Mar 18-24, 2020

Mar 18-24, 2020 / Vol. 25 / No. 25
Vermont’s COVID-19 Fighters Wield Info, Medicine and Disinfectant; Arts Venues Grapple With Closures; Students, and a Town, Reel From Middlebury College Campus Closure

Cover Story

Vermont’s Defensive Line: These COVID-19 Fighters Wield Information, Medicine and Disinfectant

In 1927, devastating floods in Vermont swept away 1,285 bridges, killed 84 people, and wrought widespread destruction and misery. U.S. president Calvin Coolidge toured his beloved home state the following year to view recovery efforts. An emotional “Silent Cal” delivered perhaps his most memorable remarks in Bennington: “If the spirit of liberty should vanish in…

Shore Rites, ‘Shore Rites’

(Self-released, digital) The interesting part about starting a band at the precipice of a global pandemic is wondering when you’ll be able to actually perform in front of an audience. Shore Rites’ self-titled debut EP hit the internet on March 3, about a week before the U.S. joined the rest of the world in the…

ILLu, ‘B Side Instrumentals Volume XIII’

(Equal Eyes Records, digital download) ILLu, a hip-hop producer from Burlington, has been central to the scene’s explosion in recent years. He’s endlessly prolific with the beats, but the young man is also a tireless networker and collaborator. Perhaps the most important connection he’s forged is his partnership with fellow Queen City producer Rico James,…

Free Will Astrology (3/18/20)

We interrupt your regularly scheduled horoscopes to offer insights about the virus-driven turning point that the whole world is now experiencing. As you’ve probably guessed, all of us are being invited to reevaluate everything we think we know about what it means to be human. I refer to this unprecedented juncture as the Tumultuous Upgrade…

Vermonters Turn to Front Porch Forum to Help Their Neighbors

This space is normally devoted to what’s weird in Vermont. But right now, well, what isn’t weird in Vermont? With daily routines turned upside down, Vermonters are looking for ways to help their neighbors. Over at Front Porch Forum, the Burlington-born company that facilitates hyper-local discussions in an email newsletter, new membership numbers have doubled…

Students, and a Town, Reel From Middlebury College Campus Closure

Sam deWolf hauled a cardboard box full of belongings through his dormitory at Middlebury College and loaded it into his mother’s silver van last Friday. The 19-year-old sophomore from Saratoga Springs, N.Y., wasn’t ready to say goodbye to the austere gray stone architecture of Forest Hall or to the handsome campus that dominates the Addison…

Pandemic Etiquette From the Emily Post Institute

Social distancing is among the most important recommendations for slowing the spread of COVID-19, more commonly known as the coronavirus. It’s also really hard. For one thing, a lot goes into self-imposed isolation: stocking supplies, finding new ways to stay connected to friends and family, figuring out WTF to watch on Netflix. Then there are…

Information Dissemination: MaryEllen Mendl

During a crisis, accurate and timely information is often the most precious commodity. Much of the job of providing Vermonters with crucial coronavirus data falls to MaryEllen Mendl, executive director of the United Ways of Vermont, and her team of community resource specialists at the Vermont 2-1-1 program. Mendl described 2-1-1 as “phone Google —…

Letters to the Editor (3/18/20)

The Virus Is a Symptom [Re Off Message: “Middlebury College Closing Campus Amid Coronavirus Fears,” March 10]: The coronavirus, aka COVID-19, is clear evidence of the United States’ lack of preparedness for health crises and pandemics. As a student at the University of Vermont, where courses have just been switched to remote instruction, I find…

College Student and Volunteer First Responder: Gabrielle Stevens

Many students who attend Vermont colleges are headed off to extended spring breaks this week and will resume classes remotely when break ends. But not Gabrielle Stevens. The 21-year-old premed student at Saint Michael’s College plans to stick around and continue her volunteer work with St. Mike’s Fire and Rescue. “It’s rewarding to be able…

Novelist Christian Guay-Poliquin on ‘The Weight of Snow’

In recent weeks, COVID-19 has forced millions of people into compulsory retreat and wreaked havoc on the global economy, a reminder of the fragility of human-engineered systems. The Weight of Snow, by Québécois novelist Christian Guay-Poliquin, presents another kind of shutdown — a widespread power failure, compounded by an epically fierce winter, that tests the…

Art Review: ‘Art and Social Justice,’ T.W. Wood Gallery

Vermonter Thomas Waterman Wood believed that art is important to society. In 1895, the nationally recognized Montpelier artist donated 42 paintings and etchings to found a museum in the city. He wanted Vermonters to have access to art. The resulting T.W. Wood Gallery was one of Vermont’s first museums. After the Great Depression, it gained…

How Local Performing Arts Venues Are Reacting to COVID-19

Call it “Black Friday.” On Friday, March 13 — yeah, we know, right? — performing arts venues of all shapes and sizes across Vermont began responding to the threat of the novel coronavirus pandemic by announcing postponements, cancellations and, in some cases, complete closures. By Monday morning, it was easier to make a list of…

Breaking Out the Disinfectant: Tara Cullinan

Tara Cullinan stocked up on gloves and masks a month ago, when she first began noticing the spread of coronavirus. She figured her Shaftsbury-based business, EFX Cleaning Services, would use them whether the virus struck Vermont or not and that it couldn’t hurt to stock up. She’s glad she did. Shortages of masks, gloves and…

Soundbites: An Uncertain Time

Sick Beat: Part 2 I don’t really know where to start. I know saying “I don’t know where to start” is a cliché, and pointing out that it’s a cliché is a cliché, but I think I’m past the point of caring about the originality of my opening line. There’s far more important stuff going…

A Pandemic Complicates Sanders’ Hopes for a Comeback

Jim James, the bushy bearded leader of My Morning Jacket, stood onstage Monday night in a full-length, baby-blue jacket and performed a solo acoustic set for thousands of enthusiastic supporters of Sen. Bernie Sanders’ (I-Vt.) presidential campaign. It was, in a way, a standard election-eve rally for Sanders, featuring impassioned speeches from campaign cochair Nina…

Sherpa Foods of South Burlington Wins Chobani Incubator Prize

Sherpa Foods of South Burlington is the recipient of a 2020 Chobani Incubator award, which will give the company opportunities ranging from a $15,000 grant to guidance about marketing and labeling. Founded in 2015 by the husband-and-wife team of Nurbu and Phura Sherpa, the company makes beef and vegetarian Nepalese momos and three sauces to…

In Middlebury, Iluminar Coffee Focuses on Transparent Sourcing

The specialty-coffee scene in Addison County continues to grow with the addition of small-batch roaster Iluminar Coffee, whose beans are currently sold online and at Lost Monarch Craft Coffee in Middlebury’s Stone Mill Public Market. Daniel Gutierrez is a coffee industry veteran and familiar face behind the bar at Lost Monarch and its sister shop,…


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