Saturday, December 9, 2017

Killington prepares town budget



Roy Webster of Roy’s Taxi in Rutland drove his little girl, Raegan up to Killington to make snow angels during an unexpected snowstorm. His wife, Amanda, took some photos. VYTO STARINSKAS / STAFF FILE PHOTO
Roy Webster of Roy’s Taxi in Rutland drove his little girl, Raegan up to Killington to make snow angels during an unexpected snowstorm. His wife, Amanda, took some photos. VYTO STARINSKAS / STAFF FILE PHOTO
KILLINGTON — At its regular Tuesday meeting, the Killington Select Board seated its newest member, Steve Finneron, and heard from department heads who are drafting their annual budgets for voter consideration at Town Meeting on March 6, 2018. The budgets cover fiscal year 2019, which begins July 1.
Finneron ran against Jay Hickory and won 87-48 in the Dec. 5 townwide election, with 135 ballots cast.
Following the resignation of Kenneth Lee as of Oct. 1, Finneron had been appointed to fill the remainder of Lee’s term.
The evening’s presentations by department heads in support of their budget proposals were the second of three sessions, with the “consolidated” budget to be presented for final changes by the Select Board Tuesday, Dec. 19, prior to being placed on the Town Meeting warning.
Informal comments by department heads provided insight into the fiscal realities of the town.
Town Clerk and Treasurer Lucrecia Wonsor described the ongoing project to preserve and bind the town’s documents, grand lists and land records in archival hard copy as well as electronically.
Unlike many other states, town clerks in Vermont are the custodians of the complete set of original records from the town’s earliest years to the present. Wonsor said she uses a cloud-based index for land records that go back to 1980, which can be accessed by the public at no charge.
The new Town Clerks Portal is hosted and managed by Cott Systems, of Ohio, specifically for digitizing land records and historical documents. Images are not available online — a visit to the town office is still needed to view the documents. The portal is reasonably priced and customizable, she said.
Wonsor would like to add a new part-time, yearround assistant treasurer position to share the increasing workload in the town office.
While she welcomes payment of taxes and fees by credit card, this practice is increasing and “it creates another step” for the treasurer. In addition, she said a third person would provide “ checks and balances,” that the person who writes checks should not be the same person making deposits.
In general, the town office is “very busy,” she said. Second-home owners “are used to a certain level of service,” she added.
New state requirements are adding to the cost of operating the town. Lister Walter Findeisen referred to the new requirement to use the statewide property parcel mapping program, adding a first year cost of $3,900, with $2,400 annually thereafter.
Chet Hagenbarth, reporting on solid waste management, said transfer stations will gradually become more expensive to operate, and food waste “will be super expensive,” he said. He noted that while “there is no market for recyclables,” which used to be an income generator and revenues from the transfer station are flat, changes proposed to Act 48, the Universal Recycling Law, will allow the towns to begin charging a fee for mandated items.
Select Board chairwoman Patty McGrath asked whether such a fee would deter people from recycling. Hagenbarth said it would definitely discourage businesses or organizations from recycling largevolume materials such as cartons.
The Nov. 21, Select Board meeting heard budget presentations by the Green Mountain National Golf Course, the Killington Police Department, the library, Planning and Zoning, and the listers.
Golf course manager David Soucy reported that his objective is to keep the budget “flat” for the coming year, while increasing memberships and tournaments. Soucy, a Vermont state senator, said he has reduced his own salary by $11,000.
Police Chief Whit Montgomery will continue to “aggressively” seek grants for funding equipment and training and now charges for special police coverage such as at private events that require road closings.
Montgomery said the policing cost per resident in Killington is approximately $172 per year, or about 75 percent of the national average.
Sherburne Memorial librarian Jane Ramos listed the transition to VTel for high-speed internet and fee increases as boosting the budget by 1.3 percent.
Planner Richard Horner said he anticipated a basically unchanged budget, with a 2 percent cost-of-living adjustment increase balanced by extra revenue from Bear Mountain permits.

Wednesday, December 6, 2017

Special Town Meeting Results


The results of the Town of Killington's Special Town Meeting of December 5, 2017 are as follows:

ARTICLE 1. To elect a Selectboard member for a term of two years to complete the unfinished term of Selectman Kenneth Lee who resigned effective September 30, 2017.

STEPHEN FINNERON - 87

JAY K HICKORY -         48

     Total Votes Cast -   135



Stephen Finneron - Elected to complete the term ending March, 2020

Saturday, December 2, 2017

Killington ‘ambassador’ wins his case



A Connecticut man won a worker’s compensation claim against Killington Ski Resort following a two-day jury trial this week.
The Rutland civil court jury found that Thomas Kibbie, 56, was entitled to compensation for a number of treatments he had initially been denied by the Vermont Department of Labor.
A call to Killington Ski Resort seeking a comment was not returned Friday.
Kibbie was a mountain ambassador at Killington — a seasoned skier or snowboarder who helps guests find their way on the slopes and provides other services — in 2008. On Jan. 12 of that year, according to court records, he was making a final check of the trails for the day when he fell, crashing hard enough to break his helmet.
Kibbie’s lawyer, Thomas Bixby, said Kibbie has no memory of the crash.
“As far as we know, there were no witnesses,” Bixby said. “Thankfully, he was wearing a helmet.”
Despite that helmet, according to court records, Kibbie suffered a hemorrhage in his right temporal lobe, leaving him with a permanent brain injury. Bixby said Kibbie had a construction business he tended to when he was off the slopes, but that the injury has left him unable to work.
It also left him in need of serious medical care, according to court records. Documents from the case describe ongoing treatment — or a need thereof — for chronic neck pain, headaches, visual problems, trouble sleeping and depression.
Bixby said there was an initial settlement in which the resort agreed to pay for certain treatments on an ongoing basis, but Killington stopped payment in September 2010.
“For the last seven years, he’s been fighting for these benefits,” Bixby said.
A decision from the Department of Labor in February 2016 granted some of the benefits Kibbie sought, but denied others, including cervical injections and a device that treats pain through electrical impulses.
With the jury decision Wednesday, Bixby said all the treatments will be covered. Bixby said he did not know what cost that would amount to.
“They have all the bills because they have the treatment notes,” Bixby said of Killington. “They will go back to the providers. I don’t want to make up a number — it’s significant.”
gordon.dritschilo @rutlandherald.com