Vermont
You can help these Vermont animals
Vermont is dwelling to a number of species of endangered animals which may be particularly liable to habitat destruction throughout hotter months when residents are out and about traversing the state’s wilderness.
“The time period endangered typically refers to species whose continued existence as a viable element of the state’s wild fauna or flora is in jeopardy,” Vermont Fish and Wildlife says on its web site.
Whereas fishing and climbing will be rewarding actions, nature-goers are suggested to be respectful to their environment, disrupting them as little as doable.
In recognition of Nationwide Endangered Species Day, Might 20, Listed below are some methods through which Vermonters may help help the habitats of a few of the state’s most endangered animals.
A full listing of endangered and threatened animals and vegetation of Vermont will be discovered on-line at vtfishandwildlife.com.
Lake sturgeon
The Vermont Division of Fish and Wildlife developed a state restoration plan for the Lake Champlain lake sturgeon in 2016 when growing numbers of the fish had been caught by anglers fishing in tributaries to Lake Champlain.
Restoration would contain creating safer up and downstream passageways for these migrating fish round Vermont dams and electronically tagging them to watch habitats and spawning grounds.
On an residential stage, fishers who catch lake sturgeon, or any endangered or threatened species in Vermont will be fined as much as $42,500 per violation, in response to the Vermont Company of Pure Assets.
Noticed turtle
In 2019, the noticed turtle acquired its personal restoration plan as properly.
The turtles’ inhabitants declined primarily due to wetland habitat loss and fragmentation, roadkill, and nest depredation by over-abundant generalist predators equivalent to skunks and raccoons, in response to Vermont Fish and Wildlife.
“Due to their sensitivity to habitat fragmentation and provided that Vermont’s wetlands have already confronted intensive losses, it’s unlikely that Noticed Turtles will be reestablished to their historic distribution all through the state,” the restoration plan says.
As a substitute, restoration is concentrated on preserving current populations and surrounding habitats.
Areas of many endangered species, together with noticed turtles are confidential to stop individuals buying and selling them as pets or interfering with their fragile ecosystems, so residents are inspired to report sightings to Vermont Fish and Wildlife, so statewide safety will be enforced.
To protect wetlands, residents could make efforts to clear away trash and any poisonous substance that may intrude with the wildlife.
Turtles on Vermont roads: When to help — and when to maintain your distance
Northern long-eared bat
Vermont is dwelling to 9 bat species, 5 of that are both threatened or endangered, in response to Vermont Fish and Wildlife.
Many of those bats, the Northern Lengthy-eared bat included, are threatened by white-nose syndrome, a illness related to a fungus that invades the pores and skin and damages the tissue in hibernating bats.
Lengthy-eared bats roost in bushes higher than 4 inches in diameter and 10 toes tall which have cavities, cracks, crevices, or exfoliating bark, in response to Vermont Fish and Wildlife, however residents can construct yard bat homes on their properties to function a summer season roost website the place feminine bats can increase their younger.
Based on Fish and Wildlife, one of the best sources for pre-built bat homes are Bat Conservation Worldwide and Bat Conservation and Administration.
Moreover, actions related to the clearing or slicing of standing bushes are topic to environmental evaluation, Vermont Fish and Wildlife says in its steering for shielding these bats and their habitats.
Widespread nighthawk
This brown speckled fowl is shortly turning into a lot much less widespread than its title suggests.
The fowl’s habitat could also be endangered by adjustments in land use and overuse of pesticides, in response to the Nationwide Audubon Society.
“In some areas, nighthawks nesting on gravel roofs have been focused by growing city populations of crows, which eat the eggs,” the Audubon’s web site says.
Vermonters may help by monitoring home animals equivalent to cats or looking canines at any time when they’re open air, as elevated predation could also be a key contributor to the fowl’s decline.
Extra details about Vermont birds will be discovered on-line at vt.audubon.org.
Rusty-patched bumble bee
The rusty-patched bumble bee is one in every of 4 threatened bumblebee species within the state, three of that are endangered.
It takes greater than honeybees:Native bumblebees disappearing in Vermont
Parasites, illnesses, pesticides and large-scale agriculture are the principle culprits diminishing bee habitats. Sure pesticides, whether or not deadly or not, can have an effect on the bee’s capacity to forage and reproduce.
What meaning on your well being: Vermont amending pesticide guidelines for 1st time in 31 years
“The nice factor is all of us may help, and that is by planting flowers and constructing extra habitat for pollinators,” Vermont apiary inspector Brooke Decker stated.
The rusty-patched bumblebee specifically will gravitate towards sunflowers, goldenrods and honeysuckles, in response to the Vermont Heart for Ecostudies.
Residents seeking to assist each endangered flowers together with animals can achieve this by planting native species, which have a symbiotic relationship with native bees.
Summer season Sorg is a reporter for the Burlington Free Press. Contact her at ssorg@freepressmedia.com.
Vermont
Opinion — Peter Langella: We're having the wrong conversation about school funding
This commentary is by Peter Langella of Moretown, a public high school and college educator.
Imagine that education in Vermont is a game of chess.
Over the years, many pieces have been taken away from the board. Student enrollment has declined, but there has also been a steady stream of cuts and consolidations, spiking during Act 46 mergers and now again over the past two years.
Conversely, many other pieces have been added that don’t mesh with the original rules of the game. This is because the United States (and Vermont, under Gov. Scott and his vetoes) has rejected many social foundations and safety nets; and schools, admirably, have often tried to fill the gap by employing special educators, social workers, psychologists, intensive paraeducators, behavior interventionists and a plethora of other important and helpful humans.
So when legislators and bureaucrats talk about “right-sizing,” they are mostly trying to play a conventional game of educational chess based on Carnegie Units, the metric developed in 1906 that awards academic credit based on the number of “seat time” hours in a given course, especially at the high school level. This is the “Reading, wRiting, aRithmetic” model many of today’s decision-makers experienced as students.
Simply put, it’s stagnant, outdated and inequitable.
So, Vermont has a choice. We can react to this education funding crisis by further cutting and consolidating, trying to put all the pieces back the way they were and play chess by the original rules, or we can flip the board over and play a new game — completely transforming our model of public education.
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Public schools in Vermont must become more personalized and community-based, partnering with local organizations for experiential and service-driven learning. Schools must think about what it means to be a compassionate human in our modern world and appropriately backward-design curricula to grow young people to meet that challenge. Schools must be interdisciplinary, creating a fusion of conventional academics with the arts, outdoor education, and sustainability. Schools must center inclusion and intersectionality, striving to represent, honor, and affirm all learners in a way that shares power. And, schools must value the whole student, concentrating on physical, social and emotional well-being above all other metrics.
The possibilities abound. We have so many creative and empathetic people here. We also have so many amazing students, who are truly our resident experts on what school is and what it can be.
We could harness that, but we aren’t, at least not at a statewide level. For example, the Commission on the Future of Public Education, by statute, was supposed to “represent the State’s geographic, gender, racial, and ethnic diversity,” and it knows it failed on multiple levels of its most basic charge. There also aren’t any current educators or school employees who are part of the group, and there are no students, who repeatedly lack power, access and representation in official spaces where their future is being decided, especially when they come from marginalized backgrounds.
On a more micro level, this isn’t happening in most districts or schools, either. Like many around the state, the district I work in had its budget defeated last year. The school board moved quickly to adopt a new number, and district and building administrators were tasked with identifying cuts.
Instead of having a more transformational conversation, they cut librarians, drama teachers, music teachers, business teachers, French teachers, personalized learning coordinators, restorative practices coordinators, mentoring coordinators, instructional coaches, intensive paraeducators and JV sports programs.
It was and is horrendous.
Imagine something better. Imagine flipping that chessboard over and looking at an open canvas. Before talking about tax rates, yield bills and common levels of appraisal; imagine centering teaching and learning. Imagine a visioning process where we, all of us, collectively redefine what school can be.
I’m not naive enough to think it would fit my exact hopes, and I’m not idealistic enough to think it wouldn’t include some cuts and consolidations. But at least it would be intentional.
The current narrative around this crisis is reactionary. The state is trying to force its way back to the chessboard, and it’s being falsely portrayed as the harder choice.
The harder choice, in actuality, is to transform. Create a bold vision and initiate a brand new game of school — creative, holistic, inclusive — that could serve as an example for the entire country.
Vermont
Vermont H.S. sports scores for Tuesday, Jan. 7: See how your favorite team fared
The 2024-2025 Vermont high school winter season has begun. See below for scores, schedules and game details (statistical leaders, game notes) from basketball, hockey, gymnastics, wrestling, Nordic/Alpine skiing and other winter sports.
TO REPORT SCORES
Coaches or team representatives are asked to report results ASAP after games by emailing sports@burlingtonfreepress.com. Please submit with a name/contact number.
►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.
TUESDAY’S H.S. GAMES
Girls basketball
Burlington 68, Champlain Valley 59
B: Bree McDonald 24 points. Nylah Mitchell 20 points. Atika Haji 16 points.
C: Zoey McNabb 23 points. Kaitlyn Jovell 10 points.
Note: Burlington defeated CVU for the first time since Feb. 17, 2012.
Oxbow 64, Peoples 33
O: Braylee Phelps 24 points. Maggi Ellsworth 15 points.
P: Daisy Berg 13 points. Sophie Beck 11 points.
Note: Phelps made five 3-pointers to lead Oxbow, which led 40-16 at the break.
Harwood 44, Lyndon 34
H: Eloise Lilley 14 points. Maddie Ryley 9 points. Kendra Rocheleau 8 rebounds. Adelaide Chalmers 5 rebounds. Roanha Chalmers 5 rebounds.
L: Ella Marshia 15 points.
Note: Harwood led 25-17 at the break and 24-29 through three quarters before pulling away for the road win.
Winooski 36, BFA-Fairfax 31
W: Ashlyn Parris 9 points. Taraji Bradley 8 points.
F: Anna Villeneuve 16 points.
Note: Winooski opened a 26-7 halftime lead.
Windsor 58, Lake Region 18
W: Sophia Rockwood 20 points. Amelia Rockwood 14 points. Audrey Rupp 8 points.
North Country 64, Spaulding 27
NC: Sabine Brueck 20 points. Ava Patten 10 points. Addie Nelson 10 points. Marlow Maxwell 9 points.
S: Taylor Keel 9 points.
Lamoille 60, U-32 34
L: Alyssa Small 17 points, 10 rebounds, 3 assists. Evie Pirie 10 points. Ava Baisley 9 points. Maddex Percey 8 points. Alana Crittenden 7 points, 7 assists, 5 rebounds.
U: Paige Parker 14 points. Clara Wilson 12 points.
Twinfield/Cabot 60, Northfield 35
T/C: Kendall Fowler 16 points. Jorja Washburn 12 points. Carly Mancini 11 points.
Williamstown 58, Danville 52
W: Julia French 20 points, 5 steals. Natalie Beliveau 15 points, 15 rebounds. Hannah Spencer 14 points. Courtney Beliveau 8 points, 5 rebounds.
D: Myah Morgan 15 points. Lauren Joncas 15 points.
Rutland 46, South Burlington 28
R: Brinley Gandin 18 points. Lanza Bellomo 9 points.
SB: Lexi Paquette 18 points.
Montpelier 49, Woodstock 42 (OT)
Randolph 47, Thetford 41
Stowe at Richford
Enosburg at Hazen, ppd.
Boys basketball
Rice 78, St. Johnsbury 56
R: Owen Eaton 22 points. Dallas St. Peter 21 points. Evan Eaton 16 points.
SJ: Rex Hauser 23 points. Michael Rodriguez Guerrero 12 points. Will Eaton 8 points.
Note: Owen Eaton drained five 3-pointers for Rice, which led 38-19 at the break.
South Burlington 76, Milton 29
SB: Deng Aguek 22 points. Oli Avdibegovic 14 points. Paul Comba 13 points. Kai Davidson 10 points.
M: Keegan Fitzgerald 7 points. Carter McGregor 7 points.
Note: Host South Burlington led 24-6 after the first quarter and 41-14 at the break.
Champlain Valley 60, Essex 36
CV: Owen Scott 21 points, 3 assists. Luke Allen 10 points, 9 rebounds.
Burlington 93, BFA-St. Albans 48
BHS: Abdi Sharif 19 points, 10 rebounds, 4 steals. Pascal Munezero 14 points, 7 rebounds, 4 steals.
BFA: Gabe Howrigan 19 points. Ryan Munger 11 points.
Note: Host BHS (6-0) raced to a 51-24 halftime lead.
Woodstock 61, Brattleboro 52
W: Elvis Lavallee 18 points. Caleb Sammel 17 points. Caeden Perreault 10 points.
B: John Satterfield 18 points. Oscar Korson 14 points. Jack Cady 10 points.
Colchester at Mount Mansfield
WEDNESDAY’S H.S. GAMES
Boys basketball
Games at 7 p.m unless noted
Williamstown at BFA-Fairfax
Fair Haven at Middlebury
Winooski at Richford
Lyndon at Montpelier
Lamoille at U-32
Lake Region at Hazen
Thetford at Peoples
Randolph at Mount Abraham
Twinfield/Cabot at Danville, 7:30 p.m.
Girls basketball
Games at 7 p.m unless noted
BFA-St. Albans at Missisquoi
Essex at Colchester
Rice at Burr and Burton
Boys hockey
Burr and Burton at Colchester, 4:30 p.m.
Woodstock at Harwood, 5 p.m.
Hartford at Rice, 5:25 p.m.
Milton at St. Johnsbury, 6 p.m.
Stowe vs North Country at Jay Peak, 6 p.m.
Middlebury at Burlington, 7 p.m.
U-32 at Brattleboro, 7:15 p.m.
BFA-St. Albans at South Burlington, 5:15 p.m.
Essex at Champlain Valley, 7:40 p.m.
Missisquoi at Mount Mansfield, 8 p.m.
Girls hockey
Kingdom Blades at Middlebury, 5 p.m.
Woodstock at Spaulding, 5:15 p.m.
Stowe at Hartford, 5:45 p.m.
Champlain Valley/Mount Mansfield at Essex, 6 p.m.
Burlington/Colchester at BFA-St. Albans, 7 p.m.
U-32 at Missisquoi, 7:15 p.m.
Wrestling
Champlain Valley, St. Johnsbury at Essex, 6 p.m.
(Subject to change)
Vermont
The 7 Best Vermont Events This Week: January 8-15, 2025 | Seven Days
Take a Bow
Saturday 11
New York City’s DragonBoot Quartet bring compelling string compositions to Waterbury Congregational Church for an afternoon of nimble musicianship. The vibrant foursome — all current students of the Juilliard School — plays familiar favorites by Joseph Haydn and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, as well as contemporary works by American composer and Pulitzer laureate Caroline Shaw.
Best Rest
Wednesday 15
Girls’ Night Out With Beth Kruger at the Essex Resort & Spa invites women over 40 to step into the New Year seeking balance, harmony and a bit of self-care. The event kicks off with a refreshing spa experience — including use of the sauna, hot tub and steam room — followed by refreshments around the fireplace and a deep dive into Kruger’s “Menopause Toolkit.”
Finding Their Footing
Saturday 11
The Marble Valley Dance Collective captivates audience members with New Dances Dawning, staged at Vermont State University’s Casella Theater in Castleton. Eighteen dancers from the state’s southwest region evoke a sense of unbridled joy, community and belonging through movement — emphasizing the nonprofit’s mission of forging deep connections through dance.
Clap Your Hands
Saturday 11
Prolific local songwriter Matt Hagen takes center stage for Burlington’s FlynnZone Kids Hour — a monthly performance series in the Flynn lobby designed for wee ones ages 3 to 5. Through musical improvisation, Hagen leads kiddos and their caregivers in interactive, playful songs built to foster imagination, make memories and introduce children to the arts.
Ski Ya There
Saturday 11
Sleepy Hollow Inn’s Full Moon Ski Party in Huntington invites snow sports enthusiasts of all ages and abilities to ski beneath the milky twilight and snowshoe out on the moonlit floor. The event opens with a free ski lesson, followed by folks taking to the trails with headlamps — or opting for the 1K lighted loop. The adventure concludes with music, hot drinks and treats by the fire.
Dynamic Duo
Saturday 11
Boston juke-joint revival band the Smack Dabs and virtuosic New England foursome Rhythm Future Quartet light up the night with a soulful double bill at Next Stage Arts in Putney. Audience members get groovy with the former’s 1930s good-time swing blues and the latter’s hot-club jazz tunes (think Django Reinhardt) — an energy so contagious, listeners can’t help but tap a toe.
Swiss Scapes
Ongoing
Acclaimed German artist Thomas Struth‘s exhibition of large-scale color photographs at Hall Art Foundation in Reading showcases the rural landscapes of Northern Switzerland. Struth’s soft, unidealized shots were taken in the early 1990s and began as a commissioned project for a private hospital in Winterthur — the works serving as a portal for patients to the outside world.
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