• Pot And Education Spending: What Happened In This Week's Veto Session bit.ly/2t0Lz5t https://t.co/tkv0pjKTBK

    Pot And Education Spending: What Happened In This Week's Veto Session bit.ly/2t0Lz5t https://t.co/tkv0pjKTBK
    Pot And Education Spending: What Happened In This Week's Veto Session bit.ly/2t0Lz5t https://t.co/tkv0pjKTBK
  • Final Reading: Service providers are wary of looming changes to Vermont’s case management structure

    Final Reading: Service providers are wary of looming changes to Vermont’s case management structure
    Rep Ann-Donahue, R-Northfield, third from left, speaks during a meeting at the Statehouse in Montpelier on Thursday, January 25. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger
    For years, the state of Vermont has been out of compliance with federal rules around home and community-based services.The state’s system for caring for older Vermonters, Vermonters with physical and developmental disabilities, and Vermonters with traumatic brain injuries is operating in violation of federal regulations governing
  • Suspect in arson at Sen. Bernie Sanders’ office indicted, ordered held pending trial 

    Suspect in arson at Sen. Bernie Sanders’ office indicted, ordered held pending trial 
    The damaged door at Sen. Bernie Sanders’ office in Burlington. Photo via police affidavit
    BURLINGTON — A former California man accused of setting a fire at the Burlington office of U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders was indicted Thursday on a federal charge and ordered held in custody while the case against him remains pending. A federal grand jury returned the indictment against 35-year-old Shant Michael Soghomonian roughly five minutes prior to a scheduled hearing to determine if he wo
  • Suspect in arson at Sen. Bernie Sanders’ office indicted, ordered detained pending trial 

    Suspect in arson at Sen. Bernie Sanders’ office indicted, ordered detained pending trial 
    The damaged door at Sen. Bernie Sanders’ office in Burlington. Photo via police affidavit
    BURLINGTON — A former California man accused of setting a fire at the Burlington office of U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders was indicted Thursday on a federal charge and ordered held in custody while the case against him remains pending. A federal grand jury returned the indictment against 35-year-old Shant Michael Soghomonian roughly five minutes prior to a scheduled hearing to determine if he wo
  • Advertisement

  • Senate panel advances Act 250 reform bill, while Phil Scott signals potential veto

    Senate panel advances Act 250 reform bill, while Phil Scott signals potential veto
    Gov. Phil Scott speaks during his weekly press conference at the Statehouse in Montpelier on Wednesday, April 17, 2024. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger
    This story, by Report for America corps member Carly Berlin, was produced through a partnership between VTDigger and Vermont Public.A key Senate committee has advanced a major bill that includes updates to Act 250 and a range of policies intended to encourage more housing development in Vermont. But hours before the vote, Gov. Phil Scott argued
  • Torn apart by chaos in Afghanistan, a refugee family is reunited in Bennington

    Torn apart by chaos in Afghanistan, a refugee family is reunited in Bennington
    Afghan refugee Musa Muslim Yar, second from right, recounts how he and his wife were separated for two years from their two older sons, Mustafa, second from left, and Nawedullah, right , at their home in in Bennington on Friday, April 12. Younger brother Shahidullah is at the far left. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerTo many in Vermont, Feb. 26 was just another Monday, the first day of another week at school or at work. To Musa Muslim Yar and his wife, Zakia, it was a day they’d been dream
  • Rep. Monique Priestley: ‘Every breath you take, every move you make…’

    Rep. Monique Priestley: ‘Every breath you take, every move you make…’
    This commentary is by Rep. Monique Priestley, D-Bradford. She serves on the House Committee on Commerce and Economic Development.
    Of the 20 largest economies in the world, the U.S. is the only country that lacks a comprehensive framework establishing rights and protections for the collection, use and sharing of data. In a time when everyone owns a computer, carries a smartphone, drives a connected car, and owns a variety of smart devices, every beat of your heart, movement you make and conversa
  • Dr. Marvin Malek: We need to act to rein in ‘prior authorization’

    Dr. Marvin Malek: We need to act to rein in ‘prior authorization’
    This commentary is by Marvin Malek, MD MPH. He is an internist from Berlin. He is an active member of the Vermont Medical Society and Vermont Physicians for a National Health Program.
    The Legislature should pass H.766, the bill now being considered by the Vermont Senate that takes some first steps reining in the insurance company practice of “prior authorization.” Here’s how prior authorization works: Let’s say that you’ve been dutifully paying your health ins
  • Advertisement

  • 3 days left! All gifts matched today

    3 days left! All gifts matched today
    Dear reader,There are only 3 days left in our critical spring member drive and right now, all gifts will be matched by three generous donors. Your gift in any amount will have double the impact and you’ll also send a brand-new book to a Vermont child. Now is the time to show your support and make it go twice as far! Will you join us?
    Double your impact & send a book
    As a digital-first organization dedicated to original reporting, VTDigger doesn’t have high printing costs or
  • Vermont Conversation: Father Michael Lapsley on becoming a healer after assassination attempt


    The Vermont Conversation with David Goodman is a VTDigger podcast that features in-depth interviews on local and national issues with politicians, activists, artists, changemakers and citizens who are making a difference. Listen below, and subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts or Spotify to hear more.In 1990, when Nelson Mandela was released after 27 years in prison, hopes were high that apartheid was in its dying days. Father Michael Lapsley, an Anglican pr
  • Final Reading: Bill in Senate proposes removing barriers to professional licensing for new immigrants

    Final Reading: Bill in Senate proposes removing barriers to professional licensing for new immigrants
    Members of the Senate Government Operations Committee listen to testimony at the Statehouse in Montpelier on Wednesday. From left to right are Sen. Tanya Vyhofsky, P/D-Chittenden Central; Sen. Ruth Hardy, D-Addison; Sen. Becca White, D-Windsor; Sen. Alison Clark, D-Windsor. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger
    Ian Hefele wants the services people receive in his Brattleboro-area community to be culturally appropriate to the backgrounds from which they come. Case in point, he told lawmakers earli
  • With looming vote to close Roxbury’s school, town sues Montpelier Roxbury school district

    With looming vote to close Roxbury’s school, town sues Montpelier Roxbury school district
    Roxbury Village School.
    The town of Roxbury has sued the Montpelier Roxbury Public School District alleging the district violated election law and needs to revote on its original budget, which failed on Town Meeting Day.The legal action comes as the school district is scheduled to vote at the end of April on a revised budget that would close Roxbury Village School, which currently serves about 40 students. That plan would mean bussing Roxbury’s students to Montpelier starting next school
  • Disagreement and lobbying threaten passage of Vermont’s landmark data privacy bill

    Disagreement and lobbying threaten passage of Vermont’s landmark data privacy bill
    Kesha Ram Hinsdale and Michael Marcotte. Photo by Mike Dougherty/Courtesy photo
    As Vermont legislators filtered back into the Statehouse early this year for the 2024 legislative session, several set their sights on a new target for regulation: Big Tech.With the federal government unable or unwilling to set parameters around the collection, sharing or sale of Americans’ data, state lawmakers said they would step up to the plate to establish state-level digital rules by which corporations w
  • Chelsea Green to be sold to international publishing behemoth

    Chelsea Green to be sold to international publishing behemoth
    Chelsea Green. Photo by Andrew Nemethy
    One of Vermont’s best-known independent publishers is expected to be sold to an international publishing consortium. Rizzoli International, a New York City subsidiary of the Italian publishing giant Mondadori Group, announced Monday that it had agreed on a deal worth $5 million for Chelsea Green Publishing. Chelsea Green, based in White River Junction, has carved out a reputation for publishing titles on progressive politics, sustainability
  • James Moffatt

    James Moffatt
    Born July 14, 1937Craftsbury, VermontDied April 13, 2024
    Craftsbury, VermontDetails of servicesThe family is planning to publicly remember Jim with an informal gathering in the summer months, details still to be determined. We will post information on the Moffatt’s Tree Farm Facebook page (which can be accessed without having an account), on our website moffattstreefarm.com, and on Front Porch Forum locally. In lieu of flowers, please consider making a donation in Jim’s name to the T
  • Aubuchon to boost its Vermont hardware stronghold by acquiring Bibens stores

    Aubuchon to boost its Vermont hardware stronghold by acquiring Bibens stores
    Bibens Ace Hardware opened its original store in Springfield in 1949. Photo by Kevin O’Connor/VTDigger
    SPRINGFIELD — Vermont’s biggest locally owned group of hardware stores is set to be purchased by what bills itself as the country’s oldest and largest family-held chain in the field.Bibens Ace Hardware has agreed to sell its seven locations in Brattleboro, Burlington, Colchester, Essex, South Burlington, Springfield and Woodstock to the Massachusetts-based Aubuchon Comp
  • Hannah Heinchon of Lowell helps young people thrive in stable housing

    Hannah Heinchon of Lowell helps young people thrive in stable housing
    As a graduate student pursuing her master’s in social work, Hannah Heinchon thought she wanted to become a child counselor. But an internship in family counseling uncovered a far greater need, that turned into a passion and a calling. “I remember I was working with a family who was homeless and living in a shelter at the time. We met weekly, but the kids continued to be dysregulated, and they couldn’t make progress. Although the dad attended all the meetings, he seemed ex
  • Sen. Tanya Vyhovsky: I’m opposed to Phil Scott’s education secretary pick, and not for the reasons he claims

    Sen. Tanya Vyhovsky: I’m opposed to Phil Scott’s education secretary pick, and not for the reasons he claims
    This commentary is by Sen. Tanya Vyhovsky, P/D-Chittenden Central. In addition to representing the Chittenden Central Senate District, she is a clinical social worker and former school services clinician working within Vermont’s public schools.
    Ordinarily in Vermont, we in the Senate give the governor great deference when it comes to whom he appoints to serve in his cabinet. While we may have policy differences with an appointee, the governor was elected by the people, and he deserves the
  • Meet Stoph Scheer, the puppeteer behind Lost Nation Theater’s new one-person play

    Meet Stoph Scheer, the puppeteer behind Lost Nation Theater’s new one-person play
    Stoph Scheer. Photo via Community News Service
    Jordan Barbour is a reporter with Community News Service, part of the University of Vermont’s Reporting & Documentary Storytelling program.Stoph Scheer gazes into the mirror and speaks: “I have to ignore you now.” She goes silent, searching for poise as she preps to go onstage. She will play 35 characters, by herself, for nearly two hours. Scheer sets her lashes in the glow of a makeup station, pulls every wayward ha
  • Laura R. Walker: Goddard College is closing. Why should we care?

    Laura R. Walker: Goddard College is closing. Why should we care?
    This commentary is by Laura R. Walker, president of Bennington College.
    Last week, Goddard College in Plainfield announced it is shutting its doors at the end of this semester. It is the fifth liberal arts college to close in Vermont in as many years. As the president of Bennington College in southern Vermont, I am alarmed and sad. I mourn not just for Goddard’s students, who have lost their academic home, as well as its talented faculty, staff and alumni, but also for Vermont and fo
  • Final Reading: Scott administration’s 11th-hour property tax idea shot down by Vermont’s treasurer

    Final Reading: Scott administration’s 11th-hour property tax idea shot down by Vermont’s treasurer
    Mike Pieciak, left, and Craig Bolio. Photos by Mike Dougherty/VTDigger
    Last Friday Craig Bolio, Vermont’s tax commissioner, arrived in the House Committee on Ways and Means with a big idea. What if, he mused, we paid for next year’s looming increase in public school spending over time? What if we, the state of Vermont, loaned some money to ourselves, and paid off the loan with property taxes?The idea, which Bolio called a “deferred payable,” was the product of a rec
  • In most Vermont counties, prosecutors are managing well over 300 cases. Officials say that has to change, and soon.

    In most Vermont counties, prosecutors are managing well over 300 cases. Officials say that has to change, and soon.
    John Campbell, executive director of the Vermont Department of State’s Attorneys and Sheriffs, speaks at a press conference at the Statehouse in Montpelier on May 2, 2023. File photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger
    Many Vermont prosecutors are handling more cases at a time than their bosses think is reasonable, data from the state’s judiciary shows. And without more state resources, those officials said, prosecutors could resign — or could have to turn cases away.Ian Sullivan is the
  • Vermont car crash fatalities begin to tick down after 10-year peak

    Vermont car crash fatalities begin to tick down after 10-year peak
    Vermont had fewer car crash fatalities in 2023 than in the previous two years, according to data from the Vermont Agency of Transportation, but the numbers are still comparatively high. The two previous years — 2021 and 2022 — were both record 10-year highs in the state, accounting for 74 and 76 deaths, respectively. With 69 car crash fatalities recorded in 2023, it’s tied with 2018 and 2013 for the third largest number of crash fatalities since 2013. One key metric
  • Only a few days left! Keep VTDigger digging in pursuit of truth

    Only a few days left! Keep VTDigger digging in pursuit of truth
    Dear reader,One of the first things we do every morning is sort through your tips. They arrive in the newsroom through voicemails, letters, emails, encrypted apps and, critically, the “submit a tip” function at the bottom of every story. That tip drop form alone received more than 1,680 story ideas last year.We follow these tips because we know readers rely on us as a first and last line of defense to help shine a light on important issues for Vermont. Now we are asking for your hel
  • Vermont’s chapter of Girls on the Run celebrates 25 years 

    Vermont’s chapter of Girls on the Run celebrates 25 years 
    Some of the 1,700 girls entered in the annual Girls on the Run 5K Run/Walk pass the starting line in 2012. File photo by Alexandra Ossola/The CommonsThis story by Victoria Chertok was first published by The Commons on April 10.BRATTLEBORO — In 1999, when her daughters were young, Nancy Heydinger said she “wanted to find a way to ensure that they would grow up loving themselves, feeling complete.”“I wanted them to celebrate and embrace their natural gifts, to know that wh
  • Bill Schubart: What are the dumbest things we do or don’t do in Vermont?

    Bill Schubart: What are the dumbest things we do or don’t do in Vermont?
    We like to think of ourselves as progressive, pioneering and aware of our neighbors’ needs. Why then do we have some of the worst socioeconomic benchmarks in America?Unsheltered: As of a January 2023 count, Vermont had the second-highest rate of homelessness in the country.Food insecurity: Twenty-seven percent of Vermonters experienced food insecurity in 2022, and families with children are more than five times more likely to be food insecure than those without.Suicide: As of 2021, Vermont
  • College decisions can be stressful: Take care of the FAFSA, and take care of yourself

    College decisions can be stressful: Take care of the FAFSA, and take care of yourself
    Between sports, theater productions, concerts, presentations, and holding down a part time job—senior year is stressful. Add graduation and saying goodbye to friends, and it can feel like a lot. Maybe too much. This year may feel even more overwhelming than usual. Delays caused by federal financial aid processes have made it even harder to answer that question that well-meaning people love to ask: what are you planning for next year? You’re not alone — planning for n
  • How a hurricane and a cardinal launched a UVM professor on a new career path

    How a hurricane and a cardinal launched a UVM professor on a new career path
    Professor Trish O’Kane and participants in her course, “Birding to Change the World,” spot a spider in the forest at Derway Island in 2016. Courtesy of The University of Vermont, photo by Joshua Brown.Before Hurricane Katrina hit her newly adopted city of New Orleans in 2005, Trish O’Kane knew next to nothing about the environment — let alone birds.O’Kane had spent much of her life working as an investigative human rights journalist in Central America and a h
  • Alice Boutin

    Alice Boutin
    Born July 29, 1925Laconia, New Hampshire
    Died April 12, 2024Rochester, New HampshireAlice Marie Ann Boutin, 98, died on Friday, April 12, 2024, under the loving care of her two daughters, Suzanne Boutin and Elizabeth McGrath DNP, and her husband, John McGrath, in Rochester, NH, where she lived the remaining three years of life. Alice’s family was with her the week before she died. Alice was born in 1925, the daughter of William and Celanaire (Blais) Boucher of Laconia, NH where she grew up
  • David Kinsley Ricklefs

    David Kinsley Ricklefs
    Born July 20, 1970Lafayette, IndianaDied April 12, 2024Middlebury, VermontAthletic, artistic, passionate, entrepreneurial — these are all words that describe who David was.As a youth, David was an elite junior ski and bike racer. David spent his formative years in York Pennsylvania, ski racing at Round Top and competing in local, national, and international bike races. David attended high school at Burke Mountain Academy in East Burke, VT, where he pursued his passion to become an elite sk

Follow @NewsVermont_ on Twitter!