• Rejecting treatment keeps White River Junction sex offender in prison

    Lucinda Smith, left, listens with her attorney Leah Henderson in Windsor Superior Court in White River Junction on Monday. Smith admitted to violating her probation while serving a sentence for sexual assault. Photo by Jennifer Hauck/Valley News
    This story by Jordan Cuddemi was published by the Valley News on July 15.
    WHITE RIVER JUNCTION — A 48-year-old White River Junction woman who was scheduled to be released from prison next week after serving a seven-year sentence for sexually assaul
  • JAG Productions to close, citing ‘crisis facing the arts’

    JAG Productions to close, citing ‘crisis facing the arts’
    Jarvis Green, founder and artistic director of JAG Productions, in his dressing room at the Briggs Opera House in White River Junction, in April 2023. File photo by Alex Driehaus/Valley News/Report For America
    This story by Nicola Smith was first published by the Valley News on April 24.JAG Productions, the White River Junction theater company that has championed the work of Black and LGBTQ+ artists, has announced that it is closing in June after eight years of bringing groundbreaking work to t
  • Final Reading: Vermont House, Senate may be at odds over a proposed fee on electric vehicles

    Final Reading: Vermont House, Senate may be at odds over a proposed fee on electric vehicles
    Rep. Sara Coffey and Sen. Andrew Perchlik. Photos by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerOne of the biggest questions facing transportation policymakers today — not just in Vermont, but across the country — is about balance. As more people switch to electric vehicles, how should states make up the lost gasoline tax revenue, while still keeping EV adoption attractive? Vermont’s Agency of Transportation is working up a replacement for the money that EV users don’t pay at the pump:
  • ‘Provider burden’ bill passes Senate, despite last-minute effort to pump the brakes

    ‘Provider burden’ bill passes Senate, despite last-minute effort to pump the brakes
    Sen. Ginny Lyons, D-Chittenden Southeast, listens to discussion on the floor of the Senate at the Statehouse in Montpelier on Wednesday, April 17. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger
    Vermont’s Senate passed a bill Friday aimed at streamlining interactions between health care providers and insurers, after a flurry of last-minute back-and-forth over the legislation. Lawmakers rejected a push to delay some of the provisions of the bill, H.766, but adopted an 11th-hour amendment changing the
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  • Windham school lawsuit moves ahead but most claims dismissed

    Windham school lawsuit moves ahead but most claims dismissed
    Windham Elementary School. File photo by Mike Faher/VTDigger
    Parents in the tiny Windham School District, who sought through a lawsuit to have the district pay tuition to send students elsewhere, have had a majority of their claims dismissed. But Windham Superior Court Judge David Barra allowed a central part of the suit to continue on allegations that Windham Elementary School, which while operating last spring had fewer than 20 students, failed to meet the state’s educational quali
  • Court officer fired over alleged comments to jurors leading to tossed verdict in sexual assault case

    Court officer fired over alleged comments to jurors leading to tossed verdict in sexual assault case
    Stock photo by Sora Shimazaki via Pexels
    A court officer has been fired over comments he reportedly made to jurors that prompted a judge to throw out a guilty verdict in a sexual assault case.Windsor County Sheriff Ryan Palmer said Thursday that Cpl. Mark Belisle, who had been suspended pending the results of an investigation, was terminated from the sheriff’s department on April 19.Palmer said Barre City Police Chief Brad Vail conducted the probe into Belisle’s conduct during the t
  • Judge rejects another bid by Ariel Quiros to shorten his prison sentence in EB-5 fraud scandal

    Judge rejects another bid by Ariel Quiros to shorten his prison sentence in EB-5 fraud scandal
    Ariel Quiros leaves U.S. District Court in Burlington after being sentenced to five years for his role in the EB-5 fraud case on April 29, 2022. File photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger
    A bid by former Jay Peak Resort owner Ariel Quiros seeking to reduce his five-year prison sentence in the largest fraud case in Vermont’s history has been denied for a second time.Judge Geoffrey Crawford, who sentenced Quiros in April 2022 for his role in the EB-5 scandal that rocked the state, issued a ruling
  • Burlington budget deficit grows to $13 million

    Burlington budget deficit grows to $13 million
    Burlington Mayor Emma Mulvaney-Stanak listens during a meeting of the City Council on Monday April 15. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerBurlington Mayor Emma Mulvaney-Stanak on Thursday said the city’s $9 million budget deficit has now swelled to nearly $13 million due to a miscalculation of employee benefit costs and other increasing expenses.The new deficit forecast comes after a more accurate analysis of employee benefit costs was completed for the next fiscal year. Salary growth and emp
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  • Brianne Goodspeed: VTDigger’s story on the sale of Chelsea Green lacked depth and perspective

    Brianne Goodspeed: VTDigger’s story on the sale of Chelsea Green lacked depth and perspective
    This commentary is by Brianne Goodspeed, senior editor at Chelsea Green.
    As one of the employee owners who will benefit from the sale of Chelsea Green Publishing to “international publishing behemoth” Mondadori, I found your story about the sale (“Chelsea Green to be sold to international publishing behemoth”), as well as your characterization of the company and the company’s cofounder and publisher, Margo Baldwin, to be lacking in depth and perspective. I’d
  • Liz Medina: ‘Same old rich man strategy’ used to oppose workers’ rights — with a new twist

    Liz Medina: ‘Same old rich man strategy’ used to oppose workers’ rights — with a new twist
    This commentary is by Liz Medina, executive director, VT AFL-CIO.
    What keeps the few in power over the many?It’s simple: divide and conquer. The “same old rich man strategy” — in the words of the artist collective the Peace Poets – is as old as the institutions of colonization and slavery. The British Empire and the emerging plantation class in the United States stoked racial resentments to prevent landless Europeans and enslaved Africans from standing together acr
  • Final Reading: New USDA program aims to help towns access federal disaster relief

    Final Reading: New USDA program aims to help towns access federal disaster relief
    Boaters paddle through the flooded intersection of Main and State Streets in Montpelier on Tuesday, July 11, 2023. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger
    As head of the Center for an Agricultural Economy in the Northeast Kingdom, Sarah Waring was surprised by the number of rules the federal government had for a grant to build a simple wooden pavilion in a park in Hardwick. The U.S. Department of Agriculture told staff, “‘oh, but you actually need to separate the design from the build.
  • Vermont’s new fair and impartial policing policy aims to reduce bias based on citizenship

    Vermont’s new fair and impartial policing policy aims to reduce bias based on citizenship
    Photo via Adobe Stock
    The Vermont Criminal Justice Council has unanimously approved a selection of long-debated changes to Vermont’s fair and impartial policing policy in an attempt to curtail biased treatment of people by law enforcement based on personal characteristics.The changes, many of which centered on citizenship status, earned qualified applause from an immigrants’ rights group, which said they were a step in the right direction but did not go far enough.Last updated in Ja
  • Mike Pieciak announces reelection bid for Vermont state treasurer 

    Mike Pieciak announces reelection bid for Vermont state treasurer 
    Mike Pieciak speaks at a Vermont Democratic Party press conference in Montpelier on Tuesday, Aug. 30, 2022. File photo by Natalie Williams/VTDigger
    Mike Pieciak will run for a second term as state treasurer, his campaign announced on Thursday. The 40-year old Winooski Democrat — who is widely seen as a contender for higher office — has raked in more campaign contributions than any other statewide incumbent, according to his last campaign filing in mid-March. “I&rsquo
  • Senate’s version of budget would reduce motel program room capacity by a third

    Senate’s version of budget would reduce motel program room capacity by a third
    The Autumn Inn, a motel in Bennington that shelters unhoused people through the state’s motel voucher program, pictured in January. Photo by Carly Berlin/VTDigger and Vermont PublicThis story, by Report for America corps member Carly Berlin, was produced through a partnership between VTDigger and Vermont Public.The capacity of Vermont’s motel shelter program for unhoused people could shrink by a third for much of the coming fiscal year, which begins on July 1.The Vermont Senate pass
  • Senate passes budget that would reduce motel program room capacity by a third

    Senate passes budget that would reduce motel program room capacity by a third
    The Autumn Inn, a motel in Bennington that shelters unhoused people through the state’s motel voucher program, pictured in January. Photo by Carly Berlin/VTDigger and Vermont PublicThis story, by Report for America corps member Carly Berlin, was produced through a partnership between VTDigger and Vermont Public.The capacity of Vermont’s motel shelter program for unhoused people could shrink by a third for much of the coming fiscal year, which begins on July 1.The Vermont Senate pass
  • Bennington lawmaker pleads not guilty to DUI charge

    Bennington lawmaker pleads not guilty to DUI charge
    Rep. Jim Carroll, D-Bennington, listens at the Statehouse in Montpelier on Jan. 7, 2020.File photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger
    Rep. Jim Carroll, D-Bennington, pleaded not guilty on Thursday to driving under the influence of alcohol, first offense. The hearing had earlier been postponed because he was undergoing treatment at a rehabilitation facility.Public defender Avi Springer entered the plea on Carroll’s behalf at the Washington County Superior criminal court in Barre. Carroll appeared v
  • Vermont Senate passes $8.6 billion state budget, teeing up negotiations with the House

    Vermont Senate passes $8.6 billion state budget, teeing up negotiations with the House
    Sen. Jane Kitchel, D-Caledonia, pictured on the floor of the Senate at the Statehouse in Montpelier on Tuesday April 2, 2024. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger
    After a key vote Thursday, Vermont’s state budget is on its way to the final stages of negotiation.The Senate voted 26-2 for an $8.6 billion budget, which would take effect at the start of the fiscal year beginning in July. Having passed its own version of the budget last month, the House can now sign off on the Senate’s rewrit
  • Senate passes $8.6 billion budget, teeing up negotiations with the House

    Senate passes $8.6 billion budget, teeing up negotiations with the House
    Sen. Jane Kitchel, D-Caledonia, pictured on the floor of the Senate at the Statehouse in Montpelier on Tuesday April 2, 2024. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger
    After a key vote Thursday, Vermont’s state budget is on its way to the final stages of negotiation.The Senate voted 26-2 for an $8.6 billion budget, which would take effect at the start of the fiscal year beginning in July. Having passed its own version of the budget last month, the House can now sign off on the Senate’s rewrit
  • Jonathan Elwell: A new prison is nothing new

    Jonathan Elwell: A new prison is nothing new
    This commentary is by Jonathan Elwell of Brattleboro. He organizes with FreeHer VT and VTJustJustice and volunteers (and formerly worked) with the Brattleboro Community Justice Center.
    “The traditional closed institution has a consistent record of failure over the last 200 years. With increasing caseloads and steadily rising costs, Vermont cannot afford programs that are proven failures and will only become more wasteful of money and human potential.”These words were written not by
  • Jessica Barquist: Overdose prevention centers would provide options when people need them the most

    Jessica Barquist: Overdose prevention centers would provide options when people need them the most
    To the editor: Vermont faces an escalating opioid overdose crisis with increasing fatalities each year.  Our current care system falls short — and we must consider new research-backed ways to save lives. Next week, the Vermont Senate will vote on H.72, which would launch a pilot of an overdose prevention center, filling a crucial gap in our care framework. OPCs serve as  vital links to treatment and recovery, offering much-needed immediate support during  cris
  • For Kevin Jones ‘everything was geared toward helping other people succeed’

    For Kevin Jones ‘everything was geared toward helping other people succeed’
    Kevin Jones, of Chittenden, commutes to work in his electric car, a Chevy Bolt, in Royalton on July 12, 2017. File photo by Geoff Hansen/Valley News
    This story by Frances Mize was first published by The Valley News on April 22.SOUTH ROYALTON — Nicole Lepre, a former student at Vermont Law and Graduate School, told her professor Kevin Jones that she was interested in some of the more nuanced policy related to electric vehicles. “Then Kevin was like, ‘Well, why don’t
  • Vermont Conversation: Surviving and escaping the Twelve Tribes cult


    Tamara Mathieu and her new book, “All Who Believed: A Memoir of Life in the Twelve Tribes.” Courtesy photos
    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 August 2000, 23-year-old Tamara Math
  • Final Reading: House panel taking up major labor reforms passed last year in Senate

    Final Reading: House panel taking up major labor reforms passed last year in Senate
    Rep. Tom Stevens, D-Waterbury, and chair of the committee that created a bill that apologizes for Vermont’s eugenics movement. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger
    For close to a century, workers across the backbone of Vermont’s economy — agriculture — have been barred under federal and state laws from joining a union. A bill that passed the Senate last year, and is now being marked up in the House, would change that. S.102 would authorize a workplace of five or more agr
  • Lawsuit accuses Norwich University, former president of creating hostile environment, sex-based discrimination

    Lawsuit accuses Norwich University, former president of creating hostile environment, sex-based discrimination
    Col. Mark Anarumo in January 2020. File photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger
    A longtime Norwich University employee is accusing school leaders of sexual harassment, sex-based discrimination and creating a hostile environment, according to a lawsuit filed this week.Elizabeth Kennedy, Norwich’s former vice president of development and alumni relations, accused top university leaders — including former president Mark Anarumo — of years of inappropriate and sexist behavior, according t
  • Incarcerated man dies in palliative care at New Hampshire facility 

    Incarcerated man dies in palliative care at New Hampshire facility 
    A 73-year-old man incarcerated by the state of Vermont died on Monday while receiving palliative care at a hospice facility in New Hampshire, according to the Vermont Department of Corrections.Roy Patten, of Lebanon, New Hampshire, had been taken April 9 from Southern State Correctional Facility in Springfield to the Springfield Hospital emergency department “after exhibiting signs of medical distress,” the corrections department said in a press release Wednesday evening. He was
  • Mitch Wertlieb to take over as host of ‘Vermont This Week’

    Mitch Wertlieb to take over as host of ‘Vermont This Week’
    Mitch Wertlieb. Photo courtesy of Vermont Public.
    Veteran broadcaster Mitch Wertlieb will become the new host of Vermont This Week, according to Vermont Public, ending the station’s nearly year-long search for a moderator. Since longtime host Stewart Ledbetter stepped down last May after nearly 17 years, the weekly television show has relied on a rotation of guest hosts, including Wertlieb, to helm the program.Wertlieb’s first show in his new role is expected to be Friday, May
  • In divided decision, Senate committee votes to recommend Zoie Saunders as education secretary

    In divided decision, Senate committee votes to recommend Zoie Saunders as education secretary
    Education Secretary Zoie Saunders speaks at her confirmation hearing before the Senate Education Committee at the Statehouse in Montpelier on Tuesday, April 23. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger
    The Senate Education Committee voted 3-2 on Wednesday to favorably recommend Zoie Saunders as the next education secretary.The Senate is expected to vote on Saunders’ confirmation next week. She needs the support of a majority of the 30-member body, though the chamber currently has one vacancy due t
  • Kurn Hattin Homes for Children fined for water system violations

    Kurn Hattin Homes for Children fined for water system violations
    The original building of Kurn Hattin Homes for Children in Westminster. File photo by Kevin O’Connor/VTDiggerThe state has fined Kurn Hattin Homes for Children $6,750 for regulatory violations related to the operations of its in-house water system. During a routine inspection in March 2022, the Agency of Natural Resources’ Department of Environmental Conservation found that Kurn Hattin had not completed a mandatory testing of its water filter vessels, nor had it updated the sys
  • VTDigger spring members support local journalism and send 2,072 new books to Vermont children

    VTDigger spring members support local journalism and send 2,072 new books to Vermont children
    Libbie Sparadeo, Director of Membership & EngagementMaggie Cassidy, Managing EditorPeter D’Auria, Human Services and Health Care ReporterFlorencio Terra, Membership ManagerK. Feigenbaum, Northeast Kingdom ReporterEthan Weinstein, Southern Vermont, Education and Corrections ReporterKristen Fountain, Senior EditorAuditi Guha, Northwest and Equity Reporter/EditorNatalie Williams, Senior EditorTaylor Haynes, Product Design DirectorJuan Vega de Soto, InternGlenn Russell, Photographer
    Some V
  • Cheryl Burghdurf

    Cheryl Burghdurf
    Born March 8, 1945Auburn, New YorkDied Middlesex, VermontApril 21, 2024Cheryl Burghdurf, 79, of Middlesex, VT, began her spiritual adventure at 12:26pm, on April 21, 2024 after a long battle with Myelofibrosis, a blood cancer. She was born March 8, 1945 in Auburn, NY. The middle child of James and Erta Burghdurf, Cheryl was grateful to her favorite older brother, Jimmy, and to her favorite younger brother, Gary, for their laughter and love.Cherie graduated from SUNY-Cortland and the University o

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