Obituary: Philip "Peter" Peltz, 1946-2022 | Obituaries | Seven Days | Vermont's Independent Voice

Life Lines » Obituaries

Obituary: Philip "Peter" Peltz, 1946-2022

Former legislator was a champion for Vermont and its natural environment

Published November 15, 2022 at 6:00 a.m.
Updated November 15, 2022 at 11:53 a.m.


comment
Philip "Peter" Peltz - COURTESY
  • Courtesy
  • Philip "Peter" Peltz
Philip "Peter" Peltz, 76, died on Sunday, October 16, 2022, at his home in Woodbury, Vt., after a long struggle with prostate cancer. Peter was a Vermont state legislator, a committed civic leader, an advocate for children and education, and a champion for Vermont and its natural environment.

His family was at his side throughout the illness and at his final moment. He was surrounded by his beloved wife of 49 years, Cacky; his daughter, Aysha, and son-in-law, Todd, and their children, Ellis and Maeve; and his son, Alex, and daughter-in-law, Ann, and their children, Calder and Lyla. His family carried out his wishes for a home burial on Wednesday, October 19, 2022, on his cherished Woodbury property, attended by close friends and family. He leaves behind his wife; his two children; his four grandchildren; his sister, Shawnee Unger, and her children, Tess and Katy; his closest cousins, John and Phil Kerr; and a close community of friends who loved him.

Peter was born in Albany, N.Y., on April 21, 1946, to Philip "Peter" Peltz and Elizabeth Hooper Peltz. He was raised in Sandwich, Mass., graduated from the Wooster School in Connecticut and received a BFA from the Museum School of Fine Arts at Tufts University. Peter realized early that his formal education didn't motivate him as much as working with his hands. He held many jobs prior to coming to Vermont: apple picker, frozen fish processor, cabdriver, maraschino cherry maker, boatbuilder, flower vendor at Faneuil Hall in Boston and photography teacher with inner-city children.

Peter was a carpenter by trade and a person who was loving, strong, dependable, determined, endlessly curious, a problem solver and a "bridge builder." He got involved early in local civic service in Woodbury. He served as lister, a volunteer for the Woodbury Fire Department, a justice of the peace, and a Woodbury Selectboard member. He ran his own contracting business for many years before becoming a founding partner of Vermont Vernacular Design, a design-build construction company. Following his retirement from this firm in 2003, he built several energy-efficient, low-impact homes.

Peter supported a wide range of local improvement projects with expertise, enthusiasm and a can-do spirit. He coordinated the voluntary construction of the Woodbury Community Room, adjacent to the Woodbury Community Library. He helped advise the elementary school in its purchase of land to expand the trail network and outdoor learning space. Most recently, he served on the planning committee for an outdoor classroom that will be built on this property. He coordinated the construction of the Woodbury Food Shelf using volunteer student labor from the Green Mountain Technical Career Center (GMTCC) building program. He was on the construction team for GMTCC’s renovation and new Forestry Building project. Peter encouraged teachers, administrators and students in all of these capacities, which led him to enroll in the Vermont Leadership program of the Snelling Center for Government, graduating in 2004.

He became a fierce advocate for public education while serving on the Woodbury Elementary School Board in the 1980s. He continued as a Hazen Union School Board member, as well as the Green Mountain Technical Career Center Advisory Board. His public career culminated in four consecutive terms (2006-2015) as a representative to the Vermont state legislature, where he was a member of the Education Committee. He was extremely proud of his work on the Education Committee and advocated tirelessly for the passage of Act 46. In 2008, Peter was elected by his legislative colleagues to serve on the Vermont State Colleges Board of Trustees. Peter was recognized for having been a tireless advocate for flexible learning pathways for students, twice championing legislation supporting dual enrollment in college for high school students.

Peter’s love for the property around his Woodbury home showed through his dedication to the well-being of the land and natural habitat. He maintained a working landscape through yearly firewood harvesting, logging-road maintenance and hunting. He was an advocate for land conservation and early on put his property into Land Use Practice and later into the Vermont Land Trust. He and Cacky maintained a productive vegetable garden that provided winter storage crops for his family and neighbors. He tended his flower gardens through the spring of 2022 and directed the harvesting of his last potato crop from a chair next to the rows in late September. He was an avid birder, and his last journal entry was, "Jays herald the beginning of the day, guardians of our shared space."

His love of Vermont and its institutions, land and people drove Peter to action on their behalf. We are better served thanks to friend, neighbor and Vermonter Peter Peltz. A scholarship in Peter’s name will be set up for a graduate of Hazen Union High School who is furthering their education in conservation/environmental studies. Contributions can be sent to Cacky Peltz, P.O. Box 41, Woodbury, VT 05681.

Mark your family’s milestones in the newspaper and online with Seven Days:

births • graduations • weddings • anniversaries • obituaries

Tags

Add a comment

Seven Days moderates comments in order to ensure a civil environment. Please treat the comments section as you would a town meeting, dinner party or classroom discussion. In other words, keep commenting classy! Read our guidelines...

Note: Comments are limited to 300 words.