Jameson Davis
Hartford voter Joan Vogel talks with Hartford Selectboard candidate Jameson Davis on her way to the polls at Hartford High School in White River Junction on Tuesday. Cyndi Salazar, of White River Junction, is at left, and Selectboard candidate Mike Morris, of Quechee, is at right. Photo by James M. Patterson/Valley News

This story by Matt Hongoltz-Hetling was published by the Valley News on March 6, 2018.

[H]ARTFORD โ€” Unofficial vote tallies show the townโ€™s political winds may have shifted, replacing longtime Hartford residents and Selectboard incumbents Mike Morris and Sandy Mariotti with relative newcomers Jameson C. Davis, a law student who recently moved to Quechee, and Kim Souza, whose business has been part of White River Junctionโ€™s rapidly gentrifying downtown.

Voters also approved a $15.7 million municipal budget and a $38.2 million school district budget by significant margins, according to the tallies posted at the polls on Tuesday evening.

The candidates spent the day outside the Hartford High School polling station, exchanging greetings with voters and holding signs in the chilly March air.

Souza, 49, who moved to Hartford in 2007, was the clear front-runner with 970 votes; Davisโ€™ 708 vote tally was enough for him to snag the second seat over Morris, who garnered 580 votes, and Mariotti, who netted 498.

โ€œIโ€™m really very, very honored with that, obviously,โ€ Souza said, speaking by phone from Elixir restaurant in downtown White River Junction soon after the unofficial tallies were announced. โ€œWe just toasted to Sandy and Mike, because it was a pretty wonderful day together. Itโ€™s a bonding experience to stand 12 hours out in the cold together.โ€

Souza dedicated the win to her father, who passed away this week.

She said one of her first actions in office would be to develop a map of priorities for the townโ€™s many infrastructure needs.

โ€œIt could highlight areas that really need attention sooner, and others that can maybe wait a few years,โ€ she said.

In some ways, the new faces on the board reflect the communityโ€™s shifting character. Souza owns Revolution, a clothing boutique in downtown White River Junction that has thrived as part of a revitalization marked by a youthful and vibrant energy.

At 31, Davis, who attends Vermont Law School, will become the second-youngest member on the board, after 23-year-old Rebecca White, who was elected in 2015 at the age of 20.

Morris, 62, who owns a modular home building company, began his first term on the board in 2016, and has lived in town for nearly his entire life. Mariotti, 51, has lived in town for about 30 years, and works as a surgical technician at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center. She served two terms, beginning in 2014.

Morris and Mariotti have been at odds with White and Selectboard members like Simon Dennis over cultural issues, such as when Morris and Mariotti voted against a Dennis-initiated move to replace Columbus Day with Indigenous Peoples Day.

After the vote totals are certified, Souza and Davis will join White, Dennis (who ran unopposed this year), Alan Johnson, Dennis Brown, and Chairman Dick Grassi on the Selectboard.

Bill Brown, a real estate agent, said he cast one of his two votes for Davis, a Tesla field consultant who moved to Hartford only recently and has expressed enthusiasm for the areaโ€™s beauty.

โ€œHe has a fresh approach, looking at things with an open mind,โ€ Brown said, shortly after exiting the polling booth. โ€œHeโ€™s a thoughtful dude. I met him for two minutes, and felt like I knew him for much longer.โ€

Brown said he cast his other vote for Morris, whom he said heโ€™s known for years.

โ€œI know Mike does his homework, and he really thinks about the problem,โ€ Brown said.

The town budget passed, 1,137-321, a 78 percent majority that was virtually identical to the 79 percent support for last yearโ€™s municipal budget.

Under the budget, municipal spending is up 2.9 percent over the current yearโ€™s $15.3 million in spending; the municipal property tax rate is expected to increase by about 3 cents, or 3.4 percent, to 99.06 cents per $100 of assessed property value.

That translates into an increase of about $82 on the tax bill of a $250,000 home.

The Valley News is the daily newspaper and website of the Upper Valley, online at www.vnews.com.