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JANUARY 2000
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Secretary of State Publishes Guide For Social Service
Agencies, January 6, 2000
- Bill Dalton is appointed Deputy
Secretary of State, January 14, 2000
- Secretary of State Publishes The Law of Public
Libraries, January 14, 2000
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NEWS CONFERENCE TUESDAY IN MONTPELIER--
SECRETARY OF STATE MARKOWITZ LAUNCHES KIDS VOTING
VERMONT , January 17,
2000
- Secretary of State Markowitz Launches Kids Voting Vermont,
January 18, 2000
- Democratice & Republican Presidential Candidate
Names Released
Vermont Presidential Primary - March 7, 2000, January
20, 2000
PRESS RELEASE
For immediate release
Contact: Thuy
Nguyen For Immediate Release (802) 828-2148
January 6, 2000
Vermont Public Service Awards to be held in Caledonia
County
Secretary of State Deborah Markowitz will honor local officials of Caledonia County at the Vermont Public Service Awards on Tuesday, January 11, 2000. The ceremony will honor over 80 local officials who have served their communities for twenty or more years. Over one hundred people including honorees, friends, family and other local officials are expected to attend.
The ceremony will begin with presentations by members of the North Country Union High School Color Guard Team. Keynote speeches by Secretary Markowitz and the Honorable Albert W. Barney will follow the opening presentations.
The ceremony will take place at Fuller Hall at St. Johnsbury Academy in St. Johnsbury at 7:00 PM. The event is open to the public.
For further information, please call 1-800-439-8683.
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PRESS RELEASE
For immediate release
Contact: Thuy
Nguyen For Immediate Release (802) 828-2148
January 6, 2000
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Town
Meeting Day Deadlines Draw Near January Deadlines for Town Meeting
Warning
Montpelier. Two deadlines for
getting on the ballot are fast approaching for the upcoming
March Town Meeting. According to Secretary of State Deb
Markowitz, "One of the things that makes Vermont town
meeting so special is that members of the community have an
opportunity to discuss issues of town government that are
important to them. However, in order to get a particular issue
on the town meeting warning, voters must present a petition to
the town clerk by January 27th." In most cases, a
petitioned article must be signed by at least 5% of the
registered voters of the town. In addition, according to
Markowitz, "Serving in local office is a great way to give
something back to the town. People who live in towns that vote
their officers by ballot, rather than on the floor of town
meeting must plan ahead if they wish to run for office. January
31st is the deadline for submitting a nominating petition with
the town clerk." Nominating petitions must be signed by 30
voters, or 1% of the legal voters, whichever is fewer. All
petitions must be submitted to the town clerk. For more
information call your town clerk's office, or the Office of the
Secretary of State at (802) 828-2363.
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PRESS RELEASE
For immediate release
Contact: Thuy
Nguyen For Immediate Release (802) 828-2148
January 6, 2000
Secretary of State Publishes Guide For Social Service
Agencies Publication helps social service agencies
request municipal funds
Montpelier. Secretary of State Deborah
Markowitz today announced the publication of a new guide
designed to assist social service agencies that request
municipal funding. According to Secretary Markowitz, "the
practice of going directly to the voters for agency funding has
proliferated in the past ten years as federal and state funding
has been reduced. As a result of the increase in demand for
assistance, town officials have adopted a variety of policies
and practices about when and how agencies may request financial
support from the voters of the town." Notwithstanding local
policies, state law gives agencies the right to petition a
community to have an appropriation request placed on the ballot.
The deadline for petitioned items in most communities is January
27th. Secretary Markowitz said, "We wrote Getting on the
Ballot, A Practical Guide for Social Service Agencies to help
clarify the law governing social service agency requests for
appropriations and to provide some needed assistance to those
seeking town support for their programs." If you wish to
order a copy of Getting on the Ballot, A Practical Guide for
Social Service Agencies, please contact the Secretary of State's
Office at 802-828-2363. The Guide is also available at
/pubs/ballot.htm
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PRESS RELEASE
For immediate release Contact: Thuy
Nguyen For Immediate Release (802)
828-2148 January 14,
2000
Bill Dalton is appointed Deputy Secretary of State
Secretary of State Deborah L. Markowitz has named William A. Dalton as Deputy Secretary of State. Mr. Dalton, of Richmond, Vermont,
has previously served the State of Vermont as Commissioner of Mental Health and Mental Retardation under the Kunin, Snelling and Dean administrations. Prior to that time, Mr. Dalton served as Commissioner of Labor and Industry under the Kunin administration, as Assistant Attorney General and as an attorney with Vermont Legal Aid. Mr. Dalton graduated from Syracuse University in 1963. After honorable discharge from active service as a lieutenant in the United States Navy, Mr. Dalton received his law degree from Boston University School of Law. Most recently, Mr. Dalton has worked as an administrator and director of compliance with Fletcher Allen Health Care.
Mr. Dalton replaces David Grayck who will be opening a private practice of law in Montpelier.
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For immediate release Contact: Thuy
Nguyen For Immediate Release (802)
828-2148 January 14,
2000
Secretary of State Publishes The Law of Public Libraries
Publication Seeks to Help Communities
Understand Legal Relationship With Their
Libraries
Montpelier. Secretary of State Deborah Markowitz today announced the publication of a Handbook entitled "The Law of Public Libraries." The Law of Public Libraries is a joint project of the Office of the Secretary of State and the Vermont Department of Libraries. The Law of Public Libraries is an easy to read handbook designed to help library trustees, local officials and citizens understand the basic laws that apply to Vermont's public libraries.
According to Secretary Markowitz "Libraries are more than places to read and borrow books. They are institutions, with responsibilities to ensure adequate funding, capital facilities and appropriate services to patrons. They are run by volunteer boards, usually called trustees, and they are bound the law, to the extent that it speaks to them." Markowitz said, "My office receives many calls from people wanting to know how libraries work. Some of these callers are library trustees, town treasurers, auditors and select board members, who sincerely want to know where their responsibilities begin and end. The purpose of this pamphlet is to ensure that the library's primary mission of making books and information available to those who seek it is fulfilled with a minimum of conflict over administrative matters."
If you wish to order a copy of The Law of Public Libraries, please contact the Secretary of State's Office at 802-828-2363. The Guide is also available at /OnLinePubs/Library/index.htm
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PRESS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE January 17, 2000
For more information contact:
Carolyn Dwyer, Executive Director 229-6874 (phone)/224-9176 (fax)
Dwyer2@sover.net
NEWS CONFERENCE
TUESDAY IN MONTPELIER-- SECRETARY OF STATE MARKOWITZ LAUNCHES
KIDS VOTING VERMONT
Vermont Secretary of State
Deborah Markowitz will announce the formation of Kids Voting
Vermont on Tuesday, January 18th at 11 am in Room 10 of the
Vermont State House. Central Vermont Public Service CEO Robert
Young, St. Albans City Mayor Peter Deslaurier and a student
spokesperson from Ms. Salzberg's first grade class at Union
Elementary in Montpelier will join Markowitz in describing the
program's pilot effort. Kids Voting Vermont is a non-profit,
non-partisan organization that will train a new generation of
Vermont's citizens in the value of voting and will help increase
voter turnout on Election Day. Students kindergarten through
high school participate in a curriculum about the election
process and then cast their ballots alongside adults on Election
Day. This program attempts to address declining civic
participation and low voter turnout, especially among 18 -24
years olds. In 1996, only 26 percent of registered 18 - 24 years
olds in Vermont voted, less than the national average of 32
percent. With the support of a statewide Board of Directors that
includes business leaders, civic activists and educators, Kids
Voting Vermont hopes to reach its goal of a better informed
electorate and increased voter turnout in the new millennium.
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PRESS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE January 18, 2000
For more information contact:
Carolyn Dwyer, Executive Director 229-6874 (phone)/224-9176 (fax)
Dwyer2@sover.net
SECRETARY OF STATE
MARKOWITZ LAUNCHES KIDS VOTING VERMONT
Vermont Secretary of State Deb
Markowitz today announced the formation of Kids Voting Vermont
at the Vermont State House. Central Vermont Public Service CEO
Robert Young, St. Albans City Mayor Peter Deslaurier and a
student spokesperson from Ms. Salzberg's first grade class at
Union Elementary in Montpelier joined Markowitz in describing
the new program and its pilot effort.
Kids Voting
Vermont is a non-profit, non-partisan organization that will
train a new generation of Vermont's citizens in the value of
voting and will help increase voter turnout on Election Day.
Students kindergarten through high school participate in a
curriculum about the election process and then cast their
ballots alongside adults on Election Day.
Recent statistics indicate a strong need to increase voter participation. Fewer than half
(48.4%) of eligible adults, and only 32 percent of eligible 18-24 year olds voted in the last presidential election. And while Vermont performs better than the national average among all voters, 18-24 year old Vermonters perform below the national average at 26 percent.
Fortunately, the results from
other statewide initiatives show two encouraging trends: adult
voter turnout increases between 5 and 10 percent in Kids Voting
communities, and 18-year-old former Kids Voting participants
vote at a rate 8 percent higher than their non-participating
peers. Kids Voting Vermont expects to produce similar results.
Secretary of State Markowitz adds, "Kids Voting
Vermont is a comprehensive solution to a complex problem.
Democratic renewal will only be possible if parents and leaders
in education, business, government, politics and the media
commit themselves to a new, energetic creative strategy for
reconnecting American youth to politics and public life. My hope
is that Kids Voting Vermont will help us ensure that our next
generation of Vermonters will be active participants in
democracy."
Designed to increase voter turnout and
create a better-informed electorate, Kids Voting Vermont is part
of Kids Voting USA, a national organization founded in 1990 that
operates in forty other states. Both the state and national
organizations facilitate partnerships among families, schools,
election officials, and community leaders in an effort to secure
the future of democracy by involving youth in the election
process today.
Kids Voting Vermont is led by a volunteer
Board of Directors that includes members of the business
community, members of the media, educators, students, activists,
and city and town clerks. Funded entirely by private sector
contributions, Kids Voting Vermont counts among its Founding
Sponsors the Lintilhac Foundation, Bell Atlantic, and Central
Vermont Public Service. National sponsors,USA Champions of
Democracy, are the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation,
America West Airlines, Blockbuster, and JCPenney.
Notes Central Vermont Public Service Corporation CEO and Kids Voting Vermont Board President Robert H. Young, "I am pleased to be a part of a program in
Vermont that will enhance our children's understanding of the importance of voting and encourage their parents to become more active in exercising their voting rights. We must do more to strengthen the democratic roots of our citizenry and this program does just that."
St. Albans City School (K-8), Bellows Free Academy (9-12), and Montpelier's Union Elementary School (K-5), Main Street Middle School (6-8), and Montpelier High School (9-12) are currently operating the program as pilot sites that will participate in the March 7, 2000 Presidential Primary.
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| For immediate release Contact: Melanie Jacobs, Elections Administrator (802)
828-0175 January 20,
2000 Democratic &
Republican Presidential Candidate Names Released Vermont
Presidential Primary - March 7, 2000
Montpelier. Secretary of State, Deb
Markowitz announced today that the following candidates'
petitions have been accepted by the Secretary of State's office
and these candidates will be listed on the March 7, 2000
presidential primary ballots for Vermont:
Democratic
Bradley of New Jersey Al Gore of Tennesse Lyndon H.
LaRouche, Jr. of Virginia
| Republican Gary Bauer of Virginia George W. Bush of Texas
Steve Forbes of New Jersey Alan Keyes of Maryland
John McCain of Arizona
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Vermont Law
requires that candidates for the presidential
primary submit nominating petitions signed by at least 1,000 registered Vermont voters.
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