Vermont
Prevent Child Abuse Vermont takes annual walk fundraiser online
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MONTPELIER, Vt. (WCAX) – A major fundraiser for a Montpelier nonprofit is switching gears following last month’s flooding.
Prevent Child Abuse Vermont says after losing all of their supplies for their annual awareness walk and losing their location on the Statehouse lawn, organizers are now planning for an online donation event instead.
Prevent Child Abuse Vermont encourages folks to still do their own walks with their teams to help raise money.
It’s one of the biggest fundraisers for the year for the group which says it lost nearly $80,000 worth of product from the flooding.
“Every nonprofit is having these conversations. Whether they were personally affected or whether they want to approach their fundraising in a respectful way. Still keeping their programs going. We have had some great support from people, like the Vermont Community Foundation, Montpelier Alive and some other local donors that have really come through,” said Mary Thon of Prevent Child Abuse Vermont.
The walk typically brings in around $100,000 and Prevent Child Abuse Vermont says fundraising is critical now, as families are experiencing more stress than ever. Click here for more information.
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Vermont
The 7 Best Vermont Events This Week: May 21-28, 2025 | Seven Days

Daydream Believer
Saturday 24
Local singer-songwriter Samantha Mae performs original works from her evocative debut album, reverie, at the District VT (formerly ArtsRiot) in Burlington. With the warmth and poise of Joan Baez and the lyrical prowess of Joni Mitchell, Mae forges an immediate bond with listeners from all walks of life — and inspires other budding artists to take the leap and pursue their dreams.
A Delicate Balance
Wednesday 21
The Silo Sessions concert series continues with introspective indie sensation Henry Jamison at Bread & Butter Farm in Shelburne. The Vermont singer-songwriter effortlessly marries the simplicity of acoustic playing with the modernity of synthesizers for a result that Big Thief’s Adrianne Lenker describes as “songs that sing me through mazes of my own sensuality and sadness.”
Buzzworthy
Thursday 22
As the Jackson 5 once declared, A-B-C is easy as one, two, three and as simple as do-re-mi … or is it? Attendees find out at the Burlington Rotary Spelling Bee at Champlain College, where friendly academic feuds take flight. Dictionary diehards in corporate, Rotarian and high school levels get their wings — or get eliminated — as they race the clock to untangle labyrinthine multisyllables.
Animal Instinct
Thursday 22
Author and ecologist Christie Green shares her deeply felt new memoir, Moonlight Elk: One Woman’s Hunt for Food and Freedom, at the Norwich Bookstore. Green’s engrossing meditation on finding sustenance — for body and soul — weaves her personal journey with natural history into a narrative that implores readers to contemplate what it means to be human in a more-than-human world.
Wingin’ It
Sunday 25
Cottagecore, flowers and fays abound at the Secret Garden Roller Disco at the Champlain Valley Exposition in Essex Junction. Guests sport their finest toadstool helmets, gnome beards and diaphanous wings at two spritely skate sessions — one family friendly, one adults only — to benefit local nonprofit Outright Vermont, supporting LGBTQ+ youths in the region.
Pace Makers
Sunday 25
Runners and spectators find sole-ful bliss at the annual M&T Bank Vermont City Marathon & Relay in Burlington, the largest single-day sporting event in the state. More than 5,000 participants and 20,000 onlookers are expected to flood the Queen City, backed by the beat of taiko drummers and succulent smells from local food trucks.
Drawing From the Past
Ongoing
Montpelier multidisciplinary artist Mary Admasian shuttles viewers back in time with her “Past Is Present” exhibit at the Phoenix’s Waterbury Studios. The curated collection showcases previous bodies of work — “The Y-Con Series” (1983-1989) and “Peering Through” (2007-2013) — and exemplifies how earlier expressions can shape an artist’s evolution and oeuvre.
Vermont
Sen. Sanders raises alarm on cost of health care in Vermont and nationwide – VTDigger

Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., joined a group of state legislators, health care officials and advocates in Burlington Monday morning to raise the alarm on what they called Vermont’s health care affordability crisis.
“Everyone knows that our health care system, nationally and in the state of Vermont, is broken. It is dysfunctional, and it is wildly expensive,” Sanders said.
The press conference at Patrick Leahy Burlington International Airport was set against the backdrop of Congress’s attempts to push through a mega spending bill that is expected to include work requirements for Medicaid recipients and limit the extent to which state governments can use health care provider taxes to cover their portion of Medicaid funding.
Back at home, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Vermont sits in financial jeopardy, having lost $152 million over the past three years. The nonprofit insurer has asked the Green Mountain Care Board to approve double-digit percentage increases to the premiums of plans sold in 2026 on the Vermont Health Connect — the state-run federal Affordable Care Act marketplace.
“I’m not sure how anybody is going to be able to afford that,” Sanders said.
While he did not touch on the specifics of how the state or federal governments can support the state’s only Vermont-based health insurer and protect it from insolvency, Sanders outlined areas where he thinks further investment can lead to lower health care costs for Vermont in the long term. Those included expansions of primary health care facilities and of nursing education programs that allow the state to rely less on traveling nurses, as well as increased support for home health care and nursing homes. He cited efforts to reduce the cost of prescription drugs as a key area that can lower costs for hospitals, and thus, reduce the costs that get passed onto insurers and individuals.
All of this falls under a need for a broader cultural change, Sanders said, from a health care system that is focused on profit to one that supports health care as a human right.
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“It’s a culture that says (if) we want people to stay in Vermont, we’re going to work day and night to lower the cost of health care, provide health care to all of our people. It’s a different culture,” Sanders said. “We’ve got to radically reorient our priorities.”
Lisa Ventriss, co-chair of the newly formed advocacy group Vermont Health Care 911, put a finer point on it at the press conference: She suggested that shifting spending to patient care, rather than to administration or management, would open up “ample room for savings in Vermont,” while curbing the “gobsmacking” premium rate hikes the state has seen.
Sen. Ginny Lyons, D-Chittenden Southeast, and Rep. Alyssa Black, D-Essex Town, who chair the health care committees in their respective chambers, also touted the bills that lawmakers are trying to pass this session to reduce health care costs in Vermont.
Namely, the legislators highlighted S.162, which seeks to keep hospital charges in line with Medicare reimbursement rates (called “reference pricing”), and H.482, which would give the Green Mountain Care Board the ability to lower reimbursement rates paid to health care providers by an insurer in danger of insolvency.
“We’re saving our Blue Cross and Blue Shield domestic insurer from insolvency. We’re stabilizing access to primary care, family medicine,” Lyons said. “We are now working to allow people to access food, rent and health care without having to make choices for one over the other.”
Still, progress at the state level is quickly dwarfed by the potential threat of federal changes to Medicaid. Most worrisome, Black added in an interview following the press conference, is the threats from President Donald Trump’s administration to undo the so-called 1115 waiver program. That waiver gives states the ability to cover services beyond what federal statute outlines as required coverage under Medicaid. Vermont has become a particular leader on finding innovative ways to use this waiver.
“It’s a huge amount of our Medicaid spending,” Black said.
Sanders said he and Senate Democrats are trying to do “everything that we possibly can, in every possible way, to defeat this awful piece of legislation,” with regard to the spending bill’s impact on Medicaid in Vermont.
He called the congressional bill a “Robin Hood proposal in reverse.”
“You take from the poor and you give to the very rich. This is a disastrous piece of legislation, we’ve got to defeat,” he explained. The real solution, he suggested, is guaranteed health care for all, but for now he lauded the state’s efforts in “trying to begin to address this crisis.”
“What we’re doing today is trying, at least to develop a sense of urgency in the state of Vermont. The status quo cannot continue. It is failing — failing small business. It’s failing patients. It’s failing everyone,” Sanders said.
Vermont
Springfield men indicted on drug trafficking charges in Vermont

BURLINGTON, Vermont — Two Springfield, Mass. men, who were charged last fall in state court in a drug-debt homicide case in Waterbury, now have been indicted by federal authorities as part of a major drug trafficking conspiracy based in Vermont.
Fabrice “Savage” Rumama, 21, and Samuel “Smitty” Niyonsenga, 19, are charged with knowingly and intentionally conspiring with others to distribute crack cocaine and more than 40 grams of fentanyl between September and October 2024 in Vermont and elsewhere.
They both pleaded not guilty during separate arraignments in U.S. District Court in Burlington last week. The more than 40 grams makes the maximum penalty, if convicted, up to 40 years, records show.
Rumama and Niyonsenga were ordered held without bail at the request of prosecutor Jared Engelking, a trial attorney from the Violent Crime & Racketeering Section for the U. S. Department of Justice in Washington, D.C.
The issue of bail in the federal case in Vermont was moot because Rumama and Niyonsenga are both being held without bail on a pair of state homicide charges.
Washington County State’s Attorney Michelle Donnelly has charged Rumama and Niyonsenga with both second-degree murder and aiding in the commission of second-degree murder for the fatal shooting of Shawn Spiker, 34, of Croydon, N.H. on Oct. 14, 2024.
Spiker was gunned down about 12:45 a.m. at the Kneeland Flats Trailer Park, State Police Detective Sgt. Seth Richardson said in a court affidavit. The autopsy showed the Sullivan County man died from multiple gunshot wounds, police said.
Michael Perry, 57, of Waterbury also was wounded during the shooting, according to Richardson, who is assigned to the Major Crime Unit.
Donnelly said after the federal arraignment the state homicide charges, which carry up to life in prison, remain pending against both men.
A motion to consider Niyonsenga as a “youthful offender” under Vermont law and to send his case to family court for secret proceedings was initially filed by the defense in state court. Records show the request has since been withdrawn and the criminal case continues in adult court.
Niyonsenga also is charged with an unrelated felony case of fentanyl trafficking for a reported sale before the shooting, police said.
Donnelly has maintained the evidence against Rumama and Niyonsenga is great. Judge Michael Harris agreed with her in a 17-page decision in which he ordered both men held without bail.
Engelking, the prosecutor from Washington, D.C., said at the federal court hearing there is considerable evidence to share with the defense. It includes law enforcement reports, search warrants, photos, audio and video of drug buys, lab reports, and cellphone extractions, he said.
Federal Magistrate Judge Kevin J. Doyle agreed with a request by defense lawyer Natasha Sen, who represents Rumama, to give her 120 days to explore the case and to consider pre-trial motions.
She said the case was tied into multiple defendants in other cases. Sen did not identify the other defendants and cases at the arraignment or when interviewed after the hearing.
Doyle set a Sept. 10 deadline.
Sen said if the homicide charges are dismissed for some reason in state court, she may seek to revisit the no bail issue in federal court.
When defense lawyer Matthew D. Anderson of Rutland appeared later with Niyonsenga, Doyle offered the same four-month deadline for motions.
The nation of origin for both defendants was not listed in court papers, but Doyle told both defendants during their respective arraignments that under a U.S. treaty, the federal government may be required to notify the consulate for their homeland if they are not U.S. citizens.
Rumama and Niyonsenga fled the mobile home in Waterbury after the shooting and returned to a residence in the town of Orange, where they had been dealing drugs, Richardson wrote. A cooperating person at the residence said the homicide was soon discussed with those at the home, records show.
State police, along with U.S. Homeland Security Investigations, raided the residence on U.S. 302 in Orange on Oct. 18 after obtaining a search warrant. Rumama and Niyonsenga tried to flee, but both were eventually caught, police said.
Investigators said they found fentanyl in both bulk and individual packages, two handguns, an AR-style rifle, ammunition and about $3,000 in cash, Richardson said.
The house in Orange was part of another ongoing drug investigation, police said.
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