Editorโ€™s note: This story is by Allison Teague. It first appeared in The Commons.

Photo of Michael Obuchowski.
Michael Obuchowski, who has represented Windham 4 House district since 1973, resigned his seat last week to take the position of commissioner of the Department of Buildings and General Services.

BELLOWS FALLSโ€”Michael Obuchowski of Bellows Falls, who has represented the Windham 4 House district since 1973, was asked last month by incoming Gov. Peter Shumlin to take the position of commissioner of the state Department of Buildings and General Services.

Obuchowski resigned his House seat last week to take the post, touching off a scramble to succeed the longtime lawmaker.

In a phone interview on Friday, Shumlin said of Obuchowski that โ€œno one is smarter, works harder or has the tenacity of fighting for people without a voice.โ€

Shumlin added that โ€œObie was one of my political mentors. Looking historically, heโ€™s been a model legislator.โ€

Obuchowski said he got a crash course on what the Department of Buildings and General Services does during a visit to Montpelier last week.

โ€œI just dropped by and ended up staying all day,โ€ said Obuchowski.

The department manages many state properties, the stateโ€™s fleet of vehicles, workersโ€™ compensation claims, and all of the stateโ€™s printing and postal services, to name just a few of the tasks that Obuchowski will oversee.

โ€œItโ€™s a big agency, and heโ€™ll have his plate full,โ€ Shumlin said.

New responsibilities

When Shumlin spoke with Obuchowski initially, he told Obuchowski that he planned to emphasize energy conservation and greater use of renewable energy resources.

โ€œI donโ€™t think Vermonters really understand how much Vermontโ€™s Legislature has accomplished in this regard,โ€ Obuchowski said.

โ€œVermont is the state that leads by example in energy use and renewable resources,โ€ Shumlin said by phone.

Obuchowski said that part of Shumlinโ€™s emphasis on efficiency and conservation includes making sure that space in state buildings is used in the best way.

โ€œThere is a lot of vacant space that taxpayers are paying for,โ€ Shumlin said, adding that he knew to expect โ€œfiscal discipline on the jobโ€ from Obuchowski.

This may be one of the biggest reasons Shumlin tapped Obuchowski. Shumlin has said he intends to make fiscal responsibility at all levels of state government a priority for his administration.

With nearly every state agency seeing cutbacks over the past couple of years, Shumlin said that finding more efficient ways of conducting state business will be one of Obuchowskiโ€™s prime goals.

โ€œMike has given 100 percent to every assignment heโ€™s been given over the years,โ€ said Administration Secretary Jeb Spaulding. โ€œHis background in government, knowledge of finances, and unparalleled work ethic will be valuable in this position.”

โ€œWeโ€™re in the process of putting together the capital bill [of approximately $79 million] that authorizes bonding for projects for the Governor,โ€ Obuchowski said. He said he intends to have the bill on Shumlinโ€™s desk in the coming weeks.

โ€œMy job is going to be assuring that Vermonters get the biggest bang for their buck,โ€ Obuchowski said.

Obuchowski said that in discussions with Shumlin, his immediate goals will be communication and management.

โ€œIโ€™ll be in a listening period [in the beginning]โ€ฆ trying not to interject my thoughts or preconceived notions without having a basis in fact,โ€ Obuchowski said.

He noted that he intends to have an open door policy that is โ€œโ€ฆvery hard to [actually] accomplish โ€ฆ listening to people and taking in what they have to say seriously and not just going through the motions. I hope to be transparent and inclusive in my management style.โ€

He said he intends to be clear about what he expects from employees โ€œso they can be corrected if they veer from course.โ€

A big transition

Obuchowski said that after Spaulding stepped down from his post as state treasurer to become Shumlinโ€™s Secretary of Adminstration, he wanted to be Spauldingโ€™s successor.

โ€œI put my name in,โ€ Obuchowski said, โ€œbut by then, it was a fait accompli. I just told myself, โ€˜OK, just get on with your work, Obie.โ€™โ€

Photo of Obuchowski being applauded in the House.
Lawmakers gave Rep. Michael Obuchowski, D-Rockingham a standing ovation when House Speaker Shap Smith announced he would be leaving after 38 years.

Obuchowski said of Shumlinโ€™s appointee to replace Spaulding, former Deputy Treasurer Beth Pearson, โ€œSheโ€™s a crackerjack โ€” an exceptionally bright, talented individual. Treasury issues can be pretty esoteric and dry, but Beth has one helluva personality. I think theyโ€™re going to really enjoy her.โ€

Shumlinโ€™s offer to lead the Department of Buildings and General Services โ€œcame out of the blue,โ€ according to Obuchowski. โ€œI was frankly befuddled [at first] by the offer, but now Iโ€™m elated and overwhelmed, but mostly elated.โ€

Obuchowski said that, when he was asked to take the position, he asked Shumlin whether he could have a few days to decide. Because the discussion was highly confidential, Obuchowski was given a list of people he could talk to about the pros and cons of taking on the job.

โ€œI talked to confidantes and people from his list,โ€ he said. โ€œI got their opinions.โ€

โ€œI encouraged him, but I knew no one was going to tell him what to do,โ€ Shumlin said. โ€œHe thinks for himself. He has put heart and soul into working for the people of Rockingham, Athens, and Windham. It was a tough decision.โ€

Shumlin said as the first governor in 40 years from southern Vermont, he wanted as many people from the area around him as possible โ€œso we donโ€™t forget where we came from. Vermont doesnโ€™t end south of Route 4,โ€ he quipped.

Obuchowski said that he considers his Windham-4 constituents family.

โ€œOver the years, you get to know people,โ€ he said. โ€œPeople trusted me with some pretty personal information, talking to me as if I were part of their family.โ€That perspective will just broaden, he said, to include his new employees and the several hundred thousand Vermonters he is sure he will be hearing from in his new position.

He is clear that ties to his constituents will not be completely severed. He is confident that his former district mate, Rep. Carolyn Partridge, D-Windham, is more than up to the job of covering any gaps he leaves behind.

โ€œShe is a competent legislator, and constituents should have no hesitation in relying on her for the same things they relied on me for,โ€ Obuchowski said.

โ€œIโ€™m going to miss him very much,โ€ Partridge said. โ€œHe and I have worked together for 12 years. He has been a colleague, a mentor, and a very good friend, so I am definitely going to miss him as my district mate.โ€

โ€œThat being said,โ€ Partridge continued, โ€œI am really delighted for him and his own personal situation that this job sort of fell into his lap. He did not pursue it. Shumlin recognized what a great worker he is. He now has a wife [Clare Buckley, whom he married this summer] and two-month-old twins [Nora and Jack, who were born in November] who live in Montpelier, so it fits beautifully.โ€

Partridge said that Obuchowski has offered to help with any constituent issues that he started and that she will have to take over.โ€œI suspect we will maintain our friendship,โ€ Partridge said. โ€œWeโ€™ve talked about exercising in the morning and maybe having breakfast. Heโ€™ll be working just across the street.โ€

โ€œEssentially, I would not have the opportunity I have chosen to take on without the support [of the voters]. I wouldnโ€™t be where I am today without them,โ€ Obuchowski said.

Shumlin said he understood moving to Montpelier for Obuchowski was a big decision but โ€œworking there 365 days a yearโ€ meant getting home to Bellows Falls on weekends would be tough.

Obuchowski said that โ€œthe ability to be together more as a familyโ€ had something to do with his decision.

โ€œThe money side of the ledger, honestly no,โ€ he said, adding that โ€œthe responsibilities did,โ€ referring to both his new post and his family.

Obuchowski said he will be โ€œgraduallyโ€ moving to Montpelier over the next few months.

Asked if he shed any tears once he had made his decision, he said unabashedly, โ€œSure.โ€

Filling his seat

According to Obuchowski and Windham County Democratic Chairman Lamont Barnett of Rockingham, Shumlin asked for three names he can pick from to fill Obuchowskiโ€™s vacated seat. Obuchowski and Partridge easily won re-election last November to represent the district.

Barnett, owner of the Rock and Hammer Jewelry store in Bellows Falls, said that he is considering putting forward his own name.

Anne DiBernardo, who is currently serving on the Rockingham Selectboard, said that she was also considering putting her name forward.

Other names have been floated and details are still being worked out, Barnett said. โ€œNothing is for sure yet.โ€

Barnett said that his years of public service and work in the community qualify him for the position. He said that his focus would be on jobs, taking a look at more friendly tax codes for businesses, highway signage to promote the local businesses, and bolstering the infrastructure of the region. He specifically wants to see the Vilas Bridge project put on the fast track with โ€œmaybe some sort of cooperative Vermont-New Hampshire legislative committee, since [New Hampshire] owns the bridge.โ€

He also said he is a โ€œhuge single-payer health care supporterโ€ and would be โ€œexcited to be involved in the process of helping to shepherd that into law.โ€

DiBernardo said that serving on the Selectboard qualified her for the position as well, but admitted that she thought that โ€œMonty would be a good candidate for the seat.โ€

But her concerns and involvement in issues of homelessness and child care give her application legitimacy as well, she said.

โ€œThereโ€™s just a difference between the sexes on what our focuses are,โ€ she added.

Partridge, Obuchowski and Reed Webster will chair the caucus of 30 to 40 members, discuss names put forward, vote on three, and send them on to the Shumlin administration, Barnett said.