
This story, by Report for America corps member Carly Berlin, was produced through a partnership between VTDigger and Vermont Public.
BURLINGTON โ Jessa Salisbury had been living near the top of Battery Street in Burlington since the fall. She was the first to set up camp along the hill overlooking Lake Champlain a few months ago, she said, but not long after her arrival, more people erected tents along the path nearby.
On Friday morning, as temperatures in Burlington plummeted to some of their lowest so far this season, heavy equipment rolled down the Battery Street path and began picking up tents out of the snow.
Salisbury left Battery Street while the city workers cleared much of the encampment; knowing she wasnโt feeling well, one worker told her to โgo lay down and come back,โ she said. But when she returned about an hour later, all of her things were gone, including her Mickey Mouse backpack, which held her medications and a lockbox.
โI didnโt know I was coming back to nothing,โ she said, incredulous. โIโm pissed.โ
Burlington bans camping in public parks, but had delayed enforcing the rule on Battery Street until the cityโs new winter warming shelter opened in mid-December and winter eligibility for emergency motel rooms began, said Samantha Sheehan, a spokesperson for Mayor Miro Weinbergerโs office.
Now that those options are available, the city has decided to move forward with clearing the encampment, which consisted of about 20 structures as of last week, Sheehan said. Notice was posted in Battery Park last Thursday, she said.
Yet city shelters and local motel rooms are regularly full. Earlier this week, Weinbergerโs office sent a memo to the state Department for Children and Families, noting that the city has had to turn away people from the new warming shelter each night. Spaces at motels participating in the stateโs shelter program are also frequently at capacity, leading the state to tell unhoused Vermonters to keep calling to secure a room.

In prior years, Salisbury had utilized the stateโs motel program during the winter. This year, having heard that rooms are full, she hasnโt tried to land a spot. She said she feels mothers and families need a room more than she does. When she gets cold, she lights a candle.
โA three-wick candle goes a long way,โ she said.
In December, a candle ignited a large fire at the encampment, though no one was hurt.
Shortly before noon on Friday, most tents along Battery Street appeared to have been cleared away.
Several occupied structures remained along the path. Sheehan said that city staff โare working with 8 remaining individuals at this location to provide service connection and assist with the removal and storage of property.โ She said officials are โseeking to support them finding better shelter options in the coming days.โ
According to Sheehan, the only items removed at the encampment today โwere indicated to be trash or abandoned items by people within the encampmentโ to city workers. Some structures in the park had been vacated, she noted. Per city policy, the city stores an individualโs personal property for 30 days following an encampment removal.

Last spring, some Burlington city councilors eyed altering the cityโs camping ordinance to allow people to camp on public lands when shelters are full, but Weinberger opposed the effort, according to reporting by Seven Days.
After the state evicted hundreds of Vermonters from its expanded, pandemic-era motel housing program this past summer, Chittenden County has reported a massive uptick in the number of people living unsheltered: in tents, in cars, and on the street. Homeless service providers and advocates have expressed concerns that communities will see even greater swells in unsheltered homelessness as the state plans to continue winding down the Covid-era program this spring.
Before leaving Battery Street to try and track down her Mickey Mouse backpack โ which she hoped was held in city storage โ Salisbury considered where she would sleep now.
โI will probably just makeshift camp somewhere else โ for now,โ she said. โWhat do they expect us to do?โย
Correction: An earlier version of this story misidentified the machinery used to remove tents from the encampment.
