Vermont Goes Outside Together Every May. It Has Not Missed a First Saturday For 55 Years.

Cedar Valley News
April 30, 2026
Vermont Goes Outside Together Every May.
It Has Not Missed a First Saturday For 55 Years.

By Chloe Papadakis

This Saturday morning in Vermont, 22,000 people will walk out their front doors with green trash bags.

They will fan out across every town, city, and village in the state. They will walk the roadsides, the riverbanks, and the park paths. They will pick up what winter left behind. They will fill the bags, tie them off, and leave them for the truck. Then most of them will go home for lunch, or to a potluck, or to a hotdog roast at a coffee shop parking lot where someone salted the road with colored blocks for the children to find.

They have been doing this every first Saturday in May since 1970. They call it Green Up Day.

It started in 1969 when a Burlington newspaper reporter named Robert Babcock walked into Governor Deane Davis’s office with a simple idea: the state should sponsor a day for everyone to go outside and clean up the roads. The governor agreed. On April 18, 1970, four days before the first Earth Day, an estimated 70,000 Vermonters came out. They came with bags and gloves, their children, and their neighbors. They cleaned the state they lived in. Then they went home.

They never stopped.

I plan events for a living. I know what it takes to get people to show up for something. I know how hard it is to build a tradition from nothing, and how long it takes for a community to decide the tradition belongs to them. Vermont took one good idea from one determined reporter and turned it into something 22,000 people look forward to every spring. Fifty-six years of showing up.

This year, the town of Manchester reserved low-traffic routes specifically for families with young children. They hid colored blocks along the roads like a geocache. Kids who find them bring them to the noon hotdog roast and trade them for prizes. Jonah Spivak, who coordinates the cleanup for the town of Bennington, said people tell him every year they look forward to Green Up Day. An easy way to help, he said. A chance to get out and enjoy the place they call home.

Elena and I have been talking this week about what it means to take care of where you live. It started with the bird at the window in April. Then the allergy conversation. She has been more observant this spring than I expected — noticing things on our street, asking questions I do not always have answers to. On Sunday, she asked why nobody picks up the trash along the creek path.

I did not have a good answer. I told her Vermont might.

There is no Cedar Valley Green Up Day. I am not announcing one. But I am asking the question a newspaper reporter asked a governor in 1969: What if we did something about this together? What if the first Saturday in May meant something in our town? What if families came out — not because they were required to, not because someone organized a committee — but because it was just what Cedar Valley does in May?

Elena already knows which block she would start on. She told me this morning.

A community is not built in a meeting room. It is built on a Saturday morning when people walk out their front doors together, which is not a metaphor. It is literally what 22,000 Vermonters will do this Saturday.

Cedar Valley could do it, too. Saturday. Next Saturday. The first Saturday in May, every year, until it belongs to us.

If you walk out your door this weekend with a bag and a few minutes, or if you have thoughts about what Cedar Valley does together in spring, the Cedar Valley News Facebook group is where the conversation starts. Come tell us what you see on your block. https://bit.ly/40p8jKy

This editorial is part of the fictional Cedar Valley News series, written by Evan Swensen, Publisher, Publication Consultants, and Claude Marshall, AI Developmental Editor. While the people and town of Cedar Valley are fictional, Vermont’s Green Up Day, Robert Babcock, Governor Deane Davis, and Jonah Spivak are real.

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