Wednesday, March 25, 2015

Fourth man charged in Killington brawl, Three men charged in Killington fracas

Rutland Herald
March 25,2015
 
A fourth man has been charged in connection with a December brawl at the Trail Creek Inn in Killington.

Donnell Myers, 35, of Lindenhurst, N.Y., pleaded innocent Monday in Rutland criminal court to a single misdemeanor charge of disorderly conduct. If convicted, he could face a maximum of 60 days in jail and a $500 fine. He was freed on conditions he have no contact with other defendants and witnesses in the case and stay away from the Trail Creek Inn.

Police said Myers was part of a fight that started with an argument about where a shuttle from the Pickle Barrel night club should stop. One of the combatants had a tooth knocked out, according to affidavits, a car was damaged and the door to one of the condominiums was battered open during the melee.

Two other New York men entered innocent pleas in connection with the incident last week, and an arrest warrant was issued for a third when he failed to appear for arraignment.
 
In a related story a couple of days ago:
 
 
Three men charged in Killington fracas
By Gordon Dritschilo
Staff Writer | March 23,2015
 
Three New York men are facing charges after an alleged brawl in Killington.

Only a handful of details were available as few witnesses to the incident said much to police, but affidavits describe a combatant getting a tooth knocked out, an attempt to batter down a condominium door and a trail of blood between units at Trail Creek Inn.

Adam LaCast, 32, and, Jason Defilippis, 30, both of Farmingdale, N.Y., each pleaded innocent last week in Rutland criminal court to a misdemeanor charge of unlawful mischief. LaCast also denied a single misdemeanor charge of disorderly conduct.

A third man, 27-year-old TJ Bertorello of Copiague, N.Y., was also scheduled for arraignment on one charge each of disorderly conduct and unlawful mischief, but did not appear in court Monday. Judge Nancy Corsones issued a warrant for his arrest.

LaCast and Defilippis were freed on conditions they have no contact with Bertorello or witnesses in the case and they stay away from Trail Creek Inn.

Vermont State Police said they responded in the early morning hours of Dec. 14 to what was initially listed as a vandalism call.

The initial complainant reported a group of drunk people trying to force their way into Unit 43 at the Trail Creek Inn. The two men staying in that room described a man breaking the door open by running into it, shouting “get the knife.” The men in the room told police they managed to keep the door closed.

A car parked nearby was reported damaged.

Police said they followed a blood trail in the snow from that room to another, where they found LaCast and Defillipis.

LaCast told police they were returning from the Pickle Barrel via the nightclub’s shuttle service when an argument broke out among passengers about where the shuttle would stop. LaCast said he was jumped by multiple attackers as he got out and fought back, knocking out the tooth of one of his assailants, but cutting his hand in the process.

LaCast offered no information about the door being broken, according to affidavits. Police said Defilippis, who matched the description they were given of the man who broke down the door, did not give a statement.

Police said they went to Unit 49, where a security guard had told police a man entered the unit after the reported fight. There, police said, they found Bertorello, who was missing a tooth but denied knowing anything about a fight and refused to provide a sworn statement. However, police said Bertorello’s cellphone was found near the damaged car.

Police cited the three men in early January.
 
 
 
 

Killington man denies guilt after alleged fracas

Rutland Herald
By ERIC FRANCIS
CORRESPONDENT | March 25,2015
 
Photo by Eric Francis

Loren Washburn appears Monday in White River Junction criminal court to face a series of charges connected to an alleged rampage in a tavern parking lot in Ludlow.
WHITE RIVER JUNCTION — A man who allegedly went on a violent rampage outside a Ludlow tavern Saturday night is facing nearly a dozen criminal charges as a result.

Loren Washburn, 33, who listed addresses in Killington and Bethel, pleaded innocent to a felony count of attempted grand larceny and to a series of misdemeanor counts of simple assault, disorderly conduct, unlawful mischief, operating a vehicle without consent and drunken driving before he was released from White River Junction criminal court Monday.

Ludlow Police Sgt. Richard King said police were called just before midnight Saturday for a report that a man was attacking people in the parking lot of Tom’s Loft and trying to steal a taxi.

King said when he arrived at the bar, cab driver Melvin DeGrasse told him that a man wearing a bright red Red Sox baseball jersey had come outside while he was waiting to pick up a party of people and appeared to be on the brink of urinating on the back of his taxi.

DeGrasse said he was “jumped” when he got out to ask the subject what he was doing. He said the man, who was later identified as Washburn, punched him in the face, broke his glasses, then climbed in behind the wheel and tried to drive away with the cab.

Police said bystanders pulled Washburn from the cab and tried unsuccessfully to wrestle him to the ground, getting kicked and punched in the process.

King said Washburn went to the other side of the parking lot and started a silver pickup, but the officer blocked the truck with his cruiser. Washburn then ran off and jumped over a steep embankment into a wooded area.

Minutes later, King said, Washburn reappeared in the parking lot and got into a fight with several patrons trying to detain him.

Vermont State Police troopers were called for backup as King and bystanders struggled with the “extremely combative” Washburn before finally getting him into handcuffs.

“Washburn continued to yell obscenities, talk nonsensically and scream” once he arrived at the police station, King wrote, and at one point, Washburn grabbed a trooper’s gun belt.

King said police were unable to get Washburn to calm down enough to take an alcohol breath test.

“Throughout my interaction with Mr. Washburn, I could smell the heavy odor of intoxicants … he was unsteady on his feet … (and) his eyes were bloodshot and watery,” the officer wrote.

Washburn has prior convictions for marijuana possession, drunken driving and attempting to elude police.

He was ordered not to enter Tom’s Loft as one of his release conditions.
 
Comment: Anybody know this guy? I don't recognize him. Looks like he's on more than alcohol.
Vito 

Tuesday, March 24, 2015

Easter Snowman

The snowman is still going strong. He's in his Easter outfit. Hopefully he makes it 'til then - mucho rain in the forecast for Thursday.


Monday, March 23, 2015

Skier crashes into trees at Killington, dies

Rutland Herald
The Associated Press | March 23,2015
KILLINGTON - A 23-year-old skier from New Hampshire has died after losing control on an intermediate trail at a Vermont resort and crashing into trees.

State police say Terence Scott, of Nashua, was skiing down the mountain with family and friends Saturday afternoon at Killington Resort when he crashed, losing his helmet in the process.

Police say Scott was immediately attended to by an emergency medical technician, a doctor and a nurse. He was unconscious throughout treatment and was pronounced dead at the mountain.

Scott was described as an expert skier. Witnesses tell police that just before the crash, Scott was speeding down the hill and had tried to turn onto a connector trail while avoiding another skier.
[From Boston.com: "Moving at fast speeds on the intermediate-level High Road Trail, Scott avoided colliding with another skiier while trying to turn onto a connector trail. He then lost control and crashed into “multiple trees,” police said. His helmet fell off in the process. The other skiier has not been identified."


Comment: Interesting that it's the AP reporting this and not a local. 
Vito

Judge weighing ski village appeals


By Bruce Edwards
Correspondent | March 23,2015
 
PROVIDED IMAGE

Killington Village Ski Plaza is shown at dusk in this architect’s rendering which shows the contemporary style for the village.
KILLINGTON — The future of a long-awaited ski village is now in the hands of an Environmental Court judge, who is considering several appeals of Act 250 permits for the $130 million project and an associated parking lot.

But one of the parties appealing the permits, Pinnacle Condominium Association, filed a motion this month with Judge Thomas Durkin asking him to stay his decision until a lawsuit related to parking issues can be resolved.

Pinnacle’s owners filed a lawsuit in December against SP Land Company, the developer, and Killington Resort objecting to the configuration of the proposed day-skier parking lot.

If built, the parking lot “would interfere with the deeded easements that benefit the Pinnacle Condominium (Association) in Killington, Vermont,” according to the lawsuit filed by Carl Lisman, a Burlington lawyer representing the owners.

Killington Resort President Michael Solimano said the lawsuit should not stop Durkin from rendering a decision.

“We believe the matters are unrelated and hope the Environment Court judge declines Pinnacle’s request,” Solimano said in an email.

In October 2013, SP Land Company received its Act 250 permit for the first phase of a ski village at the base of Killington Resort.

The estimated $130 million village includes a 77,000-square-foot base lodge, 31,622 square feet of retail space,193 residential units and a 32-unit subdivision.

The new base lodge would replace the aging Ramshead and Snowshed base lodges.

In a related project, Killington Resort received an Act 250 permit for a 1,276-vehicle parking lot for day skiers.

Both permits came with conditions that didn’t please either the developers or parties to the case, who appealed to the state Environmental Court.

In issuing an Act 250 permit for the parking lot, the District 1 Environmental Commission required Killington Resort “at all times manage the parking facility in a manner sufficient to prevent intrusion of visitors parking onto adjoining or neighboring condominium owners property.”

Pinnacle’s owners filed appeals over parking issues related to the resort’s 1,270-vehicle parking lot and SP Land’s parking design within the village core.

Jon Readnour, the condo association’s lawyer, filed a motion with the Environmental Court seeking a stay of the judge’s decision until the lawsuit over easements and parking can be resolved.

In his March 3 motion to the court, Readnour stated that … “SP Land does not have adequate real estate rights because Parking Lot B (village core) would illegally obstruct and trespass upon the Association’s paramount deeded access easements.”

Readnour continued that Killington Resort’s plans for the day skier parking lot, which includes a new road, would be an “illegal overburden of the deeded access rights of the Association and its members and guests.”

In October, Durkin held two days of merit hearings on the parking lot permit. That was followed in December by five days of consecutive hearings on the appeal of the ski village permit.

Parties had until Feb. 12 to file additional information on the parking lot permit appeal and March 4 on the ski village.

Durkin has now taken appeals on both permits under advisement.

In issuing a permit for the ski village, the District 1 Environmental Commission imposed conditions on SP Land, several of which the development company took issue with.

SP Land is required to pay half the cost of a post-construction traffic study, up to $25,000. The state and the regional commissions would pay the other half.

The analysis would encompass regional traffic impacts along Killington Road, and the Route 4 and 103 corridors from Killington to I-91 and I-89.

Another condition required SP Land to install sprinkler systems in the residential units.

The company doesn’t have a problem participating in a future traffic study, said SP Land President Steve Selbo.

“I don’t have any problem participating but why is one party responsible for 100 percent of the private portion of that study,” Selbo said.

He suggested that in fairness the commission should have asked other entities that have an impact on traffic in the region to share the cost.

“It’s not appropriate for one party to be responsible for a three region-wide study,” Selbo said.

SP Land also took issue with the sprinkler requirement for the 32, single-family home Ramshead development, which Selbo said is not “consistent with the state code.”

He also objected to a condition that requires a buyer of a residential lot to obtain approval from the District 1 Environmental Commission before construction.

Condition 19 requires an administrative amendment to ensure homes in the Ramshead 32-lot subdivision meet the design standards set out by SP Land.

Steve Durkee, another adjacent property owner, also filed an appeal over several issues. During the Act 250 proceedings, Durkee raised several issues, including aesthetics, water and traffic.

Selbo said the longer the permit process drags out, so does the cost.

“It’s not like we get this permit and a spade goes in the ground,” he said. “We have some other work to do before that happens.”

SP Land’s long-range village master plan calls for construction of an additional 2,107 housing units and 169,000-square-feet of additional retail development.
 
Comment: I sure hope the parties tying up this development aren't  whining for the town of Killington to spend money on Economic Development. Here we have a private entity interested in pouring millions of dollars into economic development while other parties are more interested in getting their businesses subsidized with taxpayer dollars and creating obstacles to private development.
Vito

Thursday, March 12, 2015

Haff: candidacy brought deficit into focus

Mountain Times
3/12/15

Dear Editor,

By now you should already know the outcome of the vote: 176-153 in favor of Chris Bianchi.

I’m glad I ran for office and happy I spent the time and effort putting together the data from the town report about the Town of Killington having a deficit.

The independent auditor did come out to the information meeting Monday night and stated that the town does have a deficit and will need to make a choice on how to address it this next cycle. This statement alone from the auditor made my running for office worthwhile. The Board will need to address it, which is a whole different position from just last week when they were claiming the town did not have a deficit and that my data was inaccurate.

I would like to thank all for coming out and voting.

Thanks,

Jim Haff, Killington

McGrath Re-Elected As Killington Select Board Chair


Vermont Standard
3/12/15
By Curt Peterson
Standard Correspondent


KILLINGTON — Patty McGrath was re-elected by the Killington select board to serve another year as chairperson at the meeting Tuesday night.


There is competition for several of the appointed positions in town – three people seeking to serve on committees that have only two open seats, for example. But for a few positions, the town is hoping to attract volunteers who want to serve the community.


“We need two people for the Recreation Commission, one to be District Representative on the Solid
Waste Commission, one person to serve on the Zoning Board of Adjustment, and someone to be Tree Warden,” Town Manager Seth Webb said.

The select board is accepting volunteers’ names until March 13, and appointments will be made at the March 24 meeting.


“For those positions where there are more volunteers than open seats we’ll discuss the appointments in executive session,” Selectman Chris Bianchi said.


Like several other Vermont towns, Killington’s Fire Department is hoping to replace their current firehouse with a new one.


“It would take a lot of money to renovate the old facility, and when we got through, we’d have the same problems: There isn’t enough space inside, and there isn’t enough space outside. We need a new site,” said Peter Vito, a volunteer fireman.


The firemen, in a joint committee with residents, are developing a proposal together. The plan, Seth Webb explained, is for the committee to gather information on a few good, affordable sites, then make their recommendation among them to the selectmen. If the board concurs, the next step would be to do the necessary engineering and architectural planning for a new
building, which would be the next proposal to consider.

Bianchi suggested “the committee produce a progress report for the public so they know the non-fire department residents are represented in the process, and that this expensive decision isn’t being made in-house without their input.” Webb said he would convey that request.


One subject left over from the Town Meeting Preview regarded some residents’ sentiment that Killington abandon the current Australian Ballot system and return to the traditional Town Meeting format. Webb explained that voter participation doubled when the Australian Ballot system was put into place, and the board requested this be publicized.


The four-payment tax collection system that was introduced in conjunction with the one-time eighteen-month budget was another Town Meeting Preview holdover. McGrath suggested a discussion of easing the resulting town cash-flow constraints by charging taxpayers the town’s portion of the taxes in two payments and spreading just the state portion over the four installments, but the board responded that residents thought they had approved a four-equal-installment plan, and would not look at the suggestion favorably.


“Let’s leave it at four equal installments for now,” Selectman Ken Lee said, “and if we run into a cash-flow problem we can always change it.”


Jim Haff, who unsuccessfully ran against Bianchi for selectman, had researched state regulations and found that a town can legally offer a discount to taxpayers who pay their taxes up front in one lump sum. “This would help the cash flow if enough people take advantage of it,” he said. The board agreed to consider it.

Comment: Who is this guy Peter Vito?

Monday, March 9, 2015

Vacationers escape midnight blaze in Killington

Rutland Herald
By Dan Colton
Staff Writer | March 09,2015
 

Anthony Edwards / Staff Photo Caution tape surrounds the remains of the condominium complex that was destroyed by a structure fire during the early morning hours of Saturday on Innsbruck Lane in Killington.
KILLINGTON — Susan Haigh said she was among about a dozen people who escaped a blaze that wrecked the Killington Townhouses on Innsbruck Lane in Killington early Saturday morning.

Haigh, a Connecticut resident, said she didn’t waste any time getting out of her ground-floor condo when she heard the fire alarms sound off around 11:30 p.m.

Steve Finer, former Killington fire chief, said the Killington Townhouses didn’t have a sprinkler system to fight any potential fires.

He said the building “predates requirements.”

Haigh, who has visited the condos for 10 years, said she doesn’t remember ever seeing fire sprinklers.

After the fire alarm sounded, she and her husband loaded up their suitcases into their vehicle and “got out of Dodge,” Haigh said, before any flames were visible.

But Haigh said that when she got outside, a lot of smoke was visible near the upper units.

“I could see smoke was up in the eaves, way up in the roof,” she said. “It was just coming out.”

She said it was easy to get all her belongings out in time because she and her husband had just arrived an hour earlier.

Many of the others weren’t as lucky, she said.

“There were some people who lost everything,” Haigh said — things like clothes, wallets and skiing equipment.

She explained that the Killington Townhouses aren’t permanent residences; they are vacation condos, or time shares, sold on a weekly basis. As a result, nobody was permanently left without a home because of the fire.

As Haigh and her husband drove out of the parking lot, they saw smoke rising from the Killington Townhouses and people standing in their pajamas out in the March night.

She headed for the Best Western, and said she believes others displaced from the fire found their way to the Best Western as well.

Patty Flanagan, manager of the Killington Townhouses, said she was distraught Sunday as she surveyed the damage left behind. She had no comment when asked how many people were in the condos when the fire began or where they were sheltered afterwards.

Only a few hours after the fire was doused, Killington Townhouses President Paul Kaufman said he didn’t know if the condos would be rebuilt.

Gary Roth, Killington fire chief, said he didn’t believe there was any indication of “foul play.”

Roth said what started as a chimney fire became a structure fire.

But Haigh didn’t wait around to see the flames spread to rest of the building.

She said that about an hour after arriving for the weekend on Friday night, she and her husband heard the fire alarm and could smell smoke.

While she was still inside the condo, Haigh said, she saw smoke billowing down the hallway from the living room.

Haigh estimated about a dozen people had rooms at the townhouses that night. Everyone escaped without injury, according to the fire department and eyewitnesses.

The conflagration lasted six hours, responders said, and left debris smoldering even into Sunday. At one point, the smoldering debris rekindled and firefighters returned briefly to douse the ruins again.

On Sunday afternoon, smoke still could be seen rising from the destruction. A chain link fence was brought in to replace the yellow caution tape from the day before.

Sunday, March 8, 2015

Fire ravages condo complex

Rutland Herald
By Dan Colton
Staff Writer | March 08,2015
 
Photo by Jill Paton

The Killington Townhouses condominium complex in Killington is engulfed in flames shortly after midnight. Two wings were destroyed by what was initially reported as a chimney fire. All of the timeshare occupants inside escaped safely.
KILLINGTON — No one was hurt in a fire that destroyed at least half of a 16-unit timeshare condominium complex early Saturday.

The fire was initially reported at the Killington Townhouses on Innsbruck Lane at about 11:30 p.m. Friday night and kept fire crews on the scene into Saturday afternoon. The fire rekindled briefly at about 4 p.m.

Killington Fire Chief Gary Roth said the incident was initially labeled a chimney fire in the section C wing, but by the time firefighters arrived it had spread to engulf the section D office wing as well.

The complex had four wings, A through D, but C and D were burned to the ground Saturday. The condition of the remaining condominiums was unclear.

A number of residents were inside the building, Roth said, but they escaped safely and were evacuated to other nearby lodging.

Many regional fire departments responded to a mutual aid call. Roth said the fire took six hours to extinguish.

“We had three fire engines, two platform trucks and somewhere around nine tankers to shuttle water,” Roth said.

He added that the county-wide response is standard protocol for a prolonged fire.

The Rutland City Fire Department was among the outside departments called in. Rutland responders got the call “right off the bat” around midnight, said Brad LaFaso, the department’s operations chief.

LaFaso arrived at around 5 a.m., he said, and the fire hadn’t yet subsided.

“It was tough fighting the fire in below zero (temperatures),” he said.

Freezing water and low water pressure complicated the efforts and caused issues throughout the night and into the morning.

Other firefighters reported seeing the blaze climb “50 or 60 feet” into the air, he said.

LaFaso said that by 11:30 a.m., most fire crews had left the scene.

By 2 p.m., smoldering and charred debris littered the area where half the building once stood. A layer of ice from the firefighters’ hoses covered much of the burned remnants.

The back half of the building was gone, with ashen tree limbs fallen across exposed and charred stairwells.

Paul Kaufman, president of the Killington Townhouses, said he drove from Massachusetts when he heard about the fire.

“It’s a tragedy,” he said.

About 600 families rent time in the Killington Townhouse condos through the year, Kaufman said.

But after the fire, he said, the future of the complex is up in the air.

“Obviously, we lost our office,” Kaufman said. “We lost our ability to communicate with our owners — we’re struggling to get that accomplished.”

He said he didn’t know how much financial damage the fire caused or how many people were evacuated from the building.

Helen and Frank Carcio of Massachusetts were taking photos of the scene Saturday afternoon.

They said they couldn’t believe the townhouses had burned. They’d been renting the same condo since 1985, Frank Carcio said.

Helen Carcio said that although they were not staying at Killington Townhouses that weekend, they were renting a nearby condo managed by the same people.

They checked out of their nearby timeshare a few hours early, Helen said, because displaced renters needed a place to stay, and the Killington Townhouses manager asked for a favor.

So, Helen Carcio said, they packed up early and came by to check out the scene.

Before they left, the Carcios left a house-warming gift for the next tenants.

“We left some beer in the fridge for them,” Helen said, “and some Baileys.”

Thursday, March 5, 2015

Bianchi Defeats Haff In Select Board Race


Vermont Standard
By Curt Peterson


Standard Correspondent


KILLINGTON — Anyone who braved blizzard conditions March 2 looking for excitement at the Killington Town Voting preview meeting was not disappointed. The race between incumbent Selectman Chris Bianchi and challenger Jim Haff played out on the floor from candidates’ statements through budget discussions. Haff frequently implied that the financial report from 2014 is inaccurate and the select board’s figures are misleading. Bianchi defended the report and its accuracy. The vote reflected Haff’s effort; Bianchi’s 176 votes narrowly beat Haff’s 153.


Votes were cast on Tuesday, March 3. In uncontested voting, Eileen Godfrey was elected as a Lister, Horace Glaze as Grand Juror, M. B. Neisner Jr. as Town Agent, Diane Miller as Trustee of Public Funds, Lou Grob as Cemetery Commissioner,
and Jill Post as Library Trustee.

M. B. Neisner, Town Meeting Moderator for 10 years, introduced Betsy Bianchi and Kristin Hagenbarth,
who presented the George Kenneth Krantz Volunteer of the Year award to the entire Clark family for their many activities for the town. Ian Clark and his mother Susan accepted flowers and a plaque on behalf of the clan.

State Representative Job Tate, who has been in office for a little over two months, gave a sobering report on what is going on in the Legislature, painting a dire economic picture. Regarding schools, Tate said, “Unless we’re willing to consolidate, we are going to have to lay off some people.” On a more positive note, he said he was proud to learn that other legislators feel Killington’s school is a model in management. “Lots of people in Montpelier say Killington is doing it right.”


Tate has co-sponsored a bill to reduce legislators’ pay. “If we’re going to take a scalpel to everybody else’s budget, we have to start first with our own”, he said.


Killington’s unusual one-time, 18-month budget drew a lot of questions. Article 2 of the Warnings proposed four tax payments spread out from August 2015 through May 2016. Town Clerk and Tax Collector Lucrecia Wonsor gave a succinct
explanation of the reasons for the payment schedule change, and that it will not cost the town any additional interest. The Article was approved by voters.

Some residents asked if Automatic Clearing House electronic payments could be set up for property taxes, to avoid missing a payment and incurring a late charge. Wonsor said taxpayers can visit the town website or come in to the office for help setting up an ACH payment plan. One resident suggested a discount for prepaying taxes, which Town Manager Seth Webb said might not be legally doable, but that he would check on it.


Article 3, the town budget for 18 months, from Jan. 1, 2015 through June 30, 2016, totals $6,282,554, of which $3,732,950 will come from property taxes, $243,550 applied from the $2014 budget surplus, $2,082,277 will come from nonproperty taxes, and $223,778 in expected FEMA reimbursements. Voters approved Article 3 by almost two-to-one.


The select board proposed to borrow $42,000 in an interest-free loan from Green Mountain Evergreen
Fund to upgrade Killington’s streetlights to a more energy-efficient system. Marty Post, from the Energy Committee, said the town should be eligible for an Efficiency Vermont rebate to reduce the cost of the installation, and the new system will save $4,000 in electricity per year, making it a net zero investment over time. Voters approved the Article 252 to 77.

If the select board had expected objections to increasing their annual stipend from $1,000 to $2,000, they were wrong. Without any questions at the preview, their raise in pay was
approved 213 to 177. Historically, the board’s compensation had been $2,000 per year until 2010, when, in the face of the recession, they reduced it to $1,000, then to zero. It was raised to $1,000 again in 2013, and has now achieved its pre-2010 level again.







1






2






3






4
1. Incumbent Selectman Chris Bianchi defeated challenger Jim Haff. 2. The Town of Killington panel, from left, selectman Ken Lee, Bianchi, Patty McGrath and town manager Seth Webb. 3. Betsy Bianchi, left, and Kristin Hagenbarth present the Krantz award to Ian and Susan Clark (not pictured). 4. McGrath answers a question.

Curt Peterson Photos

Wednesday, March 4, 2015

Killington board incumbent prevails; budgets pass

By Bryanna Allen | March 03,2015
 

Albert J. Marro / Staff Photo Killington town clerk Lucrecia Wonsor, left, chats with voters checking out after casting ballots in Tuesday's election.
STAFF WRITER

KILLINGTON — Killington Select Board chairman Chris Bianchi overcame challenger Jim Haff by a slim 23 vote margin.

Bianchi raked in 176 votes while Haff ran close behind with 153 votes.

Haff said despite his loss, he is glad he ran, and the effort was worthwhile. He said he feels he brought to light some crucial information regarding the budget and town spending.

“I would like to thank everyone for coming out and voting,” he said after the defeat.

The proposed town budget passed by a margin of 215 to 109 votes.

The budget was in a transition this year, from a 12-month calendar year to an 18-month fiscal year budget.

Therefore, the increase of the proposed budget seemed a drastic increase but passed nonetheless.

The proposed budget — $6,282,554 — is roughly $2 million more than the current budget of $4,051,573, which includes highway expenses but not the school expenses, and covers 18 months, not 12.

The proposed school budget is a total of $1,625,108, a 2.9 percent increase over this year’s current budget of $1,579,954 and passed by floor vote on Monday night during the town meeting.

Town Clerk Lucretia Wonsor said the turnout of voters was better this year than last, but still wasn’t quite what she was hoping for.

“You always hope for more people to come out and vote, but I think most towns struggle with a lack of voters,” she said after the results Tuesday night.

Wonsor said 335 Killington town residents showed up to give their opinion and cast their votes.

bryanna.allen @rutlandherald.com

Monday, March 2, 2015

Business booming in Okemo Valley

Rutland Herald
By Gareth Henderson
Staff Writer | March 02,2015
 
Anthony Edwards / Staff Photo

A freshly made bed awaits a guest at the Homestyle Hostel Inn & Cafe in Ludlow.
LUDLOW — It’s a good sign for the local business climate when back-to-back ribbon cuttings are on the schedule.

Such was the case last September for Marji Graf, head of the local chamber of commerce. She was at openings for four new Ludlow businesses that month, Homestyle Hostel, Just Doggin’ It cafe, Big Eyes Bakery and Tygart Mountain Sports.

That was just one month out of what has been a blockbuster year for business activity in this small resort town and its neighboring communities. The chamber’s records show that 50 new businesses have opened in the region since January 2014, and the chamber has gained 84 new members over the last 12 months.

Graf, who is CEO of the Okemo Valley Regional Chamber of Commerce, said the number of new businesses that started in Ludlow, Chester and nearby towns over the past year was unusual, and spanned various types of industries. She said one of the major factors driving this large amount of business activity is what already exists in the region.

“People come here because of the people and businesses that are already here,” she said.

Graf also pointed out recent investments by Okemo Mountain Resort as a big draw.

“The mountain certainly has put a lot of money into being a four-season resort, and that helps everybody,” she said.

Another local business with a successful recent opening in Ludlow is Mojo CafĂ©, which opened last July. Owners John and Jodi Seward grew up in the area and worked together in area restaurants, including Harry’s Cafe, before opening Mojo last year.

“We chose Ludlow because it’s where we live and it’s what we’re familiar with,” he said.

Ingredients grown in this region and elsewhere in Vermont are a key part of the menu. The restaurant gets its chicken from Misty Knoll Farms in New Haven, and the beef comes from Boyden Farm, located farther north in Cambridge. The Sewards have created a diverse menu, including Mexican and Cajun influences and other New England-style options, to offer a unique selection that so far has drawn in local people and visitors alike. Aside from online tools like TripAdvisor and Yelp, it’s the customers who have spread the word.

“We just do word-of-mouth and let the product shine,” Seward said.

Homestyle Hostel is also located on Main Street and has taken advantage of local resources to help their business get off the ground. Owners Eliza Greene and Justin Hyjek, who each graduated high school in the area, saw Ludlow as a place that could use a hostel that offers a comfortable home-like atmosphere. They had returned to the area with the idea of starting a local hostel, after years of traveling through South America and running several hostels.

So far it’s been good news for the business. Not only have they had a busy season with the out-of-town crowd, but local people have also given the business some early success, filling its 24-seat restaurant for trivia night and bringing in some small business groups. Homestyle Hostel joined the chamber well before its opening day, and Hyjek said that has helped them form some important relationships in the business community.

“They’ve been the conduit between us and the resort,” Hyjek said. The chamber has also helped connect Greene and Hyjek with local people who can help with key parts of a business, such as the hiring process.

The last two years also brought big news for Okemo Mountain Resort. Bonnie MacPherson, director of public relations at Okemo, said the mountain has invested more than $1 million in snowmaking. That included new HKD snow guns, which are tower guns that are more energy efficient. MacPherson also said the resort has also made improvements to its snowmaking infrastructure overall, including the pump houses and water capacity. Now, the system can pump 9,200 gallons per minute.

Recent developments have also included a partnership with Snow Park Technologies, a Nevada-based company which is helping Okemo with a makeover of all its terrain parks. Last December, Okemo unveiled the Sunburst Six bubble chair, a state-of-the-art chair lift with heated seats.

While visitor traffic is key for this community, the new and existing businesses in this region are also maintaining a strong focus on serving the local customers. An example of this is The Free Range, a new restaurant that opened in Chester. Rick and Anne Paterno opened the restaurant in August 2014, and they also hired chef and co-owner Michael Kennedy, who was born and raised in Chester.

Paterno, a 30-year veteran of the footwear and fashion industry, was looking for a way to retire from his career and realize his desire to open a restaurant. They bought their business location in Chester in December 2013, and now, Rick Paterno said he has noticed more traffic in that end of The Common and in Chester as a whole. He said the restaurant has helped bring more customers to nearby shops as well.

While the abundant sources of local, fresh food here and in Vermont have helped hugely, for Paterno, the biggest reason to open his business was to establish a restaurant that the local people could enjoy. He noted that the popular, longtime Chester restaurant, Raspberries and Thyme, closed about five years ago.

“It was something we knew the town needed,” Paterno said. “We really wanted to do something for the town we fell in love with.”

The Paternos have lived in Chester for 30 years, and bought a permanent home here in 2006.

Tesha Buss, head of the chamber’s clean energy committee and also a business owner, said the region’s trend of positive business activity certainly builds on itself. The chamber has made various efforts to keep that trend going, she added.

“We’ve worked really hard to make it a four-season economy,” Buss said.

Buss sees the inter-connected nature of the local economy firsthand through her own business. Buss owns a retreat home in Plymouth, where she welcomes large business retreats and similar group-business gatherings. She often sends groups Okemo and Killington, and to Camp Plymouth, the Coolidge site, the Plymouth Cheese Factory and other local attractions.

 Comment: Gee, I didn't see the town of Ludlow having an Economic Development Commission or spend millions on economic development. The key factor cited - "recent investments by Okemo Mountain Resort as a big draw".

Vito

Inn at Six Mountains sells for $3.3M

Rutland Herald
By Bruce Edwards
Correspondent | March 02,2015
 
Anthony Edwards / Staff Photo

The Inn of the Six Mountains is located along the top of the Killington Access Road.
KILLINGTON — The Inn at Six Mountains has been sold to a group of investors, including local businessman John Kalish, for $3.3 million.

Kalish and the other investors closed on the purchase of the 104-unit condo hotel last week.

In addition to Kalish’s company, Killington Hospitality Group 1 LLC, the other major investor is Innisfree Hotels, a Florida-based resort company.

“The intention is to do some substantial renovations after the ski season ... and reposition this hotel into the best in the market as far as lodging is concerned,” Kalish said.

He said the new ownership group will invest between $2 million and $3 million to renovate the Killington Road property, which was built in the late 1980s.

He said all rooms will undergo renovations from top to bottom, including carpeting, tile floors, bathrooms and flat screen TVs. The lobby, restaurant, kitchen and the two pools will also get a makeover.

Kalish, who called the property a “diamond in the rough,” said his “intent is to bring it up to a first class standard.”

He said once the upgrades are complete there will be an opportunity to increase the restaurant, banquet and conference business.

He said work on the hotel will begin after the ski season and take about eight months to complete.

“We obviously want to get it repositioned for the fall and certainly for the (next) ski season,” Kalish said.

Because The Inn at Six Mountains was a condo hotel, he said the transaction took two years to complete.

“There was a substantial amount of time and effort to get all the owners on board to sell it and an agreed upon purchase price,” said Kalish, who owns other property in the area, including the former Churchill’s restaurant on Route 4 and eight acres near the Cortina Inn, both in Mendon.

Innisfree Hotels, the other major investor, will also manage the property.

Kalish said he brought in Innisfree as an investor because of their track record in operating resort properties.

Jill Thomas, Innisfree chief marketing officer, said the Killington hotel offered the company an opportunity to diversify its portfolio of properties.

“Most of our properties are beach resort properties and so we were looking to diversify into a different market that is still a part of a resort market,” Thomas said, “and a ski destination is a very attractive (option).

Innisfree has properties located primarily along the Gulf Coast of Florida, Mississippi and Alabama. It also operates a resort hotel in Traverse City, Mich.

“After seeing the commitment of Killington’s owners, Powdr Corp., to invest in the mountain and improve the village we decided to make an investment too,” Julian MacQueen, Innisfree founder and chief executive officer, said in a statement. “We look forward to other opportunities in the area with the same upside potential. The move from beach to mountain will mark new ground for Innisfree, while keeping in line with our mission of ‘creating fun, memorable experiences’ for travelers.”

Thomas said based on the results of a marketing research study, the Killington hotel will be rebranded to fit the clientele it hopes to attract.

With a ski village planned at the base of the mountain, Kalish, too, is bullish on the resort’s future.

“I think that it has only one direction to go and I think that’s up,” he said.

Based in Gulf Breeze, Fla., Innisfree takes its name from the William Butler Yeats’ poem, “The Lake Isle of Innisfree.”
 
Comment: This is what the town needs more of: private investment! Notice how the resort's invvestment in the mountain and the ski village are cited as reasons for Innisfree's investment, not the efforts by the town, hay bales and such, or streetscapes, wayfinding, sidewalks and so on. If private investors are going to invest in the town its going to be because of what happens at the top of the mountain not the bottom!