Vermont
Push to get more Vermont women in leadership roles paying off
BURLINGTON, Vt. (WCAX) – Polls present Vermont is more likely to elect its first lady to Congress and advocates say it’s about time.
These days, Vermont has taken vital strides towards equal illustration of girls in authorities. Simply final week, Gov. Phil Scott appointed Jennifer Morrison as the primary lady commissioner of the Vermont Division of Public Security. We’re seeing this pattern in all three branches of state authorities and in our personal communities.
“I will probably be very totally different wanting from the opposite prior commissioners and I most likely will convey a unique perspective, totally different experiences,” Morrison mentioned.
Morrison brings Governor Scott’s cabinet– which consists of secretaries of companies and the commissioners of Monetary Regulation, Labor, Public Security, and Liquor and Lottery– to 54% ladies.
Fifty-six % of noncabinet commissioners are ladies; Scott’s senior workers is 71% ladies.
This previous legislative biennium, Vermont additionally had probably the most ladies on the Statehouse ever– 41% of the state Home and Senate, the tenth highest within the nation.
We additionally noticed probably the most ladies in legislative management positions ever, together with the first-ever Senate president professional tempore.
Since 1791, solely 15 ladies have served in statewide workplace and legislative management, a 3rd of whom presently maintain the positions: Senate President Professional Tem Becca Balint, Home Speaker Jill Krowinski, Treasurer Beth Pierce, Lt. Gov. Molly Grey and Lawyer Common Suzanne Younger.
Within the judicial department, 40% of Vermont Supreme Court docket justices, 31% of Superior Court docket judges and 57% of assistant judges are feminine.
“It’s diversifying the illustration at each degree of presidency,” mentioned Elaine Haney, the manager director of Emerge Vermont. “It’s taken a extremely very long time.”
Haney says that’s as a result of ladies haven’t traditionally had political function fashions.
Emerge Vermont recruits, trains and encourages Democratic ladies in workplace.
Haney says this pattern started within the latter half of the twentieth century, primarily because the Nineteen Eighties when Madeleine Kunin was elected Vermont’s first and solely feminine governor.
Haney attributes the uptick to a societal shift.
“Girls had been staying house, elevating kids, being homemakers or working from the house in a means that was very conventional, and politics was not seen as a spot for girls to become involved,” Haney mentioned.
Then within the ‘90s that constructive progress stalled. That’s till latest watershed moments just like the #MeToo motion.
“As horrible as that was in some ways, it was actually nice as a result of it made individuals assume actually concretely about what are the obstacles that girls are dealing with,” mentioned Cary Brown, the manager director of the Vermont Fee on Girls.
Brown has been monitoring these tendencies for years. She says inside the final decade or so, ladies have been popping out of the woodwork for seats on library boards, planning commissions and metropolis councils.
Proper now, 33% of Vermont choose board members are ladies.
Brown says it’s crucial to maintain constructing a bench of girls serving on the native degree to advance them by a pipeline to increased workplace.
“I’m hopeful that we are going to see these numbers change much more sooner or later and that we’ll get to a degree the place we’re not even having conversations like this anymore, however we’ve nonetheless acquired a methods to go earlier than that occurs,” Brown mentioned.
Brown says advancing ladies to native, state and nationwide management interprets to the development of insurance policies that mirror the wants of Vermont’s 50% feminine inhabitants.
Up to now couple of years, the Vermont Fee on Girls, Change the Story VT, the Vermont Girls’s Fund and Vermont Works for Girls have all partnered to develop a free, downloadable toolkit for workers to look at gender and racial fairness of their firm and compensation buildings.
Copyright 2022 WCAX. All rights reserved.
Vermont
Man and dog dead after fire in Colchester, police say
A man and a dog are dead after a house fire in Colchester, Vermont early Wednesday morning.
Colchester Police say they responded to a home on Malletts Bay Club Road after reports of a fire with a possible person inside at around 3:45 a.m.
Authorities say they saw heavy smoke and flames coming from the two story building when they arrived.
After extinguishing the fire, a body was located in the remains of the structure, according to authorities.
Police say a dog is also believed to have died in the fire.
The person found inside the building is yet to be identified.
The fire is not considered suspicious
The cause of the fire is under investigation.
Vermont
Flooded Fields, Dying Trees: Vermont’s Christmas Tree Farms Grapple with Changing Climate – VTDigger
This story by Fiona Sullivan and Cassandra Hemenway was first published in the Bridge on Dec. 17.
Excess rain caused by climate change could be linked to challenges with growing Christmas trees in Vermont.
“The soil has been saturated for a year or more,” said Steve Moffatt from Moffatt’s Tree Farm in Craftsbury. With saturated soil, Moffatt said, there is a “lack of oxygen, so roots can’t breathe. … when it’s warm and wet in June you get more foliar disease, and the soil is wetter so you get more soil-related diseases.” Moffatt said a “noticeable percentage” of his trees are dead or dying because of soil saturation.
Will Sutton, who co-owns Balsam Acres Christmas Tree Farm in Worcester along with his wife Sue Sutton, said their farm lost 300 trees in the July 2024 flood, and 150 trees were lost in the 2023 flood. As of Sunday, Dec. 15, they had just two trees left for sale.
“We lost a whole year’s worth of trees in the flood,” Will Sutton said, noting that they typically sell about 300 trees at their “choose and cut” location on Elmore Road/Vermont Route 12 each year. “There’s been so much moisture that it’s taking (the soil) longer to drain out, so we’re finding more and more damage to other trees. We culled out 300 trees because of the flood, but we’re now seeing trees that are turning yellow even this late in the season.”
The Suttons have two other fields uphill from their choose-and-cut location, which sits adjacent to the North Branch of the Winooski River. Those fields are not seeing the kinds of tree damage the wetter Route 12 trees are having.
In fact, a study by Trace One notes that Washington County farms are expected to lose a total of $137,148 per year to natural disasters; it goes on to note that “the worst type of natural hazard for Washington County agriculture is riverine flooding, which can inundate farmland, damage crops, and disrupt planting and harvest cycles.”
Back in Craftsbury, Moffatt said he notices a decline in the trees sooner than most people would because his livelihood depends on it. There are “subtle hints,” such as declining color, lack of growth, and a “general look that it’s not that happy.”
Moffatt said he currently grows balsam fir and Fraser fir and has had a similar amount of tree loss between the two species.
Although Fraser fir is more sensitive to cold and has done better with the warmer winters, he said, it is also more sensitive to wet conditions and easily damaged from wet soil. Moffatt also noted that overall there are fewer trees available now compared to 40 years ago. There are fewer people growing trees and planting trees, and, he said, the average age of the tree farmer is 80.
Not all growers have had difficulty growing Christmas trees. Thomas Paine from Paine’s Christmas Trees in Morristown said the effects of climate change are “minimal,” and “the only year we had significant problems [with excess rain] was two years ago.” Much of his soil is gravel and sand, which allows for easy drainage.
Jane Murray from Murray Hill Farm in Waterbury said that although their driveway is muddier than ever before, they have mostly avoided water damage to their trees because they planted on slopes. She said people who planted in valleys have issues, and that most of the damage caused by flooding has been in the Northeast Kingdom.
The Wesley United Methodist Church in Waterbury has stopped selling Christmas trees, at least in 2024. The church’s answering machine states, “We will not be selling Christmas trees this year due to the scarcity of trees and also the higher cost.”
Moffatt maintained “It’s not just me, a lot of people I talk to are having this issue.” He said, “I have to look 10 years down the line.” And with native timber, such as ash, balsam fir, and beech not doing well, he’s considering planting red oak in his other timber lots, he said.
As far as Christmas trees, he is now considering planting trees such as Noble fir and Korean fir, trees that, he said, “I wouldn’t have even considered five years ago.”
Vermont
He was shot in Vermont. Now he wants to go home to the West Bank : Code Switch
Suzanne Gaber
Hisham Awartani is a college student who was visiting family in Vermont over Thanksgiving break in 2023 when he and two of his friends were shot. All three young men are of Palestinian descent and all three were wearing keffiyehs when the attack happened. They all survived, but Awartani was left paralyzed from the waist down. Over the past year, he’s been recovering and adjusting to a new life that involves using a wheelchair.
Producer Suzanne Gaber has been following Awartani’s story since the shooting — from his physical recovery to the emotional hurdles he’s grappled with at Brown University, where he became a poster child of the divestment movement.
As Awartani prepares to return home to the West Bank for the first time since his injury, Gaber takes us through his year in recovery and what he hopes for as the war in his homeland continues to escalate.
This episode was reported for Notes From America with Kai Wright, a show from WNYC Studios about the unfinished business of our history, and how to break its grip on our future.
Companion Listening:
A Palestinian-American Victim of American Gun Violence Becomes A Reluctant Poster Child (February 19, 2024)
Still In Recovery From Being Shot, Hisham Awartani Commits To a Summer of Activism (June 6, 2024)
Our engineer was Josephine Nyonai.
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