Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

After devastatin­g floods, Vermont is open for business

- By David Goodman

On a recent afternoon Susan Allen gazed at a sunsoaked hillside cloaked in a rich autumn palette of red, gold, purple and green. The retiree from Lebanon, Ky., sat licking her lips after savoring a syrup-dipped pickle at the Morse Farm Maple Sugarworks in Montpelier, Vt., a popular stop on central Vermont’s leaf-peeping circuit.

“I love it,” she said of the pickle and the place. “The weather’s been beautiful. The scenery is gorgeous.”

Her traveling companion nodded in agreement. The two of them had heard about floods that devastated parts of the state this summer but, Ms. Allen said, they had not seen any sign of the disaster. Instead, they were in thrall of the farm’s brilliant foliage and maple ice cream, maple fudge, maple kettle corn and, well, maple everything. Morse Farm owner Jake Shattuck said his property was unscathed by the water, and quipped that Vermont “is 98% open.”

That wasn’t the case in downtown Montpelier, just 3 miles away. When record rain fell in July, causing the dangerous flooding, two deaths, millions of dollars in damage and hundreds of rescue missions across the state, Montpelier’s vibrant

downtown of shops, restaurant­s and state offices was transforme­d into a muddy wasteland. Montpelier, the capital of Vermont, was one of the hardest hit cities in an extreme weather event Gov. Phil Scott described as “historic and catastroph­ic.”

On Oct. 6, Montpelier

threw a street party and celebrated the reopening of a handful of businesses but the city’s largest hotel, the Capitol Plaza, remains shuttered. Most of the town swirls with constructi­on dust and reverberat­es with the din of power tools as downtown businesses labor

to reopen by the end of the year.

In early September, Vermont tourism officials launched a $200,000 marketing campaign proclaimin­g the state “Very Much Open.” The goal is to reassure visitors that Vermont is ready to welcome them, not only the 1

million visitors who come every year to see Vermont’s famous display of fall foliage, but also the more than 3 million skiers who follow.

As the marquee on one of Montpelier’s movie theaters wryly announced in black lettering, “We will be back after a brief intermissi­on.”

Wettest month ever

According to the National Weather Service in Burlington, Vt., up to 2 feet of rain fell on Central and Southern Vermont from June through August, making 2023 the wettest summer on record for the state. Over a foot of rain fell in Montpelier in July, its wettest month ever.

On July 10, 5 inches of rain fell in Montpelier. Water poured down city streets and turned the downtown business district into a lake. Photos of residents paddling canoes near the golden dome of the Vermont State House were splashed across national newspapers, broadcast news and the internet.

At Bear Pond Books on Main Street, staff had prepared for the worst before the deluge by moving all the books 2 feet off the ground. They underestim­ated.

“Much to our horror, it rose to 4 feet,” recalled Robert Kasow, a co-owner. The store lost 3,000 books, most of its furniture and all its computer records. Some 125 businesses were damaged in Montpelier, a city of 8,000 people.

In Ludlow, Vt., water and rocks flowed down the trails of the Okemo Mountain Resort ski area to the downtown area, destroying homes and businesses. Across the state, some 6,000 people and more than 150 municipali­ties have applied for disaster assistance from the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Damage is expected to exceed $200 million, comparable to Tropical Storm Irene in 2011.

A toll on tourism

The summer washout took a toll on Vermont’s $3 billion tourism industry. In a typical year, 13 million people flock to the small state of 647,000 people to enjoy hiking, biking, leaf peeping and skiing. This year, summer tourism was down 10% to 15%, but dropped as much as 50% to 90% in the weeks after the flood in the small number of towns that experience­d severe flooding.

“In the aftermath of the flooding, there were a lot of questions and concerns in the public in terms of whether Vermont was ready for visitors to come back or not,” said Heather Pelham, commission­er of Vermont’s tourism and marketing agency. The goal of the “Very Much Open” campaign is “to encourage visitors to come back so that they could see that they were really as much a part of our recovery as residents.”

Vermont is world renowned for its vivid fall foliage. “We have a great mix of species in our forests that result in a diversity of colors on the landscape: Yellows from birches, oranges from sugar maples, scarlet reds from red maples and darker reds from species like oaks and ash,” said Josh Halman, forest health program manager with the Vermont Department of Forests, Parks and Recreation. “Having hills and mountains where folks can see this diversity in many locations helps too.”

But leaf peeping, which contribute­s around $600 million to Vermont’s economy, is facing multiple challenges, including Canadian wildfires, record-breaking rain and climate change. This year’s damp summer contribute­d to the spread of leaf disease that caused some leaves to have black spots and drop early.

Compared to years past, “our falls are getting warmerwith climate change and generally this is leading to the onset of fall foliage later,” said William Keeton, professor of forest ecology and forestry at the University of Vermont. Higher temperatur­es “might mean that trees maintain their greenness longer with less vibrancy of colors. Or it happens a little later. Or it’s for a shorter time period. Or maybe a little bit less brilliant.”

“Vermont has the most spectacula­r fall foliage in the world,” Mr. Keeton said. But pinpointin­g the mythical moment of “peak foliage” is getting harder to predict.

“Each year the great reveal of color is a bit of a mystery right up until the end,” he said.

Leaf peeping after the deluge

Despite damage in some localities, most of Vermont was unaffected by flooding. Fall foliage hotel occupancy levels in Stowe are at an alltime high, said Carrie Simmons, executive director of the Stowe Area Associatio­n, a nonprofit tourism agency.

“Stowe is one of the best places for leaf peeping in the country,” she said. As the town’s October traffic jams might indicate, many visitors agree.

About two hours south, in Weston, Vt., visitors crowded the narrow aisles at the Vermont Country Store on a brilliant October day. Well-worn wooden floorboard­s creaked underfoot in the family-owned store that dates to 1946. The racks were crammedwit­h “the practical and hard to find,” including checkered flannel, cheese, maple treats, locally made Darn Tough socks, and all manner of Vermontian­a.

Sheena Smith, the store’s director of retail, said that more than a million people visit the store each year, but there has been a roughly 20% drop in traffic since the summer floods. Weston and nearby Ludlow were flooded, butthe store was not.

“Unfortunat­ely, we still hear it to this day that people think they can’t get here. And then when they do, they’re quite surprised,” she said.

Across the village green, theWeston Playhouse, home to the storied 87-year-old theater company beloved by Broadway actors and its nightly audiences, sits empty. On July 10, the West River poured into the theater’s basement and forced the closure of the playhouse until at least next summer. But the actors improvised, moving their performanc­es across the road, to the company’s smaller theater at Walker Farm. They put on the musical, “Singin’ in the Rain,” and even made it rain — outside, visible from the building’s interior through a raised delivery door.

“We thought it was a little bit too soon to have everybody watch it rain inside the theater,” said Susanna Gellert, executive artistic director of the Weston Theater Company.

On a recent fall day, Ms. Gellert stood outside as tourists photograph­ed the picturesqu­e white theater. “They should be coming back,” she said of the visitors. “There is no more glorious spot than right here, truly.”

 ?? Charles Krupa/Associated Press ?? Flood debris has been gathered and stacked along a street near the state Capitol in downtown Montpelier, Vt., in August.
Charles Krupa/Associated Press Flood debris has been gathered and stacked along a street near the state Capitol in downtown Montpelier, Vt., in August.

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