Apr 29 – May 5, 2020

Apr 29 - May 5, 2020 / Vol. 25 / No. 30
Coping With Death in the Age of a Pandemic; Remembering Vermonters Lost to COVID-19; Home Health Care Workers Tread Carefully; A Shoemaker Pivots to PPE; Vermont Restaurants Feed the Front Line

Cover Story

Coping With Death and Grief in the Time of Pandemic

Marguerite Meunier’s brother, Roger Guillemette, died of COVID-19 at Birchwood Terrace Rehab and Healthcare in Burlington on April 14. He was 68. A few hours before he passed away, Marguerite said her last words to him over the phone — that she loved him, that he had been a good brother, that he wasn’t alone.…

Farmstands Do Brisk Business as Vermonters Seek Local Food

Vermont’s quintessential roadside farmstands, stocked with produce, eggs and maple syrup, are busier than ever during the COVID-19 pandemic. With restaurants forced to close and guidelines for farmers markets up in the air, many farmers have doubled down on self-sufficiency; they’ve shifted to direct-to-consumer sales and reinvented their farmstands. Alissa Matthews, agriculture development specialist for…

The Beerworth Sisters, ‘Another Year’

(Self-released, digital) Digging into Another Year, the latest album from indie-folk duo the Beerworth Sisters, it would be tempting to muse on the mysteries of “blood harmony” — the ear-tingling phenomenon that sometimes occurs when family members sing together. Think of the close, twining harmonies of the Everly Brothers or the Carter Family. Indeed, you’ll…

Quasar Valley Band, ‘QVB EP’

(Self-released, digital) “It’s the last night of July, and I’m on a bender,” sings Patrick Crowley on “Wined and Dined,” a standout track on Quasar Valley Band’s new release, QVP EP. “Someone wrote their number on my hand, but I can’t remember,” he later confesses. Forget pickup trucks and American pie; to me, country is…

Letters to the Editor (4/29/20)

Tech Check How many times have we heard about computer failure and crashes in state government [“Mainframe of Shame,” April 22]? Isn’t it way past time for the legislature to find some money to replace the old mainframe with new, up-to-date technology? Paul Hoffman Ferrisburgh Does Not Compute [Re “Mainframe of Shame,” April 22]: If…

Amid Pandemic, Burlington City Workers Take on New Tasks

Gillian Nanton typically spends her workdays behind a desk. As an assistant director of Burlington’s Community Economic Development Office, Nanton oversees the slice of city government that offers job training programs and helps to support women-owned businesses. That was before the coronavirus crisis hit. Now Nanton works from home and spends most of her days…

Free Will Astrology (4/29/20)

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Is there an area of your life where you would like a do-over? A chance to cancel the past and erase lingering messiness and clear a path for who-knows-what new possibility? The coming weeks will be an excellent time to prepare — not to actually take the leap but rather make…

Vermont Nonprofits Find New Ways to Serve At-Risk Youth

What’s a social service organization to do when everyone has to stay at home? Ask Outright Vermont and Spectrum Youth & Family Services. Both are in the business of supporting at-risk young people: Outright serves the state’s LGBTQ youth; Spectrum provides services for teens, young adults and families in need of shelter, life skills, counseling…

Retail Therapy: Seven Items for Reading and Listening

On April 6, Forbes published a piece with an eye-catching — and stomach-turning — headline: “Americans Are Excessively Eating, Drinking, Smoking Pot, Playing Video Games and Watching Porn While Quarantined.” Though one could argue that each of those activities is fine in moderation, binging can quickly lead to burnout. So what else is there to…

Dance Studios, Students and Artists Improvise and Keep Moving

If necessity is the mother of invention, the pandemic is the mother of improvisation. While many Vermonters are finding creative ways to cope during the stay-at-home order, artists who depend on human interaction are being extra resourceful. Dancers, in particular, face unique challenges because they typically teach, create and perform in kinesthetic interaction with each…

Queen City Dry Goods Gears Up for the Pandemic

It’s a lucky coincidence that Matt Renna, founder of Queen City Dry Goods, is releasing a line of house shoes at a time when an unprecedented number of people are staying home. Renna has had a passion for footwear since he first taught himself to make shoes more than 20 years ago, and the house…

Soundbites: For Waking Windows, the Show Must Go Online

Among the more bittersweet aspects of life in isolation has been how we’ve adapted in order to observe certain yearly landmarks and milestones. For example, raise your hand if you have celebrated birthdays in the last six-ish weeks by, say, standing outside a loved one’s house and singing “Happy Birthday” or eating cake together over…


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