Groennfell Meadery Tasting Room Credit: File Photo
U.S. Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) spoke on the Senate floor Wednesday about a Colchester business, Groennfell Meadery, whose effort to move to St. Albans and expand production is on hold due to the federal government shutdown. The meadery is waiting for three government agencies to reopen in order to proceed with its plan, said Ricky Klein, who owns Groennfell with his wife, Kelly.

Klein, 33, of  Swanton, noted that some people faced greater challenges owing to the shutdown, which was 27 days old Thursday.

“I have a regular customer who’s been going to work as an air traffic controller for three weeks without getting paid,” Klein said. “My sister is a data criminologist in Philadelphia, and she is dealing with families who aren’t sure they’re going to be able to eat next week. And here I am: I’d like to move, and this is not our fault, but the three agencies we need to be able to move are closed.”

 The craft meadery’s plan requires permitting from the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau, Klein said, as well as the approval of a $1.3 million loan from the Small Business Administration. The longer the shutdown lasts, the longer Klein expects the backup for services will be when the government reopens.

Credit: Screenshot
In his comments from Washington, Leahy described the effect of the shutdown on the Kleins’ business: “[I]nstead of expanding, Ricky and Kelly are using their stockpiles of mead to fulfill customer orders and trying to keep their new hires, rather than cut back their hours or lay them off. They just recently had to take out a loan to make payroll. They have no choice but try and hang on during the shutdown, but they are losing precious time and money in the meantime.”

The senator noted the Kleins’ concerns for other people even as their business plans are on hold. “That sense of community and care for one’s neighbors is one of the reasons I love Vermont,” Leahy said. “It’s the kind of empathy the president lacks.”

Groenfell Meadery employs 12 people and expects to add four employees for its bigger production facility, Klein said.  He and his wife founded the meadery, which produces a craft beverage fermented from honey, five years ago. “It’s kind of like a beer; it’s kind of like a cider,” Klein said. “And it’s exactly like a mead.”

A photo released by Leahy’s office pictures the senator holding a photograph of Kelly Klein with her daughter, Nora.

“Isn’t it weird?” Ricky Klein said. “But my grammy is proud.”

Sen. Patrick Leahy holding a photo of Kelly Klein and her daughter, Nora Credit: Office of Sen. Patrick Leahy

Got something to say?

Send a letter to the editor and we'll publish your feedback in print!

Sally Pollak was a staff writer at Seven Days from 2017 until she retired in summer 2023. She started as a Food contributor before transitioning to the Arts & Culture team. Her first newspaper job was compiling horse racing results at the Philadelphia...

2 replies on “Federal Shutdown Puts Colchester Meadery Expansion on Hold”

  1. That sense of community and care for ones neighbors is one of the reasons I love Vermont,” Leahy said.

    It’s interesting to note that’s exactly the reasons why the people of Vermont do NOT want the F35 bomber jet based in our residential neighborhoods. We don’t want our communities trashed by anyone, no matter who they are. And even if our own homes are not directly affected by the projected negative impact of this inappropriate and dangerous basing decision, we deeply care about our neighbors whose homes, health, safety and property values will be bombed by the F35s.

    Funny how Sen. “Paddy Warbucks” Leahy just can’t seem to understand or appreciate his own words when it comes to the F35 basing in Vermont. He sure doesnt seem to love those same qualities when it comes from everyday Vermonters who oppose the toxic future that he is forcing upon thousands of Vermonters.

  2. Shouldn’t this bring into question why the feds are responsible for this? Last time they shut down, breweries couldn’t get new lables approved. A label and logo has to go to the feds for approval.

    So much for freedom.

Comments are closed.