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Seven years later, Brian continues to vigorously raise funds and to organize a program that has expanded to 650 students from pre-kindergarteners to fourth-graders from schools in Richmond, Jericho, Underhill, Bolton, and Huntington. In other words, his program serves every school in the Mount Mansfield Unified Union school district. The program takes place during school hours, and all transportation, equipment, instruction, and lift access is free of charge. Oh—and these days, Brian has not only learned to ski, he snowboards, too. He calls the program Snow Motion. The Path that Led Back Home Brian—known to his legions of students and parents as “Mr. G.”—is respected and revered at his school. Maybe it’s his soft-spoken manner or his respectful attitude toward everyone with whom he interacts. “He is a role model for all of us,” says parent Tam Smith, whose children attended Richmond Elementary and participated in Snow Motion. Brian was not a stranger to Richmond when he took the teaching job; he actually grew up in Richmond where his mom, Velma Plouffe, was town clerk. “It was never in my master plan to return,” he says. “It just sort of happened.” Also, to be clear: that first day of Snow Motion was not his very first time on snow; his mom brought him to Cochran’s twice as a kid. “I remember riding the T-bar,” he says. “And being scared.” in the Lincoln, Montpelier, and Stowe school districts. Along the way, he earned a master’s degree in educational leadership from the University of Vermont. By the time he returned to Richmond, he came with experience and a belief that every place has unique strengths and resources. So, what were Richmond’s strengths? What features make this place unique? He knew that Cochran’s Ski Area lay right outside of the Richmond village and he had a sense of the people who live in Richmond. From his years teaching at Stowe, he was also armed with the knowledge that Stowe has a “Friday program” in which schoolchildren set their books aside and instead ski, ride, or skate on Friday afternoons in the winter. (Ironically, Brian was relegated to “lodge duty” during his years at Stowe because he neither skied nor snowboarded.) A vision took shape. Still, there were logistics; he knew a 45-minute time block for gym class was not enough to bus stu- dents across town, get geared up, and have anything resembling a meaningful outdoor experience. “I knew I needed buy-in from the teachers,” Brian says. He therefore approached longtime fourth- grade teacher Maribeth Berliner—that is, his fourth-grade teacher—about taking two hours for alpine skiing in gym. “I knew she’d be up for anything,” Brian says. Her class became the first pilot group. Brian credits his mom as having given him every opportunity he needed in order to be successful. Now, his mission is to make sure students in his hometown and sur- rounding communities have the same op- portunities. Skiing and bicycling are units in his core curriculum (yes, he teaches kin- dergartners to ride two-wheelers). He has afterschool clubs for swimming, running, biking, and skiing. “Earlier in my career I was probably more into team sports,” he says. “Now I’m into lifetime fitness.” Maribeth isn’t the only teacher who supports Snow Motion. “Without support from our classroom teachers, the program wouldn’t exist,” says Brian. The teachers sacrifice classroom time, make sure students are properly dressed, and get them on the bus. And make no mistake: Richmond’s classroom teachers don’t get a two-hour break; rather, they are on the snow supporting Brian, Barbara Ann, and parent volunteers. “The teachers are 100 percent in,” says Brian. Richmond Elementary was not the first stop on Brian’s career path; after graduat- ing with a degree in education from John- son State College (now known as Northern Vermont University – Johnson), he taught You may ask: is taking two hours off from a school day prudent? Shouldn’t kids be studying and learning reading, writing, and arithmetic? We’re conveniently located on Rt. 9 just 2/10 mile west of Exit 2 off I-91 GOURMET TO GO FRESH PASTRIES VERMONT PRODUCTS 432 Western Ave. • Brattleboro, VT 802-257-9254 www.vermontcountrydeli.com VTMAG.COM HOLIDAY 2019 55