NEWS

Bernie's Big Day is here: Event guide

April Burbank
Free Press Staff Writer

Tuesday's big Bernie Sanders presidential campaign event will be equal parts homecoming and political spectacle.

The independent senator has pulled together plenty of Burlington symbolism: Sanders expects to stand on public land he fought for in the 1980s as he announces his presidential ambitions — while spectators munch Ben & Jerry's ice cream at the free, non-ticketed event in Waterfront Park.

Burlington-based band Mango Jam will play in the park. Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield, of ice-cream fame, and Bill McKibben, the Vermont environmentalist and author, are expected to speak.

Plans for the event came together less than week before the big day, as Sanders campaign staffers unpacked a national campaign headquarters on Church Street. Volunteers on Friday had begun to call New Hampshire residents. The workers were surrounded by cardboard boxes and "Join the political revolution today" T-shirts.

The Vermonty kickoff is likely to draw people from across the state and beyond for the start of what Sanders and staff have described as a grassroots campaign for the Democratic nomination.

Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-VT, speaks at a rally in September, 2013, in front of the White House for government contract workers as part of a one-day strike for better wages.

Richard and Margy Gerber of New York state plan to drive five hours to catch Sanders' hometown announcement. They also want to visit family in Burlington.

"I don't think I've ever been at a campaign announcement event in my life," Richard Gerber said.

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Gerber remembers marching into Sanders' office during a visit to Burlington several years ago and telling a staffer that Sanders should run for president. Elevator doors opened, and Gerber suddenly found an opportunity to share the same message face-to-face with the senator himself.

"He sort of looked at me like I was crazy, I think, and just sort of thanked me for my support and got off of the elevator and went into his office," Gerber said, adding that he'd like to think his encouragement had something to do with the senator's decision.

Does Sanders have a shot at the presidency? "I'm realistic that it's not likely to happen," Gerber said, "but it'd be nice if it did."

The campaign kickoff is set for 5 p.m. Tuesday in Waterfront Park, with music and ice cream starting at 4:30 p.m. A separate "people's assembly" is planning to rally starting at 2 p.m. in City Hall Park before walking to the waterfront.

Burlington last experienced a presidential announcement in 2003, when Democratic candidate and former Gov. Howard Dean spoke to a crowd on Church Street Marketplace.

The Burlington waterfront can accommodate thousands of Sanders fans, ice cream eaters and curious onlookers, but the location was the campaign's second choice.

"The original conversation was around using Contois, which is the auditorium in City Hall," said Jesse Bridges, who oversees city parks and buildings as director of Burlington's Department of Parks, Recreation and Waterfront.

Contois Auditorium can hold about 300 people.

"It became pretty clear pretty quick that there was going to be a few more people wanting to attend," Bridges said.

Plan B was Waterfront Park, looking out over Lake Champlain.

As mayor of Burlington, Sanders initially supported a waterfront development project and then joined an effort in the late 1980s to preserve waterfront land for public use, a fight that went to the Vermont Supreme Court.

"It's something that he's very proud of," said Sanders campaign spokesman Michael Briggs, "and people in Burlington, I think, appreciate that."

In a contract with the city signed less than a week before the event, the Sanders campaign agreed to pay a $3,100 fee to hold the kickoff in Waterfront Park, plus an additional $800 to hold Memorial Auditorium on Main Street in case of rain.

"The park can handle it very well space-wise," Bridges said. The campaign had yet to announce an expected crowd size, but Bridges guesses at least 2,000. The event is free and open to the public, though the campaign has asked people to RSVP. The bad-weather alternative at Memorial Auditorium can hold 2,500 people.

Glass containers are banned from the park, and city ordinances prohibit alcohol consumption. Burlington discourages dogs at events with large crowds.

Like any other event, the rally will be subject to the city's decibel limits for amplified sound. The contract with the city requires amplified sound to end at 7 p.m. Parks and Recreation staff will be on hand monitoring noise.

Parking could become a challenge: The city encourages people to use the Burlington Bike Path, take the free College Street shuttle bus or walk from downtown parking garages. No parking is available on-site.

"We are always proponents of biking and walking to our parks, and using public transportation," Bridges said.

Note: This article has been updated to reflect the Sanders mayoral administration's initial support for a Lake Champlain waterfront development project prior to the Vermont Supreme Court case about the use of waterfront land.

Contact April Burbank at 802-660-1863 or aburbank@freepressmedia.com. Follow her on Twitter at www.twitter.com/AprilBurbank.

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If you go:

What: Bernie Sanders' Official Presidential Campaign Kickoff.

When: 5 p.m. Tuesday.

Where: Waterfront Park, or Memorial Auditorium at 250 Main Street in case of bad weather.

Parking: Burlington recommends parking in downtown parking garages and walking, biking or taking the CCTA College Street shuttle to the waterfront.