The 2025 Vermont Principals’ Association spring sports playoff pairings are out! Here’s a look at the first round and the byes for Franklin County high schools. The dates for the first round and the byes have been established, but the times for all the games have not. Please visit ScorebookLive.com for more information.
D1 Softball
No. 1 BFA-St. Albans Comets have a bye in the first round and will play the winner of No. 8 South Burlington/No. 9 North Country on June 6 at 4:30 p.m.
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No. 7 Missisquoi Valley Union hosts No. 10 Champlain Valley Union on June 4.
D2 Softball
No. 5 Enosburg hosts No. 12 Spaulding on June 4.
D3 Softball
No. 2 BFA-Fairfax hosts the No.7 Fair Haven/10 Paine Mountain winner on June 6.
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D4 Softball
No. 4 Blue Mountain hosts No. 5 Richford on June 5.
The city of St. Albans is amplifying its efforts to track down the source of an offensive odor that’s been wafting through part of a downtown neighborhood since the beginning of the year.
City Manager Dominic Cloud said officials have launched a telephone hotline to allow city residents, and visitors, to report when they smell the strong odor, which Cloud said the city thinks is coming from the Dairy Farmers of America milk processing plant.
“We’ve tried to activate the community around the co-op who was complaining,” Cloud said during a recent interview. “I don’t want to be in a place six weeks from now where they’re saying, ‘You didn’t do enough to protect us,’ so I need their assistance in that effort.”
The St. Albans Messenger, which has been chronicling the odor saga, reported the news of the hotline last week.
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According to Cloud, the offensive odor, which he said smells like sulfur and rotting animal flesh, was detected soon after the owners of the Dairy Farmers of America plant completed some work on their wastewater treatment system in January.
Since then, the city and the dairy plant have been battling over where the smell is originating.
Elodie Reed
/
Vermont Public
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St. Albans officials say the offensive odor was detected soon after the owners of the Dairy Farmers of America plant completed some work on their wastewater treatment system in January.
According to Cloud, representatives from the dairy plant have been coming to city council meetings and promising to install filters and add chemicals to its wastewater system to cut down on the smell.
“The creamery has taken several actions to ensure that odor emissions are appropriately managed,” Dairy Farms of America spokesperson Kim O’Brien said in a written statement. “Most recently we engaged a third-party consultant to perform odor monitoring. Odor monitoring at the site is ongoing, and these results will inform appropriate next steps at the creamery.”
But the smell is still strong, Cloud said, and so he is now gathering reports from the new phone tip line, and preparing for the city’s next move, which could include taking the company to court.
That’s not a step the city, which proudly identifies with its dairy farming heritage, is eager to take.
“It’s not a great space for me to have to square off against a major employer and a large section of our tax base,” Cloud said. “That’s why I resisted for six months, but I couldn’t resist any longer and we were unhappy with the pact in which they were solving it.”
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Cloud said plant officials have both denied that the smell was coming from the plant while also saying they were addressing the issue.
The stench worsened during the summer, Cloud said, and as it continues into fall, the city is seriously contemplating taking stronger action.
“For more than 100 years the creamery has been an important fixture in Vermont’s dairy industry,” O’Brien wrote in her email comment. “We have made significant investments in this plant and the community. As we work to address this complex issue we appreciate constructive engagement with our neighbors and the city.”
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Gov. Phil Scott has chosen a replacement for the Democratic state representative who resigned and moved to Canada this summer out of fear for a second Trump administration.
On Oct. 17, Karen Lueders, an attorney and fellow Democrat from Lincoln, was appointed to fill the open Addison 4 seat, which Mari Cordes vacated in June to start a job in Nova Scotia after six years in the Legislature.
Cordes attributed her departure to fears that the Trump administration might cut Social Security, continued concerns about her safety as a queer woman in the U.S and a loss of work hours at her nursing job at the University of Vermont, according to VTDigger.
Before she moved to Canada, Cordes occasionally made the news for her activism, especially regarding medical and social issues. In 2018, she was arrested in Washington, DC, after joining hundreds of other women to protest U.S. immigration policies.
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Lueders will represent the district’s four towns: Lincoln, Bristol, Starksboro and Monkton.
“Karen has strong ties to her community, which will bring a valuable perspective to Montpelier,” Scott said in an Oct. 17 press release. “With many years of public service, I believe she will be an effective legislator and represent her constituents well.”
Who is Karen Lueders?
Lueders has extensive nonprofit and volunteer experience, according to the press release from the governor. She is a board member for Addison Housing Works and serves on a Lincoln Selectboard-appointed committee tasked with studying and recommending improvements to local voting, including during Town Meeting Day.
Lueders previously sat on boards for Addison County Home Health and Hospice and Habitat for Humanity. Along with her law office, Lueders also ran Walkover Gallery and Concert Room in Bristol for 17 years until the start of the COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020.
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Lueders’ son is Tim Lueders-Dumont, who serves as the executive director of the Vermont Department of State’s Attorneys and Sheriffs.
“I am grateful to the governor for the opportunity to represent Addison 4 in the Vermont House of Representatives,” said Lueders in the press release. “I look forward to working with my colleagues in the House to find solutions for the complex concerns that affect our communities across the state.”
Megan Stewart is a government accountability reporter for the Burlington Free Press. Contact her at mstewartyounger@gannett.com.