27-05-2025
Burlington mayor tells council to rewrite downtown business resolution
BURLINGTON, Vt. (ABC22/FOX44) – Mayor Emma Mulvaney-Stanak wrote Tuesday that she hopes the Burlington city council will work again on a resolution they passed May 19 that aims to help businesses and tourism on Church Street.
The most contentious part of the resolution so far has proven to be a requirement for the nonprofit collective Food not Bombs to move its free food distribution out of the downtown parking garage. Originally, the resolution called for the distribution to move out by the middle of June. City council took out this requirement in a majority vote, and then added a less stringent requirement for the operation to submit a plan to move out by the middle of July.
City Council passes resolution for downtown issues
'I fully support our locally owned small businesses, and I also fully support mutual aid for those in need,' wrote Stanak in her official statement. 'I do not believe that these two things are mutually exclusive. Burlington is a City where everyone deserves to exist with dignity.'
Mulvaney-Stanak is a member of the Vermont Progressive Party. The resolution passed 8-4 in the city council on May 19, with all 7 Democrats and one Progressive in favor.
Small businesses express concern about conditions in Downtown Burlington
Downtown business owners and Democrats on the council have said that while they do not lack compassion, they've waited long enough. 'We need to be honest about the choices that we're making here,' said councillor Becca McKnight at the previous council meeting. 'The food distribution service is not permitted by ordinance in our garage.'
In her statement, Mayor Mulvaney-Stanak also criticized 'polarization and harmful escalation'. Earlier this month, business owners released an open letter calling for action relating to the conditions downtown; a fake second letter using divisive language went viral online last week.
The mayor announced that her office will be hosting a public forum at the Fletcher Free Library on May 29 at 5:30 p.m. to have a 'discussion on homelessness and mental health, and we will discuss concerns related to the downtown', in advance of the next city council meeting on Monday, June 2.
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