Editor’s note: WCAX News updated this story with a statement from Burlington Mayor Emma Mulvaney-Stanak, which is linked at the bottom.
BURLINGTON, Vt. (WCAX) – Efforts to keep people safe in downtown Burlington continue. Many agree there is no easy or quick solution, but city leaders say they are working on new ways to hold people accountable.
Meanwhile, business leaders said they are nearing a breaking point and many say they avoid the city altogether.
City employees cleaned up City Hall Park on Wednesday morning, just days after an ordinance was passed asking to do just that.
“Our public spaces must be safe for everyone, and they must be usable by everyone, but the solutions to these complex challenges are far from easy. They are not fast, and they are certainly not simple,” said Mayor Emma Mulvaney-Stanak, P-Burlington.
In her monthly media briefing, the mayor did not shy away from the issues the state’s biggest city faces, pointing to a trio of challenges, including substance abuse, mental health and the housing crisis.
“The challenges are very difficult to address on our own as a municipality,” Mulvaney-Stanak said.
She continued to call on the state to help with things like mental health and substance abuse treatment, but rejected the governor’s offer of more law enforcement, believing more police could move progress in the wrong direction.
“If anything, we need to really know what evidence shows us, which, when you get people’s basic needs met, which includes shelter, which includes adequate health care, and includes being able to be fed and clothed and whatnot, that actually brings people’s risk level down, and that’s the work we’re doing,” the mayor said.
But Burlington police have already beefed up their presence in the city. Data from the department shows an increase in foot and directed patrols since 2020.
“The data is very, very clear that we are seizing every opportunity to hold people accountable and then make an arrest,” Burlington Interim Police Chief Shawn Burke said.
City leaders say help is on the way, with programs rolling out intended to help… Like the Situation Table that will bring city leaders together to identify those most at risk in the community and match them with support services… And the City Circle, a restorative justice initiative meant to hold offenders accountable.
“Really, I hope that folks will seize upon the restorative justice aspect of this. and find their way to any one of the treatment providers that we do have serving the community, that would be fantastic because I have done this job long enough to know that we are not going to arrest our way or fine our way out of this crisis,” Burke said.
City Councilor Melo Grant agrees, arguing that some of the concerning behavior is not always criminal and that current statutes won’t keep people away.
“A lot of these ordinances that people are deeply concerned about– people won’t be held,” said Grant, P-Central.
Click here for the mayor’s statement on supplemental law enforcement resources.