• e-Bikes gain in popularity

    e-Bikes gain in popularity
    The cargo bike is the Clasons' primary form of transportation.  "We take it everywhere, it's essentially just a family vehicle now." said Clason. 
  • Ryan Csizmesia: Compassion without consequences is failing our schools

    This commentary is by Ryan Csizmesia, the principal of Canaan Memorial Schools.In response to VTDigger’s recent article on Vermont’s declining proficiency rates, I write not as a partisan voice, but as a principal who is in school every day. We are told by state leaders that transformation is essential and consolidation is overdue, and by union officials that data is being politicized. Perhaps all of that is true. But while leaders debate educational structure, something far mo
  • To spotlight Trump cuts to health insurance, Welch brings Vermont lawmaker to the State of the Union 

    Rep. Alyssa Black, left, and U.S. Sen. Peter Welch, D-Vt. Photos by Glenn Russell/VTDigger.
    Alyssa Black may find herself singing Talking Heads this week. On Tuesday, the Democratic state representative from Essex Town plans to travel to Washington D.C. to attend the State of the Union address as the guest of U.S. Sen. Peter Welch, D-Vt. Since receiving the invitation last week, she said she keeps repeating the line from the song “Once in a Lifetime,” that goes “Well
  • Vermont struggling to take full advantage of heat pumps

    Cody Stephenson, a contractor with Vermont Energy, installs a heat pump in October 2017. Photo courtesy of Efficiency VermontZachary Moss is a reporter with the Community News Service, part of the University of Vermont’s Reporting & Documentary Storytelling program.Heat pumps could help Vermont reach its climate goals, but several factors are making it hard to take full advantage of their potential, according to the 2026 Annual Energy Report by the Vermont Department of Public Se
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  • Vermont officials optimistic after US Supreme Court ruling against Trump tariffs, but trade uncertainty persists

    U.S. Sen. Peter Welch, D-Vermont, speaks during a press conference at Leahy Burlington International Airport in South Burlington on Monday, Feb. 23. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerTheo Wells-Spackman is a Report for America corps member who reports for VTDigger.SOUTH BURLINGTON — The U.S. Supreme Court ruled Friday that many of the Trump administration’s international tariffs from the past year were levied illegally. Despite ongoing uncertainty over a new set of tariffs the Whi
  • For Vermont’s favorite Olympians, there’s no rest — nor revelry — for the weary

    Vermont skier Mac Forehand celebrates his score during the men’s freestyle big air finals Feb. 17 at the 2026 Winter Olympics in Italy. Photo by Abbie Parr/Associated Press. For Vermonters returning to everyday routines after the escape of the 2026 Winter Olympics, take heart: Medal winners with ties to the Green Mountain State also have to go back to the grind.“So soon, like so soon,” Mikaela Shiffrin, a graduate of Burke Mountain Academy, told NBC of most skiers’ plans
  • Opening doors to care: how Open Access and CCBHC are changing mental health in Rutland County

    Community Care Network-Rutland Mental Health Services serves more than 3,500 people each year throughout Rutland County across the areas of mental health, developmental disabilities and substance use treatment and recovery services.For many people, the decision to seek help for a mental health or substance use concern doesn’t come easily. It often arrives in a brief window of courage – one phone call, one step through a door. When that moment is met with long wait times or complicate
  • Vermont recommends continued, but reduced, NEK moose hunting

    Joey Davis spends much of his time in the woods of the Northeast Kingdom. He guides moose hunts, and in the spring he combs the woods for antlers that moose have naturally shed. But he often finds something he’s not hoping for: dead moose calves, killed by winter ticks. Winter ticks are native to northeastern New England and have become a serious problem for moose in some places. Tens of thousands of them can live on just one animal, according to research published in the Canadi
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  • Benjamin Brickner: The rising stakes of Town Meeting Day

    This commentary is by Benjamin Brickner, an attorney and chair of the Pomfret Selectboard. The views expressed are solely those of the author.Vermonters will soon gather in town halls, at polling places and around well-worn tables to shape their future. Some will raise hands from folding chairs, as Elmore has done for generations. Others will mark ballots on a long Tuesday, as Killington now does. Waterbury will do both on the same day. The formats differ, but the purpose is the same: citizens
  • Six years in, long Covid is still with many Vermonters — and they say the system is failing them 

    Mary Kate Shanahan has long covid.Seen in South Burlington on Friday, February 13, 2026. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerAli knew something was wrong with her body. She’d always been an active Vermonter and a full-time nurse. But in 2024, she began experiencing shortness of breath, chest pain or sheer exhaustion after the slightest exertion. So she went to the emergency room — twice. Both times, the doctors performed a battery of tests: a chest CT scan, an echocardiogram, b
  • More cash-strapped Vermont communities seek local taxes on rooms, meals, alcohol and sales

    Signs posted in many Vermont communities call for property tax changes. Photo by Kevin O’Connor/VTDiggerAs Vermont municipalities aim to pinch pennies this March Town Meeting season, a rising number are seeking to pull in more spare change by piggybacking on state taxes and proposing their own 1% local charges on rooms, meals, alcohol and sales.Voters in almost 20 cities and towns will be asked to join the nearly 40 now accessing some combination of such fees, according to a VTDigger surv
  • Erica Fuller: AmeriCorps opens doors

    After reading VTDigger’s recent article highlighting an impressive new, young Vermonter, Matthew Carey, I want to commend him for the determination and resilience he’s shown in defying the odds. What stands out to me is the notable impact that AmeriCorps and other federally and state-funded programs have had on his life. Matthew describes the doors opened by his AmeriCorps service, such as the educational award that helps make college more affordable, and the career pathway tow
  • Young Writers Project: ‘Dear New York City’

    “I Know a Spot,” by Bradee Traverse, 17, of West Rutland.Young Writers Project is a creative, online community of teen writers and visual artists that started in Burlington in 2006. Each week, VTDigger publishes the writing and art of young Vermonters who post their work on youngwritersproject.org, a free, interactive website for youth, ages 13-19. To find out more, please go to youngwritersproject.org or contact Executive Director Susan Reid at sr
  • ‘Craftivism’ makes a comeback as local knitters spin yarns about ICE resistance

    South Burlington resident Kathy Wilder works on a new “Melt the ICE” red hat. Photo by Sophia Balunek/Sheburne NewsKathy Wilder and Anne Morgan were peacefully seated in the Marabella KidSpace at the South Burlington Public Library last Thursday, a knitting needle in each hand, yarn twined through their fingers.Wilder had already gotten to work on a project — a red triangular hat with a braided tassel — by the time the clock struck 2 p.m., when others were due to join th
  • As Vermont lawmakers work to consolidate schools, how will they handle school district debt?

    Rep. Emilie Kornheiser, D-Brattleboro, chair of the House Ways and Means Committee, speaks as the committee is briefed on the proposed 2026 state budget at the Statehouse in Montpelier in February 2025. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerVermont school districts are more than $480 million in debt from the costs of renovating school buildings, according to data from the State Aid for School Construction Advisory Board. That might sound pretty steep, but experts say it’s not necessarily a bad t
  • After 16 days in ICE custody, Steven Tendo is heading back to Vermont

    Steven Tendo, a refugee from Uganda seeking political asylum in the U.S., speaks with supporters after receiving a letter announcing a year-long stay of his deportation in St. Albans on Tuesday, November 15, 2022. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerUgandan minister, health care worker and asylum-seeker Steven Tendo is expected to return home to Vermont on Friday after being detained for 16 days, his lawyer said.U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement took Tendo, 41, into custody on Feb. 4 outside
  • Vermont settles lawsuits over foster case licenses denied due to anti-LGBTQ beliefs 

    Officials with the Department for Children and Families at a legislative meeting. Photo by Peter D’Auria/VTDiggerThe state of Vermont has settled two lawsuits brought over the Department for Children and Families’ policies surrounding care for LGBTQ foster children.The state has now revised its policies prohibiting those with anti-LGBTQ beliefs from receiving a foster license, according to court documents filed Friday.The settlements come less than a week before plaintiffs in the tw
  • Gov. Scott appoints Jack Brigham to the Vermont House

    The House of Representatives chamber at the Statehouse in Montpelier on Tuesday, Jan. 7, 2025. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerGov. Phil Scott appointed Jack Brigham to a vacant House seat Friday.Brigham will represent part of St. Albans City and St. Albans Town, replacing Casey Toof, a Republican who was serving as assistant minority leader when he resigned last month. “Jack has been active in his community and understands the issues of his constituents well,” Scott said in a s
  • Vermont Senate President Phil Baruth says he won’t run for reelection

    Senate President Pro Tempore Phil Baruth, D/P-Chittenden Central, pictured on February 3, 2026. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerUpdated 12:31 p.m.Phil Baruth, the president pro tempore of the Vermont Senate, will not run for reelection this year.Baruth, a Democrat/Progressive from the Chittenden Central district, announced his decision to retire at the end of this year’s legislative session on the Senate floor Friday.
    The pro tem lives in Burlington. He has served in the Senate since 2011.
  • Vermont seeks to join 5 states in drug-purchasing consortium

    Vermont State Treasurer Mike Pieciak pictured on Thursday, Aug. 7, 2025. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerThe pathway a prescription drug takes from a manufacturer to a pharmacy to a patient’s hands — and how its cost is determined along the way — is often an opaque and confusing one.Vermont’s state treasurer, backed by some health care-focused lawmakers, wants to make that process more transparent and make the drugs more affordable by introducing a bulk buying prescriptio
  • Vermont students are ‘well below’ proficiency goals in math and English, according to state report

    Champlain Valley School District school busses in Hinesburg on Monday, Jan. 5, 2026. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerA majority of Vermont’s students are “well below” math and English language arts proficiency goals, while the state’s public education system “is not yet consistently delivering strong and sustained outcomes for all students.”That’s according to the Vermont State Report Card, the Vermont Agency of Education’s annual assessment of stu
  • Michael M. Cohen: Build bridges, not walls

    This commentary is by Rabbi Michael M. Cohen, rabbi emeritus of the Israel Congregation and Director for Community Relations for the Friends of the Arava Institute. The views expressed here are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the organizations with which he is affiliated.A Jewish sage and leader of ancient Israel who lived and worked in Jerusalem during the decades before 100 B.C., Yehoshua ben Perachyah, said, “Judge every person favorably.” We should not preju
  • Why people incompetent to stand trial could receive treatment in Vermont’s prisons

    Part of the security fence at the Southern State Correctional Facility in Springfield seen on Friday, Oct. 25, 2024. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerEveryone is innocent until proven guilty, right? If someone charged with a violent crime is deemed a threat to public safety, they might be held without bail. And if that person is also incompetent to stand trial, they could remain in prison for years until they pass a competency evaluation. But the state currently lacks a process to resto
  • Jordana Churchill and Kate Paarlberg-Kvam: You don’t get to choose the facts 

    This letter is from Jordana Churchill, an educator and member of the Vermont Coalition for Palestinian Liberation, and Kate Paarlberg-Kvam, who has spent time in the West Bank as a human rights observer.Dear Editor,As Vermonters, we write to agree with the title of Mark Treinkman’s recent opinion piece. Facts do matter in Vermont’s discourse about the actions of the State of Israel.As people of conscience whose tax dollars and elected officials have made these actions possible, the
  • Poultney man charged with first-degree murder in deadly quarry beating

    RUTLAND — Two men have been arrested in a monthslong investigation into the beating death of a Rutland County man at a West Pawlet quarry, with one of the suspects facing a charge of first-degree murder.Court records made public following the arrests over the past week show that police say the beating stemmed from a drug robbery turned deadly on the quarry property where the man who was killed lived in a camper and worked for over 20 years. Richard Mattison, 42, of Poultney, pleaded
  • Former Caledonia County victim’s advocate charged with sexually exploiting crime victim

    Vermont State Police cruiserThe Vermont State Police arrested on Thursday a former Caledonia County victim’s advocate on charges he used his position to sexually exploit a crime victim and then tried to cover it up.State Police say that last May, Anthony Jackson-Miller, 39, allegedly entered into a sexual relationship with a victim he was assigned to represent and then took steps to cover up that relationship. At the time, he was employed by the Caledonia County State’s Attorney&rsq
  • Beta Technologies board member resigns after appearance in Epstein files

    Dean Kamen. Photo by Jordan Strauss/Invision/APTheo Wells-Spackman is a Report for America corps member who reports for VTDigger.Dean Kamen resigned from the Beta Technologies board of directors Wednesday, following revelations surrounding his relationship with Jeffery Epstein.“Dean Kamen has voluntarily stepped down,” read a statement from the South Burlington-based electric airplane company in a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Thursday morning. “
  • Vermont legislators elect Henry ‘Hank’ Harder to lead state’s National Guard

    Hank Harder, a retired general and candidate to be the next Adjutant General of the Vermont National Guard, speaks before a joint meeting of the House and Senate government operations committees at the Statehouse in Montpelier on Tuesday, Jan. 13, 2026. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerMONTPELIER — Henry “Hank” Harder was elected to serve as the next leader of the Vermont National Guard on Thursday by the state House and Senate. Harder is a retired Air National Guard genera
  • Bernie heads to California to talk AI with tech leaders

    U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders, I-Vermont, speaks during a press conference with U.S. Senator Peter Welch, D-Vermont,at the Statehouse in Montpelier on Friday, February 6, 2026. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerThis story was produced in partnership with NOTUS, a publication from the nonprofit, nonpartisan Allbritton Journalism Institute. VTDigger has partnered with NOTUS to cover federal actions affecting Vermont.U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt, is in California this week during the Senate’s r
  • Brian Powell

    Born: Aug. 27, 1951Montpelier, VermontDied: Feb. 8, 2026Berlin, VermontDetails of service:Visitation will take place at Guare & Sons Funeral Home on Feb. 25, 2026, beginning at 10a.m. An informal memorial service will begin at 11:30 a.m. His interment will be private at the family’s lot at Green Mount Cemetery, followed by a reception. In lieu of flowers, please do something kind for someone, as Brian was a pillar of such kindness.Brian Powell, a strong member of the Montpelier commun

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