says Mary Wesley of VT Folklife. “This process channels that knowledge and creates a pathway for creative responses to complex issues such as youth mental health, flood resilience, and local food access to name a few.”
The past made useful in the present: the Vermont Folklife Archive
1. This list has been adapted from UVM Professor of Anthropology Luis A. Vivanco’s book Field Notes: A Guided Journal for Doing Anthropology (pg 12, 2017) who adapted his list from Lecompte and Schensul’s Designing and Conducting Ethnographic Research, 1999).
In addition to conducting new research, Community Fellows will work with interviews held in the Vermont Folklife Archive, a collection of over 7,000 audio recordings as well as photographs and texts. Federal support will allow VT Folklife to hire an additional full time archivist to make relevant Archive content accessible to Community Fellows. “Odds are good that Vermonters in the past faced the same or similar challenges as Vermonters today,” says VT Folklife Archivist Andy Kolovos. “The recordings in our Archive provide insight into past perspectives on life here—perspectives that can help inform action in the present.”
Building on our strengths
For the last 15 years, Mary Simons has been leading road trips around the country, and challenging youth to undergo a process of learning and documentary media making through her program Conversations From the Open Road. “The fieldwork and research process we facilitate is a way to explore and uncover attitudes, perceptions and values,” she says, “By making sense of these things together, we open the door to dialogue, mutual understanding, and positive change.”
Simons and Vermont Folklife have been working together for over a decade. “We’ve long wanted to bring the respective strengths of our programs together to reach a wider public” says Kate Haughey. “Particularly because opportunities to learn this transformative method of community-based research have often been limited to the academic sphere. We believe every person’s curiosity and care for their community can lead to change. We’re so grateful to Senator Sanders for making this possible!”
To learn more about the Vermont Community Fellows Program, visit http://vtfolklife.org/communityfellows. Applications for the first cohort of Fellows will be accepted from November 1 to December 15, 2024.
Check out more from Vermont Folklife and Conversations from the Open Road:
Recent research and exhibits from VT Folklife:
- “In Our Words, in Our Community” – created in partnership with the Champlain Valley Office of Economic Opportunity this exhibit amplifies the voices of our neighbors experiencing the complex dynamics of homelessness, food insecurity, and economic challenges.
- Pride 1983 – explores the origins and lasting legacy of Burlington, Vermont’s first LGBTQ2+ Pride celebration on June 25, 1983.
- El viaje más caro / The Most Costly Journey – a non-fiction comics anthology presenting stories of survival and healing told by Latin American migrant farmworkers in Vermont, and drawn by New England cartoonists
Recent work from Conversations from the Open Road:
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