[B]URLINGTON — Progressive/Democratic lawyer Jared Carter and Republican Paco DeFrancis are planning on running in the March City Council election against two longtime incumbent councilors.

Carter will seek the nominations of the Democratic and Progressive parties against Progressive Jane Knodell, while DeFrancis will run against Democrat Joan Shannon.

Councilors Dave Hartnett, an independent, and Richard Deane, a Democrat, are also up for re-election this cycle.

Carter, a professor at Vermont Law School and the director of the Vermont Community Law Center, said he is running as he is concerned about inequality in the city and the sale of public assets, like Burlington Telecom.

โ€œWhat makes Burlington an exceptional city is its leadership when it comes to investing in public assets,โ€ he said. โ€œI am very concerned about the sale to private entities of our public assets โ€ฆ I donโ€™t think thatโ€™s going to keep Burlington on the right path.โ€

Carter is involved in challenging the sale of BT as the Vermont Public Utility Commission considers whether to approve the sale of the utility from holding company Blue Water to Schurz Communications and ZRF Partners.

Jared Carter
Jared Carter, director of the nonprofit Vermont Community Law Center, is a professorย at Vermont Law School. Courtesy photo

Carter also said he was concerned about the status of the CityPlace Burlington project, and said the City Council should take a step to come up with a โ€œPlan Bโ€ if the current plans with developer Don Sinex donโ€™t work out.

โ€œItโ€™s the responsibility of good governance to make sure we have a plan in place if that one falls through,โ€ he said.

Carter has also been critical of the cityโ€™s policy on homeless encampments, and represented Seven Daysย in an unsuccessful public records lawsuit for a document explaining Councilor Karen Paulโ€™s initial recusal in the Burlington Telecom sale vote.

Knodell said she was planning on running on her record and her vision for an โ€œinclusive, equitable and vibrant city.โ€

โ€œIf people want to know what kind of councilor I will be, all they need to do is look at my record of what Iโ€™ve done and how I work with others,โ€ she said. โ€œThere shouldn’t be a lot of mystery about who I am, and what Iโ€™m all about.โ€

She said that the city is required to sell Burlington Telecom as a result of the lawsuit settlement with CitiBank, and the focus should be on how to move forward with the present reality.

Knodell said she would continue supporting the cityโ€™s seniors and children, and work on inclusionary zoning and progressive economic development.

Paco DeFrancis is the chair of the Burlington Republican Committee and a senior financial analyst at Keurig/Dr. Pepper/Courtesy photo

DeFrancis, the chair of the cityโ€™s Republican Party, said he thought the city was emphasizing major projects, like renovations of the Memorial Auditorium and Moran Plant, at the expense of the cityโ€™s finances.

โ€œThereโ€™s not enough pushback for these big plans,โ€ he said. โ€œTheyโ€™re noble, but are they actually doable, and how much are we biting off while weโ€™re trying to do the Burlington High School project?โ€

DeFrancis, 27, has lived in Burlington for three years and is a senior financial analyst at Keurig/Dr. Pepper. He previously ran for justice of the peace in Burlington.

He said he thought Shannon, his opponent, had done a great job, but the council as a whole should be more fiscally responsible.

โ€œThere are a lot of things I agree with Councilor Shannon on, but I think thereโ€™s a little bit more of a need for fiscal restraint,โ€ he said.

Shannon did not immediately reply to a request for comment from VTDigger on Friday, but welcomed DeFrancis into the race on Twitter.

โ€œWelcome to the race Paco,โ€ she wrote. โ€œI look forward to the debate!โ€

Aidan Quigley is VTDigger's Burlington and Chittenden County reporter. He most recently was a business intern at the Dallas Morning News and has also interned for Newsweek, Politico, the Christian Science...