On September 26, 2024
Letters

End homelessness in Vermont  

Dear Editor,

What happened yesterday in Vermont to people experiencing homelessness is nowhere close to a humane treatment of our neighbors. I saw babies and school children being sent to live in the woods and on our streets. I saw people on oxygen and in wheelchairs completely disregarded by our state. I saw people who are extremely vulnerable with psychiatric disabilities left to fend for themselves. I saw people who lost their homes in the flood dropped from housing programs. That we allowed and even orchestrated this humanitarian crisis in this state is inexcusable.

Vermont is failing to protect our most vulnerable. At End Homelessness Vermont we work primarily with people with complex needs and disabilities as well as working with people at the point of an emergency. Our most vulnerable clients are being left to catastrophic outcomes. 

Over 1,000 Vermonters, including hundreds of children, will lose their access to shelter by mid-October. This burden will be left on providers, municipalities and our communities in general. We must all agree that our most vulnerable Vermonters, people experiencing homelessness, deserve continuous shelter until they find permanent housing. 

“I had conversations just trying to comfort clients who did not understand due to their disability,” said Shelby Lebarron, worker at EHVT, “Our clients are terrified that they will lose their lives. I can’t lay my head down or think of going to bed knowing that there are children crying in a tent in their parent’s arms. Knowing that there are people struggling to breathe. They are all alone. There are people in wheelchairs who can’t even set up a tent or get access to a bathroom.” 

Letting people suffer the most catastrophic of outcomes is not who we are in Vermont. The Vermont we know brings people together, picks up shovels after a flood to support our fellow Vermonters. These are our fellow Vermonters.

Our municipalities need support to address this crisis in a humane way. We can not criminalize people for a housing crisis and un-sheltering that they did not create. Our community members need to meet those who are suffering with empathy and understanding or this crisis will never get better. 

The governor must call a special session and correct course on this inhumane action. We can not allow this to stand. We are better than this and we must do better. 

Brenda Lynn Siegel, executive director of End Homelessness Vermont, endhomelessnessvt.org

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Vermont School Board Asso. supports H.454 ed plan

April 23, 2025
Dear Editor, VSBA supports the bill as a more thoughtful and phased approach than Governor Scott’s rushed, five district proposal. Grounded in a more realistic timeline: H.454 is the most grounded and actionable proposal developed during the 2025 session. It acknowledges the operational realities education leaders face every day. The implementation timeline is more manageable…

Vote Bill Vines for Killington Select Board

April 23, 2025
Dear Editor, At the special election on May 28, I am running for the 2-year seat on the Killington Select Board. An incredibly diverse group of people call Killington home; my partner Mary Furlong and I included. After years of renting a ski house, we purchased our first Killington home in 1995. In 1997 we…

We moved to Vermont to escape Florida’s schools

April 16, 2025
Dear Editor, If you’re wondering what Gov. Phil Scott and Sec. Zoie Saunder’s education plan will be like in practice, I can tell you­— our family lived through it in Florida. My family relocated to Vermont from Florida just a couple of months after Saunders and her family. Unlike Saunders, we moved to Vermont to escape Florida’s…

In support of Woodstock police chief

April 16, 2025
Dear Editor, We moved to Woodstock, Vermont, in early 2017. It was the first time we had spent any time in Vermont, and we fell in love. We loved the town, the community, and everything else. We opened a business, and one of the first people we met was then officer Joe Swanson. He was…