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Vote now for Vermont Varsity Insider Athletes of the Week: Ballots for Jan. 1-7

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Vote now for Vermont Varsity Insider Athletes of the Week: Ballots for Jan. 1-7


Welcome to the second installment of the 2023-24 winter season for the Vermont Varsity Insider Athletes of the Week voting by high school sports fans.

This week, and every week during the sports seasons, members of the public may vote for a top girls athlete and a top boys athlete.

Varsity Insider Athletes of the week: Winners for the 2023-24 school year

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How do I cast my vote?

All voting is through the two ballots at burlingtonfreepress.com. We will not accept votes through email or through social media.

Voting began Jan. 8, and continues through 11:59 p.m. Thursday.

How do we learn who wins?

The two winners will be announced in a story published at burlingtonfreepress.com on Friday.

How can I nominate an athlete?

We accept nominations via email: sports@burlingtonfreepress.com (Subject Line: Athletes of the Week nomination).

Girls Athlete of the Week nominees

More on this week’s candidates:

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Sabine Brueck, North Country basketball: In a 3-0 week for the defending Division II champion Falcons, Brueck compiled 18 points, 10 rebounds and five steals in a 45-20 win over Spaulding, dropped 17 points in a 48-23 decision over U-32 and poured in 29 points in a 50-35 victory over Harwood.

Kate Carlson, Mount Mansfield Nordic skiing: The freshman captured the first two stages of the Tour de ChAd last week. Last Monday, Carlson recorded a winning skate time of 14:54.8 at Sleepy Hollow. Then at Rikert Nordic Center on Friday, Carlson posted the win in the classic discipline (19:26.7). The third and final stage was scheduled for Monday afternoon at Cochran’s (uphill climb).

Lauren Chute, Brattleboro gymnastics: In a meet in Manchester between defending champion Burr and Burton and Essex, Chute claimed all-around honors with a total score of 36.8. Chute and Brattleboro are traveling with BBA this winter.

Kaelin Downey, Burr and Burton hockey: After a two-goal, one-assist performance to lead BBA to a 6-1 win over Rutland, Downey’s unassisted third-period tally vs. Missisquoi broke a 2-all tie and lifted the Bulldogs to a 4-2 triumph.

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Emily Tringe, U-32 hockey: Tringe supplied a hat trick in a 6-2 victory over Missisquoi and racked up two goals and three assists in a 10-1 rout of Brattleboro.

Boys Athlete of the Week nominees

More on this week’s candidates:

Malcolm Ernst, Lamoille basketball: After a 10-point, 8-assist performance in a 49-45 victory over U-32, Ernst totaled 16 points and five assists in a 66-45 triumph over Spaulding.

Brady Morigeau, Mount Mansfield Nordic skiing: The junior won the first two stages of the Tour de ChAd last week. For the opening stage last Monday, Morigeau raced to a winning time of 13:12.5 in the skate discipline at Sleepy Hollow. Then on Friday for stage No. 2, Morigeau’s 15:59.7 topped the field in the classic discipline at Rikert Nordic Center. The third and final stage was scheduled for Monday afternoon at Cochran’s (uphill climb).

Griffin Nelson, Harwood hockey: The freshman forward struck for a pair of goals in a 3-2 win over Milton, and then supplied another two-game effort to aid the Highlanders’ 5-3 victory over Missisquoi.

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Kelton Poirier, Essex indoor track and field: The Tennessee-bound Poirier reset the school record in the 600 meters (1:23.66) in capturing the event at Saturday’s Dartmouth Relays in Hanover, New Hampshire. Then Sunday, Poirier raced to wins in the 1,500 (4:23.85) and 300 (38.12) at a meet held at the University of Vermont.

Abdi Sharif, Rice basketball: After a 23-point outing in a 78-74 victory at St. Johnsbury, Sharif tallied 12 points, including a pair of late free throws to help the Green Knights edge reigning champion Champlain Valley in a rematch of last year’s Division I title game.

Become a member of the Vermont Varsity Insider Facebook group at https://bit.ly/2MGSfvX



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Head Start programs in two Vermont regions may face temporary closure amid federal shutdown – VTDigger

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Head Start programs in two Vermont regions may face temporary closure amid federal shutdown – VTDigger


Playtime sponsored by the Rutland County Head Start at Wonderfeet Kids’ Museum on Dec. 11, 2024. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger

A version of this story by Adora Brown was published on Oct. 29, 2025 by NOTUS. Theo Wells-Spackman is a Report for America corps member who reports for VTDigger.

In Washington, Democrats and national advocates are warning about the growing consequences that the government shutdown will have on Head Start programs across the country.

On Saturday, another wave of funding lapses is set to affect nearly 60,000 more children across 41 states, according to the National Head Start Association.

In Vermont, none of the state’s seven Head Start programs will need to shutter in November, according to Christy Swenson, the Head Start Director at Capstone Community Action and board chair of the Vermont Head Start Association. 

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However, several will face temporary closure in early December if the shutdown wears on, Swenson said. Leaders of programs serving two Vermont regions — the Champlain Valley and the Northeast Kingdom — anticipate running out of federal funds by then, they said. 

The federal Head Start program, which provides child care and nutritious meals to more than 700,000 children across the country, and around 1,250 in Vermont, has already faced funding lapses that forced some locations in other states to close completely and others to look for interim funding elsewhere. 

Head Start, together with Early Head Start, aims to serve children from birth to age 5 living in foster care or households with incomes below the federal poverty line, or who are experiencing homelessness. In Vermont, almost one-fifth of children enrolled are unhoused or experiencing housing insecurity, according to an analysis of federal data by a national advocacy group.

“It’s an absolute tragedy,” Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., who caucuses with Democrats, said about the upcoming lapses. “And it is beyond comprehension that you have a Republican House, which is now in its fifth week of vacation. Maybe they want to come to work and help us resolve this crisis.”

Head Start is funded on annual cycles, which have starting dates that vary from program to program, Swenson said. Once the commitment is renewed, the process of “drawing down” federal funding as it becomes necessary is not affected by the shutdown, she added.

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Champlain Valley Head Start in Burlington is only guaranteed funding through Nov. 1, which means their grant ends on Saturday, Sandra Graves, the program’s director, said on Friday. Her program would be able to stay open through November under a continued shutdown, although only by exhausting its financial reserves, she said.

The program, which is operated by the Champlain Valley Office of Economic Opportunity, serves Chittenden, Addison, Franklin, and Grand Isle counties. Graves’ staff of 63 provides care and programs to 233 enrolled children and their families, she said.

On Dec. 5, in the absence of federal funding or other support, all of the program’s offerings will need to pause, and all staff will be furloughed, Graves said. The annual grant from the federal Office of Head Start is roughly $7.2 million, she said, which represents the program’s entire operating budget save two small state-level grants.

The Head Start program run by Northeast Kingdom Community Action, or NEKCA, has a Dec. 1 funding cycle, but does not possess the financial cushion that Champlain Valley has available, said NEKCA Executive Director Jenna O’Farrell. The program may be able to keep running for a short time after Dec. 1 with a fraction of its previous capacity, but O’Farrell said that isn’t guaranteed.

That program operates eight physical locations across the rural Northeast Kingdom. It serves 160 children and their families, and employs 78 staff members.

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Champlain Valley Head Start filed its annual federal funding application on time in August, Graves said. Ordinarily, the request should have been approved in September. But the Office of Head Start has seen cuts to staffing under the Trump administration, and every aspect of Graves’ interaction with federal officials has slowed, she said.

Even once the government opens, Graves has been told her organization’s funding approval might take several weeks. It may be hard to avoid the Dec. 5 deadline even if the shutdown ends in mid-November, she said.

Graves has not heard from the federal Office of Head Start since the shutdown began. Even though reimbursement for stopgap measures would be customary, she said recent federal actions toward other service programs have made her nervous.

The program’s closure would be a “huge, huge loss for our children and families,” Graves said. Apart from being a source of food and services for kids, Champlain Valley Head Start provides child care that allows parents to stay in the workforce, Graves added.

Graves has applied for temporary state funding from the Vermont Emergency Board, which on Wednesday approved a state-funded stopgap for lost federal food assistance. Champlain Valley Head Start will need about $1 million to remain stable over the next two months, Graves said.

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O’Farrell said she too plans to apply for funding from the state’s Emergency Board. NEKCA’s Head Start program’s monthly expenses total roughly $450,000.

A closure would cause an “immediate, severe impact on low-income families across our service area,” O’Farrell said. 

Federal finger pointing

Outside of Congress, pressure from nonprofit groups is starting to pick up as Head Start programs look for solutions elsewhere.

“They are working with their states, working with their counties, working with their school districts, looking within their agencies, talking to philanthropic partners, just really trying to do everything that they can to avoid children and families being the collateral damage of the political fights in Washington,” said Tommy Sheridan, the deputy director of the National Head Start Association, a nonprofit that represents Head Start organizations and programs in Washington, D.C.

“They’re not gonna be able to hold that back forever,” Sheridan added.

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Across the country, some Head Start programs already lost funding on Oct. 1 when their fiscal year ended, but the Saturday Nov. 1 deadline will have an even bigger effect because programs in the vast majority of states will lose their federal funding.

More than 100 organizations signed a letter released Tuesday, led by the First Five Years Fund, a nonprofit that supports child care and early education programs. In it, they asked Congress to end the shutdown.

“We cannot allow political gridlock to take away opportunities from our youngest learners and their families,” the letter reads.

But the pressure appears to have little effect on Republicans on Capitol Hill, even though lawmakers are aware that programs in their states could close. The Florida Head Start Association wrote in a press release that seven grantees won’t get a federal check on Saturday, bringing the total number of affected children in the state to almost 9,000.

“Isn’t it awful that the Democrats are doing this?” Sen. Ashley Moody, R-Fla., told NOTUS. Her comment is in line with Republicans’ messaging strategy of placing blame on Democrats for the shutdown as they withhold votes due to expiring health care subsidies.

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In a statement to NOTUS, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services also tried to place the blame on Democrats.

“More than 58,000 children are on course to lose access to Head Start funding and programs on November 1 due solely to the Democrat-led government shutdown,” a spokesperson for the federal department said in a statement to NOTUS.

Despite the fact that many programs for low-income families are barrelling toward losing federal funding, including the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program and WIC, senators seem no closer to ending the shutdown stalemate.

The home state of Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., would be one of the most affected by Head Start funding lapses. 

When asked what people in Florida are saying about losing programs that help low-income families, Scott said, “They’re fed up with the Democrats shutting down the government.”

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Remains found in search for woman missing in Jan. Canada border crossing attempt

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Remains found in search for woman missing in Jan. Canada border crossing attempt


Human remains were found in northern Vermont in the search for a woman who was reported missing during an attempt to cross the border into Canada in January, police said Thursday.

The remains were found in Jay on Wednesday afternoon by a search-and-rescue team and search dogs and were taken to Burlington for an autopsy on Thursday, Vermont State Police said. The autopsy is meant to determine the cause and manner of the woman’s death; her identity wasn’t available as of Thursday.

Police said the U.S. Border Patrol had reached out for help with the case last week, on Oct. 20. The federal agency was investigating a report of a woman becoming separated from her group while trying to cross the international border, and recently found personal effects belonging to her.

The Royal Canadian Mounted Police have been investigating the case as well, according to police, who didn’t have more details to share about the matter, referring questions about the initial investigation to the Mounties and U.S. Border Patrol.

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How CVU boys, girls soccer teams controlled the 2025 Division I semifinals

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How CVU boys, girls soccer teams controlled the 2025 Division I semifinals


SOUTH BURLINGTON – The teams in red drew first blood in the Division I high school soccer semifinals on Wednesday, Oct. 29.

And their opponents couldn’t strike back.

The Champlain Valley boys and girls stormed to two-goal halftime leads and cruised into their championship games, both aiming for repeat crowns. The third-seeded and two-time reigning champion Redhawk boys toppled No. 10 Burlington 3-0, while the No. 1 and defending champion Redhawk girls dropped fifth-seeded St. Johnsbury, also in a 3-0 result, at Munson Field.

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The CVU girls will meet No. 7 Colchester in the D-I title game, and the CVU boys will take on No. 1 Burr and Burton in the other final at Virtue Field in a championship doubleheader on Saturday, Nov. 1. The girls game is set for 5 p.m., with the boys to follow at 7:30.

For more on CVU’s twin semifinal triumphs, read on below:

Gavin Prada scores with 1 second left before break for first-half brace

CVU coach Shane Bufano made a tactical change late in the first half. Bufano and his assistant coaches thought midfielder Gavin Prada might provide an impact at forward. After BHS made a late substitution, Bufano pulled the trigger.

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Prada rewarded his coaches with a pair of goals in the final 8 minutes of the first half, the latter coming with 1 second on the clock for a 2-0 halftime margin.

“We saw something that we could exploit from direct play to possession-oriented play,” Bufano said.

On the first goal, Sebastian Bronk sent a restart deep into the box, where Will Wallace flipped over his shoulder — as he was falling to the turf — toward Prada. The senior pounced on the loose-ball chance, slotting inside the right post on a low shot for a 1-0 lead.

Then as the game neared halftime, Bronk booted the ball from midfield down the middle of the BHS defense. The pass took a deflection off a defender, freeing Prada for a breakaway. Prada beat BHS goalie Ben Koh and the halftime horn with a high toe poke.

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“I had no idea,” how much time was left, Prada said. “I just knew I had to get to the ball and put it into the back of the net.”

Bufano on Prada’s second goal: “It totally changed the momentum of the game.”

In the second half, Wallace set up another goal. The senior midfielder sent an over-the-top ball for Lincoln Ricketts, who fended off a BHS defender and coolly scored on a low shot from a tight angle in the 44th minute for a 3-0 edge.

“We knew what we had in us and we went out there and showed them what we could do,” Prada said.

CVU (11-5-1) will play for a three-peat in its 36th championship-game appearance. But the Redhawks slumped down the stretch, losing to Mount Mansfield, BHS and Burr and Burton over a five-day stretch in the final week of the regular season.

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“These guys just need to get a goal first to start believing. There was a lot of doubt, especially in that three-game (skid) when we could not score goals,” Bufano said.

The Seahorses, who close at 7-10, put together a surprise playoff run, highlighted by knocking off No. 2 Essex 2-0 in the quarterfinals.

“The boys have made me proud all season. This was the most fun I’ve had as a coach. Out of the last three semifinals we’ve lost, this one hurts the most,” fourth-year BHS coach Mukhtar Abdullahi said. “We were very grateful to be here. Sometimes it goes your way and sometimes it doesn’t.”

No drama needed for CVU girls soccer in semifinal rout

A loss in the finale to Mount Mansfield halted a 56-game regular-season unbeaten streak and provided a “wake-up call,” according to star midfielder Elsa Klein. A near-unthinkable comeback against Essex in the quarterfinals — three goals over a two-minute span in the game’s final 5-plus minutes — turned what appeared to be nightmare finish to the season into a dreamy result.

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“A lot of things have come to easy for us at times. It’s good to have some adversity,” first-year CVU coach Kelly Knudsen said.

But in the semifinals vs. St. Johnsbury, the Redhawks avoided the drama. They played their game, with their full-steam-ahead attack on complete display to book the program’s 31st title-game appearance and 14th since 2009.

Reese Kingsbury, the hero of the quarterfinals, opened the scoring with another long-range effort and Elsa Klein set up the second goal of the first half while completing the dominant 80-minute performance with a second-half strike to lead the Redhawks (14-1-1).

“Our (strategy) was to be a threat to this team. We wanted to go in with full intensity, to scare them a little bit,” Klein said. “We did that right away.

“I’m so proud of our girls. We’ve worked so hard this season to get here. I can’t wait for the (final) vs. Colchester.”

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Kingsbury unloaded a 30-yard shot that skipped under SJA goalie Jayden Bunnell’s arms for a 1-0 lead in the 16th minute. From there, CVU worked the wings with Allie Barrett and Lilyanna Mittelstadt to create scoring chances. Center back Elliana Antonucci found a cutting Klein, who unloaded a through-ball down the left sideline for the sophomore Barrett.

Barrett used her speed to break free from a SJA defender, with only the goalie to beat. Bunnell charged off her line, but Barrett used the wider angle to pass the ball into the net for a 2-0 lead with 14:18 to play in the first half.

“I told (Barrett), ‘Those are the type of balls I’m looking for,’” Klein said. “That’s what we’ve been working on. She’s one of our fastest wings. I love playing with her.”

Less than 10 minutes into the second half, Mittelstadt lifted a pass down the sideline for Klein, who pushed the ball into space for a clear break opportunity. Klein had options and elected for a cut-back in front of goal with a composed lefty finish for a 3-0 advantage.

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Bunnell made eight saves for the Hilltoppers (10-5-1). Antonucci, Sierra Rainey and the CVU defense did not allow a SJA shot on target.

Contact Alex Abrami at aabrami@freepressmedia.com. Follow him on X, formerly known as Twitter: @aabrami5.

Contact Judith Altneu at jaltneu@gannett.com. Follow her on X, formerly known as Twitter: @Judith_Altneu.





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