Press Coverage
January 14, 2009

Barack to the Future


When President-elect Barack Obama loses the qualifier from his title at next week’s inauguration, a fitting sound effect would be the starter’s bell for a horse race. Never before in modern history has an American president needed to spring from the gate so swiftly, considering how much is riding on his success.


From day one, millions of Americans will be waiting impatiently for Obama to fix the economy, end the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, curb global warming, provide universal health-care coverage, and restore America’s tattered reputation abroad. While he’s at it, Obama might as well promise to rid the world of cancer, stinky diapers and men who leave the toilet seat up, since no matter how much he accomplishes in the first 100 days, someone is bound to be disappointed.


Vermonters’ expectations are understandably high, despite being tempered by the awareness that eight years of Bush can’t be undone overnight.

This week, Seven Days asked a cross-section of Vermonters to provide their “wish lists” for the new administration on issues that were often ignored in the last eight years, including poverty, immigration, civil liberties, workers’ rights, the environment and religious tolerance. We asked them what they thought of Obama’s chances of attaining those goals, given the decisions he’s made thus far.


If there’s a common thread to Vermonters’ hopes for 2009, it appears to be a shared desire for more progressive values, a shift away from the politics of divisiveness, and a return to the primacy of science and the rule of law. But in light of some recent cabinet picks from the Clinton ranks, there’s also a sense that only time will tell whether Obama can rise above the Washington morass that bogs down even the most well-intentioned public servants.


******


Allen Gilbert, executive director, American Civil Liberties Union of Vermont


The Vermont ACLU didn’t wait for the Obama transition team to settle in before outlining its agenda. The organization is participating in a nationwide “Day One” initiative that’s asking state legislatures to pass resolutions calling on Obama to immediately close the prison at Guantanamo, stop torture, and end the practice of extraordinary rendition.


The Vermont ACLU’s top priorities include terminating warrantless spying on American citizens, reviewing federal watch lists to remove names of people for whom there’s no credible evidence of terrorist links, returning to openness on Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests, and ending the monitoring of political activists, particularly those based in Vermont.


Gilbert says he’s also hoping for renewed enforcement of civil rights by the U.S. Department of Justice, particularly those involving voting, employment and prisons. On the issue of Real IDs, Gilbert urges Obama to “get it right or not at all” by directing the new Secretary of Homeland Security to suspend the regulations until Congress has time to review the entire program.
 

On the national and global fronts, Gilbert supports a moratorium on the federal death penalty, a lifting of the Bush administration’s prohibition of foreign aid to overseas organizations that promote or perform abortions, and a ban on federal discrimination based on sexual and gender orientation.


Typically, the ACLU doesn’t make political endorsements or comment on political appointments — “We aim for the sin, not the sinner,” Gilbert jokes. Still, he sees Obama’s picks thus far as being so unlike those of the last eight years that he admits to a positive initial reaction.


“Following the November elections, we have high hopes,” Gilbert adds. “But hopes must become real if we are to again live in a country where power is not abused and the liberties of everyone are respected and protected.”


******

Judith Stermer, director of communications and public affairs, Vermont Foodbank


Nowhere does the current recession more closely resemble the Great Depression than in Vermont’s food lines. In the last eight months, the Vermont Foodbank and its network of 270 food shelves, meal sites, senior centers and afterschool programs have seen a 20- to 90-percent rise in requests for emergency food assistance.


Not surprisingly, the Vermont Foodbank’s wish list for Obama’s first year focuses heavily on increased funding for nutrition programs that serve women, children, the elderly and low-income families — something that, Stermer points out, has already been promised by the Obama team.


“Since the beginning of his campaign, President-elect Barack Obama has talked about addressing the issue of hunger in the context of poverty,” she says. “In the long term, this means looking at the root causes of hunger and finding sustainable solutions to the problem that affects one in eight Americans.”


During the holidays, Michelle Obama urged Americans to support their local food shelves, offering a possible hint of the First Lady’s long-term priorities. There’s even talk of renaming the Secretary of Agriculture the “Secretary of Food,” since millions more Americans eat food than grow it.


Currently, the Foodbank runs a federal program called Commodity Supplemental Food Program, a once-a-month delivery to seniors, mothers and their children. Several months ago, the Foodbank asked for a 25-percent increase in its funding because it had already surpassed its 3625 caseload limit — it’s now serving nearly 4000 clients through this program. Last week the Foodbank got word that, instead of the 25-percent increase, it will receive more caseloads — yet another area where funding falls “grossly short” of the need.


“Food is a right,” Stermer says. “I am hopeful that the Obama administration will help the Vermont Foodbank and food banks around the country ensure that no one has to choose between food and the other necessities of life.”


******


Elizabeth Meyer, executive director of Child Care Resource, a Williston nonprofit that serves Chittenden County childcare needs


Though childcare is rarely touted as a way to jumpstart a stalled economy, there’s no question it affects the lives, and livelihood, of thousands of Vermont workers. One in every three of them needs it. And for many families, childcare is the highest monthly expense — more than rent or mortgage, food, utilities or transportation. One can also make a strong argument that an investment in childcare is an investment in Vermont’s future workforce: Growing evidence indicates that good childcare and early- education programs have demonstrable effects on a child’s performance in school, educational success, and earning potential later in life.


Perhaps it’s not surprising that former community organizer Obama proposed infusing $10 billion into early childhood programs, nearly double the federal government’s current level of support.


From Meyer’s perspective, the federal Child Care Subsidy Program, which provides childcare-tuition aid to low-income families, should be the new administration’s top priority. All too often, she says, CCR can’t help families much, if at all, because of the current eligibility guidelines. A Vermont family “must be poorer than poor” to qualify for the maximum amount of childcare-tuition assistance.


Funding for this program comes through the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). Former Sen. Tom Daschle, who’s been tapped to head HHS, has a strong grasp on health-care reform, according to Meyer, though his focus on early childhood is “not as clear.”


At the same time, Arne Duncan, who’s been selected to become Obama’s education secretary, has a long history of developing innovative programs that support children’s development through pre-K education.


In Meyer’s opinion, the key factor is how well HHS works with the Department of Education to achieve Obama’s goals. The two federal agencies must reinvent “how we all work together,” she says, to develop “our most important natural resource: our children.”


******


John Zicconi, communications director, Vermont Agency of Transportation

Economists at all levels are urging the new administration to invest in “shovel-ready” projects. Since transportation is one of the few areas where government thinks years, if not decades, in advance, money for new roads, bridges, transit stations and other improvements may be the quickest way to get the economy on a road to recovery.


Every six years the feds adopt a transportation reauthorization bill, which provides all states with federal money to repair roads and bridges, run public transit, make highway-safety improvements, and fund other transportation-related programs. The current bill expires in October, so a new six-year bill is due before year’s end.


Vermont Agency of Transportation Communications Director John Zicconi says he’ll be looking for a “massive investment” in the nation’s transportation infrastructure, comparable to that of the 1960s when most of the Eisenhower Interstate System was built.


“The issues that plague Vermont’s crumbling roads and bridges are the same issues faced by every state in the nation,” Zicconi writes in an email. “None of us has enough state revenue to keep up with the necessary rehabilitation and replacement of our aging bridges, or the needed resources to apply preventative maintenance to our roads, bridges and culverts.”


According to Zicconi, a “fair estimate” of Vermont’s annual transportation shortfall is in the range of $100 million to $150 million annually. How does that translate into jobs? Depending on whom you ask, between 34 and 45 new jobs are created for every $1 million spent on transportation infrastructure.


******


Jes Kraus, director of the Vermont State Employees Association (VSEA)


Like most folks in the labor movement, Jes Kraus is excited to see the first president in years who holds a positive view of organized labor. And, with the state facing one of the worst budget crises in decades, he’s hoping that any federal relief to the states comes ASAP.


“Like most working Americans, Vermont’s public employees are looking to President Obama to help right our nation’s deeply troubled economy,” he says. “It’s no secret that Vermont, like many other states, is in desperate need of federal assistance to help stop the fiscal bleeding.”


That said, VSEA’s wish list isn’t all about the money. Kraus is hoping the Obama administration will beef up the nation’s occupational safety and health laws to “reverse” the damage that’s been done to them over the past eight years.

Equally important, VSEA is hoping Obama can “restore some integrity” to the National Labor Relations Board, which organized labor has viewed as more foe than friend since 2000. Obama, like Vermont’s congressional delegation, has also expressed strong support for the Employee Free Choice Act, which would make it much easier for unions to organize.


“The fact is, it’s become harder and harder for workers to organize under the current law because, more often than not, management has the upper hand,” Kraus explains. “Elections can be endlessly delayed, workers are intimidated and threatened in the long periods leading up to elections, or workers just simply grow disenchanted with the process and give up.”


How has Obama done so far? Notably, Kraus is thrilled with his recent pick of Hilda Solis as the new labor secretary.

“VSEA believes Ms. Solis is the right person at the right time to try and reverse some of the damage that was done” during the Bush years, he adds. “She comes from a union household and understands the importance of collective bargaining and the need to protect and enhance workers’ economic and social justice.”


******


Armando Vilaseca
, commissioner, Vermont Department of Education


Vilaseca cannot yet speak as head of the Vermont Department of Education — his first official work day is January 20. But, as someone who’s worked in education for many years, the top item on his Obama “wish list” is increased funding for special-education programs through the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA).


When Congress first enacted IDEA (under a different name) in 1975, fewer than one in five disabled children got a decent education. At the time, it was assumed the federal government would fund about half its mandates. But in the ensuing years, educational costs have risen dramatically, and the spectrum of people considered “disabled” has grown exponentially.


Currently, Vermont gets less than 20 percent of its special-ed funding from the feds, Vilaseca says; the rest comes from state and local sources. “That puts a tremendous burden on the schools . . . It’s a big, big unfunded mandate.” Realistically, however, Vilaseca isn’t optimistic that Obama will turn on the money spigot quickly.


Ditto the No Child Left Behind Act, where Vilaseca thinks “the spirit of the law is good,” and he doesn’t expect Obama to make any major changes. Look for his ed folks to tweak things, but not institute a wholesale overhaul.


As for Obama’s pick for education secretary of Arne Duncan, the Chicago public schools chief and president-elect’s longtime hoops buddy, Vilaseca seems more optimistic. Duncan has a reputation as a reformer and — dare we use the word? — maverick who isn’t shy about challenging the teachers’ unions or punishing underperforming schools.


“He’s someone who’s willing to look at things from another perspective,” the new commish adds. “What I hear is all good stuff about the guy, and I look forward to working with him.”


******


Jessica Edgerly, community organizer, Toxics Action Center


It’s hard to overstate the damage the Bush administration has wrought on environmental protection efforts in the last eight years; at times, it seemed to be straining to devise Orwellian names for its work, such as the “Clear Skies” and “Healthy Forests” initiatives.


But in the next year, Jessica Edgerly is looking forward to a new administration that’s more proactive and “precautionary” on toxics policy. Given the state of the economy, she expects the policies most likely to “gain traction” will be ones that lighten the budget demands on state governments, create jobs, or both.


Additionally, Edgerly thinks we’ll see important progress on state toxics reforms that have the potential to be adopted nationally. They include reinstating the so-called “polluter pays” policy in the Superfund program. Currently, state governments and the EPA rely heavily on taxpayer dollars to clean up toxic-waste sites that burden their communities, including nearly 1500 in Vermont.


Edgerly is hoping Obama will shift the onus for waste-disposal costs from municipalities to manufacturers, creating an incentive to design more durable and less toxic products. As she points out, Vermont’s solid-waste districts collectively spend more than $1 million annually to get rid of hazardous waste.


Also on Edgerly’s wish list: re-reforming the Toxic Substances Reform Act by creating a system for phasing out persistent toxic chemicals. Several states, including Vermont, have banned specific chemicals from the marketplace. She says a nationwide system to identify and ban chemicals linked to health problems would establish more uniformity among manufacturers and protect more Americans from toxic hazards.


“We have a critical opportunity in the midst of the economic recession to shape our marketplace,” Edgerly adds, “to be the one that recognizes environmental costs and promotes truly ‘green’ industries.”


******


Patrick Giantonio, director, Vermont Refugee Assistance


It’s been a decade of fear, intolerance and uncertainty for the tens of thousands of refugees, immigrants and asylum seekers who enter this country each year. And no administration in recent memory has shown more contempt for America’s immigrant roots than the one leaving office on January 20.


As an advocate for the thousands of refugees and asylum seekers who pass through Vermont each year, Patrick Giantonio is looking for the new administration to take “concrete steps” toward a new era of respect for human rights and the rule of law here and abroad. That includes making a national commitment to “actively and aggressively intervene to stop genocide.”


Giantonio also hopes Obama will end the federal workplace raids seeking undocumented workers; close Guantanamo; scrap the “fence” being erected between the U.S. and Mexico; ban torture and abide by the terms of the Geneva conventions; discontinue the imprisonment of asylum seekers (many of whom are torture survivors themselves) during their asylum process; and address the backlogs and long waits for reunion of families after they’re granted political asylum.


Giantonio’s final wish? That the new administration “brings charges of war crimes against Cheney, Bush, Rumsfeld and the rest of their henchmen.” If you’re dreaming, might as well dream big.


******


The Right Rev. Thomas Ely, bishop, Episcopal Diocese of Vermont


A change in national leadership won’t just manifest itself in new policies and programs. Some members of Vermont’s ecumenical community are looking to the Obama administration to usher in a new era of cultural acceptance and inclusiveness.


Bishop Ely can’t speak for Vermont’s entire religious community, or even the entire Episcopal Church. But as the spiritual leader of the state’s fourth largest Christian denomination, he expresses three wishes for the Obama administration, all of which focus on “collaborative or reconciliatory leadership.” He hopes it will address the current economic challenges, with particular emphasis on people of middle and lower incomes; establish adequate, affordable and accessible health care for all, especially those without access now; and take a leadership role in addressing the global climate crisis, which Ely calls “the number-one theological and moral challenge of our time.”


“President-elect Obama gets it on this issue,” he adds, “and I think if he can lead on this issue and draw us more deeply into the community of nations addressing this issue . . . that would be an encouraging sign.”

In a broader sense, Ely is hoping that Obama will find ways to “respect and honor the diversity of faith expressions that are so much a part of our culture and are guaranteed in our Constitution.”

In that regard, Ely was “disappointed” by the choice of Rick Warren, the California evangelical pastor who has equated homosexuality with incest, to give the invocation at Obama’s inauguration.


“We are also a nation of symbols, and religious people are people of symbols,” he says. “If the person who’s going to lead the prayer is a lightning rod for religious intolerance, does that serve a unifying purpose for us?”


After Ely’s Seven Days interview, several news organizations reported that the Right Rev. Gene Robinson, the first openly gay man to be ordained a bishop in the Episcopal Church, has also been asked by Obama to give the invocation for Inauguration Week. Perhaps the bishop’s prayers were answered.


Lions Club delivered the goods over holidays

Foodbank Says Need For Food Growing

Foodbank having hard time meeting needs

Demand way up at Vt. Foodbank

VT. artists help need families

Food shelf offers up a side of confidence

Bowling to help the Vermont Foodbank

Rep. Welch visits Foodbank, urges effort to fight hunger

Foodbank sees increase in demand

Hunger Worsens In Vermont

Hunger on the rise, expected to get worse in Vermont

Vermont Foodbank In Need

Vt. is 6th Hungriest State in Nation

Good Works: Citizens, Hannaford do their part

Rep. Peter Welch To Visit Food Bank Monday

Economy Takes Toll In Fight Against Hunger

Demand High at Vermont Food Shelves

Foodbank seeks expansion locally

Hannaford Helps Fight Hunger program launches in five state

Methane Facility Gets New Lease On Life

Leave no trace: No-waste energy close to reality

The need to feed hungry families cultivates new interest in gleaning

Thank you to Sovernet

Matches Sought At Farmer-Seller Meeting

Foodbank touts new digs at open house

Vermont Foodbank Opens Southern Vt. Warehouse

California’s Food Banks Go Locavore

Light shopping at Foodbank

Gleaning for Vermont

Free CFLs now available at sites around county

Vermont Foodbank's Kingsbury Farm--Part 1

Glean Living

Vermont Foodbank revives "gleaning"

Energy Efficient Light Bulbs Distributed to Low Income Vermonters

Efficiency Vermont provides Vermont Foodbank with 15,000 CFL bulbs

Crop Walk Talk

Food Banks Prepare for Swine Flu Outbreak

Vermont Artisits Fight Hunger

Fourth Dairy Drive Seeks Donations

Editorial: Hunger Action Month is our call to action

Vt. food banks bracing for swine flu

Apples for everyone, pick for your neighbor

HOMETOWN: Potatoes go to the Foodbank

Foodbank prepares for winter

Doing our pART, too

September deemed national hunger action month

Hunger Action Month raises awareness of local hunger issues

Hungry Vermonters Get in Line for Imani's Monthly Food-For-All

Dairy Drive Sunday

Vermonters Help Fill a Truck

Gleaning the Fields

Good Works: Chittenden donates $5k to Intervale Center Partnership

Local Foodbank receives funding

Vt. Foodbank receives $50K grant

Fare Shot: Community Kitchen opens the food-service field — and NECI — to more Vermonters

Eating healthy: Fresh vegetables and new skills

Table for Everyone

Dairy Drive to Help Low Income Vermonters

Editorial: Hunger never takes vacation

Food drive scheduled for June 27th in Southern Vermont

VT dairy drive helps consumers, producers

Donations boost Foodbank, dairy farmers

VT Dairy Drive Helps Local Farmers

Vermont Cheese News: Join us for a good cause

Grant Money Means Concord Kids Won't Left Behind or Go Hungry This Summer

City Market customers donate 500lbs of food to Chittenden Emergency Food Shelf

Fill A Truck for Hunger

City Market & Vermont Foodbank Fill A Truck for Hunger

VPR News: VT Edition: John Sayles & Marissa Parisi on hunger programs in Vermont

A Samosaman for All Seasons

Vermont Business Careers: Movers and Shapers-David Thurlow

Post Oil Solutions Hosts Forum on Gleaning in Windham County

Vermont Foodbank hires executive officer

Saturday is 'fun day'

Grow one extra row

A tote with a mission

Lessons in the kitchen, and in life

First Community Kitchen Grads Prepare for Jobs

One in six Vermont kids going hungry

Charity rides combine exercise, good will

No gardener left behind

VPR, foundation donate to Vermont Foodbank

Foodbank lets people grow foods in creative ways

VPR Cooks

Vt. Foodbank Hosts Hunger Conference

Final Day of Skiing at Stowe Aids Vermont Food Bank Stocks

Vermont Foodbank has a farm

Vermont Foodbank Day at Stowe Mountain

Law school group to host benefit dinner

Egg Scramble

Movers and Shapers in the business community

Bakery debuts 'Vermatzah'

Anti-Hunger Activist Robert Egger to Speak

Concert for Post Oil Solutions' Food Security Project

State and USDA Implement Programs to Help Dairy Farmers, Families in Need

Naga Bakehouse to donate sales of Vermatzah to VFB

Tree Nursery Tour to Raise Funds for Vermont Foodbank

Living Briefs: Food drive to benefit Vermont Foodbank

Dairy farmers get break

Hunger in Vermont

VPR Reaches Goal and Raises 41,900 meals for VFB

Symphony and orchestra collaborate on food drive

Vermont Foodbank receives $42,000 donation

A cooking class for mamas

News Minute: John Sayles becomes CEO of Vermont Foodbank

Governor's Ball raises $42,000 for Vt. Foodbank

Douglas to Present Check to Vt. Foodbank

Take it to the bank

Thought for Food - Barre Election Food Drive

Pledges to VPR will also help Foodbank

Anti-hunger groups worry about meeting growing need

Teen Center Serves Food and Fun

Open for business

Kids Cafe offers a fun food spot

Hannaford Helps Fight Hunger

Martin Luther King Jr Food Drive

In the midst of gloom, one aid group has good news

Vermont Food Bank meets fundraising goals

Shaw's Supermarkets donates $212K to Kids Cafe

Barack to the Future

Letter to the Editor: Foodbank facing growing demand

Vermont Foodbank Needs Your Help

Foodbank Hungry for Donations

Food Providers Face Fundraising Shortfall As More Seek Help

Foodbank: Shelves are empty

Vermont Foodbank In Need of More Donations

VPR's Midday Edition: Emergency food system in crisis

Food banks forced to partner farms, fisherman

Letter to the Editor: Vermont artists' great generosity

Giving season notes: VAC fundraiser

FOOD DRIVE AT GRACE POTTER & THE NOCTURNALS SHOW ON DECEMBER 29.

From Canned Goods to Fresh, Food Banks Adapt

VT Edition: Christine Foster, Melinda Bussino & Joanne Heidkamp on hunger in VT

Celtic point-guard dishes out assists

Food Shelf Profile: Heavenly Food Pantry

Food shelf profile: Milton Family Community Center

Interview: Christine Foster on food demands at the Vermont Foodbank

Art Auction to Support Vt. Foodbank

Full Plate - Two Vermont counties combine efforts to feed the hungry

Vt. hunger numbers show rise

Answering the call at Foodbank

Keeping Food on the Shelves

Vt. hotel project awarded grant to reduce waste

New Williston food shelf opens in unlikely home

Nonprofits edgy about downturn

Hannaford helps out in fighting hunger with donations, lots of food

Vt. Foodbank to move into Book Press

Chittenden Bank delivers $30,000 gift to Foodbank

Vermont Foodbank Gets Hefty Donation

Vermont Foodbank holds open house for Wolcott branch

VPT to air program on coping with food costs

Foodbank director announces resignation

Going Hungry in America: What Happened to the Food Surplus?

Barre farmers' market faces fresh challenges

Scholar to lecture on U.S. hunger problem

Going Hungry in America:Food Programs Feel the Squeeze

Community center burglarized

Vermont Foodbank to Open Local Facility

Volunteer gleaners make a difference

Group Aims To Help Community With Food, Fuel

Local People Planning Vermont Foodbank Benefit

Share a harvest

Statewide cycling event benefits area food shelves

Vermont Food Bank Counts on Cyclists

Point to Point rides Saturday

Salvation Farms nationally recognized

Vt. Foodbank buys landmark farm in Warren

For Vermont Foodbank, farm buy is a perfect fit

Interview: Doug O'Brien of the Vermont Foodbank

Food shelf needs a home

Vermonters are confronting heating fuel crisis

Food Bank Grows Its Own

Vermont Food Bank purchases farm to grow produce

The Vermont Foodbank will purchase Kingsbury community farm

Vermont Foodbank to Grow Fresh Veggies

Hunger Hits Williston

Food banks turn to gleaning in lean times

Vermont to Offer Fuel and Food Assistance

Farm bill good for Vermont

Demand for food services rising in Vermont

Farm Bill Will Help Out Food Shelves

Farm bill includes provision allowing Bromley Resort to buy Green Mountain National Forest land

Food for Thought

My Turn: Childhood nutrition must be a priority

Lawmakers created hope for neighbors

Downturn hits Vt. nonprofits

Winners, 'Losers'

Lawmakers raise $4,000 for Foodbank

More Vermonters Relying on Food Stamps

Statehouse Food Drive

Salvation Farms Going Statewide

Program Helps Bring Produce to Vermont Foodbank

High food costs on front burner for Vermonters

Rising costs, stagnant wages fueling hunger in Vermont

Partnership Brings Fresh Produce to Foodbank

Produce program expands

From farm to Foodbank: Gleaning project brings fresh veggies to low-income tables

Hannaford donates to Foodbank

Wal-Mart donates food to Vermont Foodbank

Foodbank Thanks Vermonters

Vermont Foodbank in need

Senate passes $286 billion farm bill expanding subsidies

Food Banks, in a Squeeze, Tighten Belts

On Thursday, free Thanksgiving dinners set all across Vermont

Empty Shelves: Are local food pantries surviving the crunch?

Crop Circles

Shortages at Vermont Foodbank impact local food shelves

Foodbanks running on empty

Vermont Foodbank's Supply Is Down as Demand Goes Up

Can Do Competition

My Opinion: Farm bill critical for Vermont

Food Stamps: Old stereotypes no longer true

VPR Interveiw with Doug O'Brien

The costs of hunger and what you can do to help

Tunstall to play benefit

Eyeing independence, Program prepares visually impaired teens for work

Local Community Helping Meet Needs Of Laid-Off Workers

Federal cuts, increased demand squeeze Vermont pantries

Hunger programs see drop in federal surpluses

Foodbank is Netting Edibles off the Web

Cooks Rescue Food Through Unique Recipes

Roving Food Drive a Hit at Church

Hunger in Vermont