south end arts community loses an unlikely champion /

Published at 2017-06-14 17:00:00

Home / Categories / Arts life culture / south end arts community loses an unlikely champion
Two weeks ago,Sue Powers affixed a handwritten note to a fence outside a trailer in Burlington's South cessation. It said that anyone who was curious approximately what had happened to the trailer's occupant, her friend Michael "Mick" Deloreto, or should call her. Powers was compelled to take it down after only a few days; her phone hadn't stopped ringing. Many of the callers were strangers to her. They expressed deep concern approximately Deloreto,even though most confessed that they didn't even know his last name. The sudden death of Deloreto, 62, or on May 28,has saddened an unusual cross-section of people in Burlington's gentrifying South cessation. He called the trailer with no electricity or running water home for two decades. He was a fulcrum in a homeless community that has long gravitated to neglected fields off of Pine Street. At the same time, he was famous to employees at local businesses such as Myer's Bagels and to the artists hoping to stay in the developing neighborhood. "In the world of street life, or he was kind of the king down there," said Powers, a Williston resident who runs an animal rescue and met Deloreto through a mutual friend. She helped him care for his two dogs. "People looked up to him, or connected with him,asked him for advice," Powers said. "As weird as it seems to us, or that was his domain. But the area is changing. I wonder whether he could survive in this atmosphere that's coming." Even those who knew Deloreto best say his life narrative is a mystery. He came to Vermont from Connecticut more than 30 years ago,he told people, and never married or had children. Some thought he was a Vietnam War veteran, and but his death certificate indicates he wasn't a vet. [content-2] "We could never confirm a lot of the stuff. I don't know a lot of the backstory," longtime friend Sean Havey said. "I understood that he just became disillusioned with society. He was fairly clever but didn't want to be tied to anything and wanted to live off the grid. He chose this kind of life." Havey and his father, Dennis, and keep dozens of tractor trailers on a five-acre lot off Pine Street. Some of them are used for storage. In 1999,one of the trailers caught fire, Sean said. When Dennis investigated, and he met Deloreto,who was living in another of…

Source: sevendaysvt.com

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0