• Genie Rayner: Do we see a pattern yet?

    Editor’s note: This commentary is by Genie Rayner, of Bennington, a writer and freelance editor who is a member of the Bennington group of Rights and Democracy. This was first published in the Bennington Banner on June 28.
    It took Donald Trump 13 days to sign the executive order that countermanded the xenophobic policy he set in place to separate children from their parents as they sought to cross the U.S. border from Mexico. Most of the families are seeking asylum from Honduras, El Salvad
  • Police investigate suspicious death in Corinth

    A Vermont State Police cruiser seen in Burlington on Thursday, January 23, 2025. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerVermont State Police are investigating a death after receiving a 911 call late Saturday that a man had been shot at a home on Richardson Road in Corinth.Police said troopers responded at about 11:15 p.m. and found a man unresponsive inside the residence. Emergency medical personnel pronounced him dead at the scene.The death is considered suspicious, according to a state police news re
  • Young Writers Project: ‘How many roads’

    “Snow Day” by Amelia Van Driesche, 19, of Burlington.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 sreid@
  • Then Again: In Vermont, the oldest ski patrol in the country

    Brian Lindner has delved into the history of the Mount Mansfield Ski Patrol, which he has been a member of for more than 50 years. Photo courtesy of Brian LindnerOn a March day in 2015, ski patrollers near the summit of Mt Mansfield received an urgent call: A skier two-thirds of the way down the mountain had suffered a heart attack. The man had been standing, talking with a friend, when he collapsed. A Sugarbush ski patroller, who happened to be skiing at Stowe that day, witnessed the man fall.
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  • March bond requests down 84% in Vermont’s biggest cities and towns

    A sign encourages March voting in Brattleboro. Photo by Kevin O’Connor/VTDiggerIn a sign that public concerns about affordability aren’t limited to groceries and household goods, Vermont’s most-populated cities and towns are set to ask voters this March for nearly $44 million in capital projects — an 84% drop from last year’s $275 million wish list of proposals.Only nine of the state’s 29 municipalities with at least 5,000 people are seeking bond requests for
  • Vermont bill would repeal retirement mandate for professors

    Steven Zdatny, professor of history, standing in front of his classroom at the University of Vermont. Photo by Mona AbouVia Community News Service, a University of Vermont journalism internshipVermont lawmakers have advanced a bill that would repeal a state statute requiring college professors to retire at age 70. H.532 passed the House in late January and is now in the Senate Committee on Education. If passed, the change would take effect July 1.The bill’s sponsor, Rep. Marc Mihaly,
  • Renee Seacor: Time to bring catamounts home?

    This commentary is by Renee Seacor, the Northeast Rewilding Director at Mighty Earth, working on catamount restoration in Vermont.Did you know that white-tailed deer, moose and even wild turkey were once nearly extinct in Vermont?Over the last century, wildlife professionals and communities across the region have worked together to bring back numerous species that were lost to unregulated hunting and widespread habitat destruction — at a time when our forests were nearly stripped bare. To
  • Vermont legislators hear the benefits — and costs — of road crossings for wildlife

    A young moose crosses Route 100 in Troy on Friday, June 7, 2019. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger“What you see on screen is really my worst nightmare,” Jens Hawkins-Hilke, a planner at Vermont’s Department of Fish and Wildlife, told the House Transportation Committee on Friday.“A foggy road, a large moose and a vehicle moving very quickly.”Hawkins-Hilke was pitching the committee, with a slideshow behind him, on the utility of building dedicated crossings for wildli
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  • Vermont students protest ICE in coordinated walkouts

    About 200 students at South Burlington High School protest against ICE during a walkout on Friday, February 13, 2026. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerSOUTH BURLINGTON—Holding placards and shouting slogans, scores of South Burlington High School students formed a line along Dorset Street during an organized walkout Friday afternoon to protest actions of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement across the nation.“A lot of my aunts and uncles have immigrated from Chile and Peru,”
  • Mary Just Skinner

    Born: July 7, 1946
    IndianaDied: Jan. 9, 2026
    CaliforniaDetails of service:
    There will be no funeral or calling hours, but there will be a celebration of Mary’s life at the Old Labor Hall in Barre on Saturday, June 20, 2026 at 2:00pm. Memorial contributions in lieu of flowers can be made to the Barre Historical Society or the Vermont ACLU. Condolence notes can be sent to the Skinner family at P.O. Box 412, Montpelier, VT 05601. Mary’s ashes will be interred in Middlesex at a small fa
  • Priscilla R. Baker

    Born: Sept. 7, 1946Lancaster, OhioDied: Feb. 5, 2026Middlebury, VermontDetails of servicesThere will be celebration of Priscilla’s life in the spring.Living life intentionally, building networks and connections(“Obituaries are not about the dead, but about the living and giving a person a second life.” Obit.  2016 documentary about the NYTimes Obituary Dept. )At Priscilla Baker’s preschool in Ferrisburgh, Otter Creek School, in the 1980s, a girl, maybe 4 y
  • A rare condition can send kids into fits of rage. Treatment could help — if insurance covers it. 

    Elizabeth Bechard arm-wrestles with her son as his twin sister looks on at home in Essex on Thursday, February 5, 2026. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerJust days before Christmas in 2023, Elizabeth Bechard’s 7-year-old son woke in the middle of the night, screaming. He and his twin sister had been battling winter strep infections, Bechard said, but this was different from the discomfort of a scratchy throat and fever.In the weeks that followed, he became wracked with obsessive compulsive d
  • Records: Palmer left first police job after poor performance, policy violations

    CLAREMONT — Nearly two decades before Windsor County Sheriff Ryan Palmer would face sexual misconduct charges, which led to the temporary suspension of his law enforcement certification last week, he had a short, troubled tenure with the Claremont Police Department in New Hampshire.Documents recently obtained from Claremont police shed light on the beginning of a law enforcement career mired in controversy.In September 2006, at 19 years old, Palmer was hired as a patrol officer with the C
  • Ray Pelletier: Connectivity is just the beginning

    This commentary is by Ray Pelletier, an adjunct professor at Norwich University who served on the CVFiber Communication Union District board of directors for more than four years. Vermont has invested enormous public resources into connectivity, creating Communications Union Districts and committing more than $100 million in state and federal broadband funding to expand last-mile fiber infrastructure so Vermonters can get online.That work matters. It is necessary. But it is no longer suffi
  • Should students have voting power on Vermont’s school boards?

    Rep. Peter Conlon, D-Cornwall, chair of the House Education Committee, speaks as the committee takes testimony from Secretary of Education Zoie Saunders at the Statehouse in Montpelier on Feb. 4, 2025. File photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerThe sea change underway in Vermont’s public education system will affect many — school boards, administrators, teachers and (of course!) taxpayers.But perhaps no other demographic is more affected than, well, the kids themselves.A new bill introduce
  • Norm Etkind: Act 250 expansion risks rural housing

    Dear Editor,What will rural Vermont be like after implementing the new Act 250 requirements? From Dec. 31, 2026, Act 250 permits will be required for any development, including single-family homes, in areas that meet certain criteria.  These are contained in Act 181, which reduced some Act 250 requirements in developed areas and increased them in the rest of the state.
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    These include habitat connectors, headwater streams and other areas that meet the act’s environmental
  • Settlement will keep Green River Reservoir dam operating — for now  

    Green River Reservoir dam. Photo by DEC Dam Safety ProgramA hydroelectric dam on the Green River in Hyde Park will continue operating under a settlement between the dam’s operator, state agencies and conservation and recreation groups, state officials announced at a press conference on Wednesday.”The settlement provides some certainty for the fate of the dam and Green River Reservoir State Park, although questions remain about the facility’s long-term future.“This agreem
  • ‘On our own’: Vermont is getting less help from the feds to keep elections secure

    A resident scans his Town Meeting Day ballots inside the Barre Municipal Auditorium on March 1, 2022. File photo by Mike Dougherty/VTDiggerVermont’s secretary of state says it could get more difficult to keep elections secure because of recent federal funding cuts and other policy changes backed by the Trump administration that have limited cybersecurity information-sharing between states. From 2022 to 2024, Vermont received a $1 million grant each year under decades-old federal legi
  • Barbara Mayhew-Belatski

    Born: Sept. 23, 1954Windsor, VermontDied: Jan. 26, 2026Burlington, VermontDetails of servicesPlease join us on Feb. 7, 2026, in honoring Barbara. There will be a Memorial Service at Cabot Funeral Home from 2:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m., followed by a gathering at Norman Williams Public Library from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. An online viewing of the service will be made available through https://www.cabotfh.com.Donations in her memory can be made to Toys for Tots, St. Jude Children’s Research Hospita
  • Wayne Steele Darling

    Born: Oct. 2, 1946Nampa, IdahoDied: Jan. 23, 2026Monkton, VermontDetails of servicesA Celebration of Wayne’s Life will be held at a later date in both Idaho and Vermont.Memorial donations may be made in Wayne’s honor to:Sandy Hook Promise (SHP)
    Autistic Self Advocacy Network (ASAN)
    Monkton Town Forest CommitteeWayne Steele Darling, born Oct. 2, 1946, in Nampa, Idaho, died at home in Vermont on Friday, Jan. 23, 2026, at age 79.Wayne grew up in Idaho and graduated from Borah High Scho
  • Stratton-trained skier Jessie Diggins wins Olympic bronze in 10K freestyle

    Stratton-trained skier Jessie Diggins smiles after winning a bronze medal Thursday in the 10-kilometer cross-country freestyle race at the 2026 Winter Olympics in Italy. Photo by Kirsty Wigglesworth/Associated PressStratton-trained athlete Jessie Diggins, the most-awarded U.S. cross-country skier of all time, didn’t let bruised ribs stop her from winning a bronze medal Thursday at the 2026 Milan Cortina Winter Olympics in Italy.The 34-year-old racer, set to retire at the end of this winte
  • Iso Bock: End the era of corporate money in politics

    Dear Editor,I am a freshman from Lake Region Union High School in the Northeast Kingdom. I’m 14, and elections have changed dramatically since I was born.Fifteen years ago, the U.S. Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision allowed both nonprofit and for-profit corporations to spend unlimited money in elections by recognizing corporate political spending as protected speech under the First Amendment.
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    Since then, billions of dollars — much of it from large, out-of-stat
  • Vermont receives $93 million in federal funds to expand broadband access

    The NEK Broadband offices and warehouse in Danville on Sept. 3, 2025. File hoto by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerTheo Wells-Spackman is a Report for America corps member who reports for VTDigger.Vermont will receive about $93 million in federal funding to continue constructing its broadband internet network in some of the state’s most remote rural areas, officials said Tuesday. The new resources will allow high-speed internet connections to reach over 99% of Vermonters, according to Ver
  • Gina Tron: Strengthen Vermont’s survivors’ bill of rights

    This commentary is by Gina Tron, a volunteer for the nonprofit organization Rise, an advocate for survivor-centered reforms, and a survivor of sexual assault. Sitting in the Special Victims Division of the New York Police Department (NYPD), I fought back tears as I scoured through mugshots, an effort the detective told me was pointless. Just a few minutes earlier, when I said I wanted to call a friend to be with me, he threatened to throw out what he termed my “iffy case.”At th
  • Vermont Conversation: Rep. Becca Balint warns state may be ‘in the crosshairs’ of Trump


    U.S. Rep. Becca Balint, D-Vermont, speaks during a press conference at the Statehouse in Montpelier on Tuesday, Jan. 27. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerThe Vermont Conversation with David Goodman is a VTDigger podcast that features in-depth interviews on local and national issues. Listen below and subscribe for free on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you get podcasts.When Rep. Becca Balint, D-Vt., traveled to Minneapolis on a Congressional oversight mission several weeks
  • Vermont Conversation: Rep. Becca Balint on ICE, Epstein and presidential fealty


    U.S. Rep. Becca Balint, D-Vermont, speaks during a press conference at the Statehouse in Montpelier on Tuesday, Jan. 27. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerThe Vermont Conversation with David Goodman is a VTDigger podcast that features in-depth interviews on local and national issues. Listen below and subscribe for free on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you get podcasts.When Rep. Becca Balint, D-Vt., traveled to Minneapolis on a Congressional oversight mission several weeks
  • As pilot program sunsets in Burlington, lawmakers look to bring ‘accountability court’ elsewhere 

    Prosecutor Zach Weight, left, speaks during Chittenden County Community Accountability Court in Burlington on Friday, November 21, 2025. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger“I think we learned things that we already knew,” Defender General Matt Valerio told both the House and Senate judiciary committees Wednesday. Burlington’s accountability court pilot was successful, Valerio said, because it embedded social workers in the legal system. Before the court’s pilot beg
  • Rutland police panel drops interim from Matthew Prouty’s title, naming him permanent chief 

    Rutland City’s new polie chief, Matt Prouty, in 2022. File photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerInterim Rutland City Police Chief Matthew Prouty will soon take over the role on a permanent basis.The Rutland City Police Commission this week agreed to name Prouty to the post, effective March 1. In selecting Prouty to become the city’s next police chief, the commission opted not to conduct a wider search.“We decided this was not the time for a long, drawn-out search,” Patricia Br
  • Calais, Worcester residents vote against shuttering schools

    Doty Memorial School in Worcester. Photo courtesy of Christina Pollard/The Bridge
    Calais and Worcester residents on Tuesday voted against shuttering two community elementary schools in the Washington Central Unified Union School District.In Worcester, 212 residents voted against shuttering the Doty Memorial School, while 114 approved of plans to close. In neighboring Calais, 398 residents voted against closing the Calais Elementary School, with 249 in favor.Tuesday’s results marked a reje
  • Marilee Kemsley

    Born: June 3, 1954Pewaukee, WisconsinDied: Jan. 23, 2026Colchester, VermontDetails of servicesA celebration of life will be held by the family at a later date.Please share memories, stories, and photos of Marilee at www.champlaincremation.com. Marilee Conrad Kemsley (72) went home on Jan. 23, 2026, surrounded by love. She is survived by her loving husband of 38 years, Michael, and their daughter, Mae Lin Kemsley Kirn, and her husband, Spencer, and her grandson, Graham.Marilee also had many

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