• Gov. Phil Scott’s public schedule Dec. 9-15, 2017

    News Release — Gov. Phil ScottDec. 8, 2017
    Contact:Ethan Latour
    [email protected]. Director of Policy and CommunicationsGov. Phil Scott
    Governor Phil Scott’s Public Schedule: 12/9/17 – 12/15/17
    Saturday, December 9
    No public events scheduled
    Sunday, December 10
    11:30 AM – 1:30 PMPomerleau Annual Christmas PartyHilton Hotel Burlington, VT
    Monday, December 11
    1:00 – 2:00 PMWeekly Press Conference: Progress on Bennington Waterline Construction495 Fairview St
  • Final Reading: Has Burlington’s special accountability court worked?

    Jaye Pershing Johnson on Jan. 3, 2024. File photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerCourt backlog. The phrase has defined a malaise that’s permeated the Vermont Legislature’s work on public safety initiatives in recent years. When Covid-19 slowed down the judicial system, criminal cases piled up, leading defendants and victims to wait years for resolution.Enter the Chittenden County accountability docket. Proposed by Gov. Phil Scott last fall, the pilot project dedicated court time and
  • Vermont Health officials reaffirm existing childhood vaccine schedule in light of federal changes

    Dr. Rick Hildebrant, commissioner of the Vermont Department of Health, speaks before the Senate Health and Welfare Committee at the Statehouse in Montpelier on Wednesday, Jan. 7. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerThe federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention scaled back federal guidelines for childhood vaccines Monday, moving six immunizations out of the “recommended” category. Following the federal action, Vermont officials and health experts are reaffirming the state’s
  • Lawmakers try to keep education reform on track as Gov. Phil Scott calls the issue Vermont’s ‘most critical challenge’

    Sen. Seth Bongartz, D-Bennington, left, and Rep. Peter Conlon, D-Cornwall, right, chairs of the Senate and House education committees respectively on March 13, 2025. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerMONTPELIER—Vermont lawmakers in the early days of the 2026 legislative session are trying to keep the education reforms started last session on track.But the efforts appear on shaky ground after the state’s school redistricting task force refused to deliver a map of proposed consolidated s
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  • Vermont Conversation: ‘An act of war’ — Sen. Peter Welch on Trump’s Venezuela and Capitol insurrection


    U.S. Sen. Peter Welch, D-Vermont on July 7, 2025. 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.President Donald Trump marked the new year by launching a military assault on Venezuela and abducting President Nicolás Maduro. Some 75 people in Venezuela were killed i
  • ‘We just need to do it’: In address to lawmakers, Gov. Phil Scott stays bullish on education reform plans

    Gov. Phil Scott enters the House of Representatives chamber to deliver his State of the State address at the Statehouse in Montpelier on Wednesday, January 7, 2026. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerMONTPELIER — In his annual address to Vermont legislators Wednesday afternoon, Gov. Phil Scott urged the House and Senate to move forward with the sweeping education reform project lawmakers started last year at his administration’s urging.But as the 2026 legislative session got underway th
  • Resolutions become reality as goals turn into achievements

    The new year offers an opportunity to reflect upon aspirations—and commit to the work needed to achieve them. Students of all ages are putting in the effort to bring their goals to fruition. Education continues to shape pathways for learners at every stage, and 2026 brings new possibilities for learning of all kinds. The stories revisited below highlight seven student experiences.Full-time firefighting is in Bailey’s futureBailey Shepard’s goal grew from the sense of belonging
  • Jewish group files ethics complaints against Vermont legislators who took paid trip to Israel

    Wafic Faour speaks during a press conference during which activists called for the resignation of five state representatives who recently went on an Israeli-sponsored trip to the Middle-Eastern country at the Statehouse in Montpelier on Tuesday, Jan. 6. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerMONTPELIER — A Jewish group that opposes Israel’s military campaign in Gaza has lodged ethics complaints against the five members of the Vermont House who traveled to Israel last September on a trip tha
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  • Benjamin Brickner: Vermont’s cost crises are connected. Our solutions should be, too.

    This commentary is by Benjamin Brickner, of Pomfret. He is a practicing attorney and chair of the Pomfret Selectboard.As towns and school districts across Vermont finalize their budgets, local officials are staring down a familiar question: with healthcare, housing, personnel and other non-discretionary costs out of control, what gets cut?For Pomfret and its 916 residents, hard choices are inevitable. Road maintenance may be scaled back. Overworked staff may go without needed support. Taxes sti
  • Final Reading: First day of the Vermont Legislature brings back-to-school feel. Just ask the kids.

    Speaker of the House Jill Krowinski, D-Burlington,, addresses her colleagues on the first day of the second year of the legislative biennium at the Statehouse in Montpelier on Tuesday, Jan. 6.Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerHappy first day back to school session! How was your summer? The floors are a little cleaner and the eyes are a little brighter as the both the Senate and the House of Representatives begin their second year of the biennium. The House gaveled back into session Tuesday mo
  • Ethics complaints against senators with private school ties dismissed by Senate panel

    Sen. Scott Beck, R-Caledonia, left, and Sen. Seth Bongartz, D-Bennington, right, listen as Rep. Emilie Kornheiser, D-Brattleboro, speaks as House and Senate members of the education reform bill conference committee meet at the Statehouse in Montpelier on May 28, 2025. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerThe Vermont Senate Ethics Panel dismissed two complaints against Sens. Seth Bongartz, D-Bennington, and Scott Beck, R-Caledonia, and found their conduct was not unethical under the state’s Sena
  • Clear theme emerges on opening day of Vermont’s Legislature: Tough choices ahead

    Representatives chat in the House chamber before the start of business on the first day of the second year of the legislative biennium at the Statehouse in Montpelier on Tuesday, Jan. 6. From left to right are Rep. Chris Taylor, R-Milton; Rep. Lisa Hango, R-Berkshire; and Rep. Leland Morgan, R-Milton. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerMONTPELIER — House Speaker Jill Krowiniski had some less-than-cheery opening remarks to her colleagues to kick off the 2026 Vermont legislative session.“
  • Your starter kit for the 2026 Vermont legislative session

    Read the story on VTDigger here:Your starter kit for the 2026 Vermont legislative session.
  • Martha Boyce Colyer

    Born March 26, 1953Albany, N.Y.Died Dec. 31, 2025Colchester, VermontDetails of servicesIn lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Lund Family Center in Burlington or a charity of your choice, especially those that help children and families.Martha Boyce Colyer of Colchester, wife of Lawrence (Larry) Keyes died on Dec. 31, 2025 at home in the presence of her family.Martha was born in Albany N.Y. She attended the Albany Academy for Girls.She received a BA in Art from Elmira Colleg
  • Final Reading: Here’s your indispensable tool for surviving the 2026 legislative session

    The Speaker’s gavel and podium in the House of Representatives chamber at the Statehouse in Montpelier on Jan. 7, 2025. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerVermont’s legislative session this year will be one for the ages. Can lawmakers pull off the generational transformation of the public education system they started last year, or will they take an easier way out? What state programs will be on the chopping block during an agonizing budget cycle? How will electeds try to counteract the
  • VTDigger’s staff photographer looks back on his 15 favorite images of 2025

    As the new year gets underway, we’re taking a moment to look back at the images that helped tell Vermont’s story in 2025. From civic engagement and legislative whispers; surprise federal visits and overlooked municipal drama; to the end of a critical housing program and the expansion of an immigration crackdown — VTDigger was on the ground to capture the scene.
    Our veteran staff photographer Glenn Russell selected and reflected on his favorite images of the year.U.S. Departmen
  • Gov. Phil Scott taps Christina Nolan and Michael Drescher for state’s highest court

    Christina Nolan and Michael Drescher. Photos courtesy of the Office of Gov. Phil ScottGov. Phil Scott made two appointments to the Vermont Supreme Court, naming one former top federal prosecutor and another currently serving in that role for Vermont to fill the open spots on the state’s high court.  Scott, a Republican, announced in a press release Monday the appointments of Christina Nolan, who served as U.S. Attorney for Vermont from 2017 to 2021 during the first President Don
  • Suzanne Chant

    Born Sept. 29, 1951Darby, PennsylvaniaDied Dec. 25, 2025Colchester, VermontDetails of servicesA memorial service is planned for spring.Suzanne Chant, 74, of South Burlington, died on Dec. 25, 2025, alongside family and friends, after a long illness.Suzanne is survived by her children Gerry Canavan and wife Jaimee Hills, Patrick Canavan, and Ariel Chant and partner Will Willoughby. She was “Susu” to grandchildren Hannah, Zoey, Dalton, and Connor, and step-granddaughters Jal
  • Anne Pratt Slatin

    Born Oct. 31, 1944Buffalo, N.Y.Died Oct. 17, 2025Stamford, N.Y.Anne Pratt Slatin passed away on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025, at The Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital in Cooperstown, N.Y., at the age of 80 from pneumonia.
    She was born on Oct. 31, 1944, in Buffalo, New York, to Mary McNeil and Wilson Holly Pratt. Her early summers were spent at Camp Otsego in Cooperstown, where she began as a camper and later taught sailing — friendships from those years stayed with her for life.In 19
  • Bruce Cole

    Born April 19, 1933Medford, MassachusettsDied Dec. 24, 2025Marlboro, VermontDetails of servicesHe has been laid to rest in King Cemetery in Marlboro. A celebration of life for Bruce will be held mid-April 2026. Letters of condolence can be sent to the family at P.O. Box 133, Marlboro, Vermont 05344.Bruce Cole, 92, of Marlboro, passed away peacefully on Dec. 24, 2025, surrounded by his family. Born on April 19, 1933, in Medford, Massachusetts, Bruce was the son of Barbara Sawyer Cole a
  • Molly Gray is running for Vermont lieutenant governor — again

    Lt. Gov. Molly Gray speaks to a crowd at the Amtrak station in St. Albans July 19, 2021. File photo by Riley Robinson/VTDiggerBURLINGTON — Molly Gray, the former Vermont lieutenant governor who also ran, unsuccessfully, for a seat in Congress, wants her old job back.Gray announced her campaign for the state’s second-highest office Monday morning at a coffee shop in the South End of Burlington. Gray is running as a Democrat; if she wins the party’s primary in August, she’
  • Vermont’s congressional delegation condemns attack on Venezuela and capture of Maduro

    Sen. Bernie Sanders, left, Rep. Becca Balint, center, and Sen. Peter Welch. Photos by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerVermont’s congressional delegation condemned the U.S. military’s attack on Venezuela over the weekend that led to the capture of the country’s leader, Nicolás Maduro.U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt, and Vermont Democrats U.S. Sen. Peter Welch and U.S. Rep Becca Balint, all labeled Maduro a brutal authoritarian but said President Donald Trump’s attacks on the
  • Eyeing cuts to federal support, Vermont lawmakers face tough decisions over food and heating assistance

    Rep. Theresa Wood, left, and Sen. Ginny Lyons. File photos by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerTheo Wells-Spackman is a Report for America corps member who reports for VTDigger.Facing federal funding cuts and potentially faltering tax revenues ahead of this week’s legislative session, Vermont lawmakers say decisions over food and heating assistance programs serving their most vulnerable constituents will be particularly difficult.“We’re coming back to the basic hierarchy of needs he
  • Corinth studio offers a window into an artist’s life

    Kathy Chapman works on cleaning a segment on a stained-glass window. Photo by Amelia Cunningham.Amelia Cunningham is a reporter with the Community News Service, part of the University of Vermont’s journalism internship for Bradford Journal Opinion.CORINTH — At the end of a long, wood-lined road in Corinth, Kathy Chapman’s studio stands nestled among the trees. The modest workspace — with panoramic views of the surrounding forest — serves as a quiet refuge from the
  • U.S. Nordic skiing’s future is a Vermonter with a pioneering family past

    Vermont cross-country racer Ben Ogden competes in the 2023 Nordic World Ski Championships in Slovenia. Photo by Matthias Schrader/Associated PressUniversity of Vermont graduate Ben Ogden — a two-time NCAA Nordic champion, 2022 Olympian and 2023’s fastest young male World Cup sprinter — “just might be on the verge of taking American cross-country skiing where it hasn’t been before,” the New York Times recently reported.“He’s never really seen a rac
  • Michael Long: Streamlining housing permits shouldn’t sideline the public

    Dear Editor,The permitting and appeals process for housing and other development in Vermont should be streamlined. Legal challenges can be lengthy, expensive and onerous, and delay is often the central — and winning — strategy. But projects can be challenged, successfully or not, only by parties with substantial funding and sustained commitment. That reality leaves much of the public on the sidelines, even though public policy should serve the public interest first.From that perspec
  • Jerry Ward and John Bossange: Hijacking the abundance myth

    Jerry Ward lives in Randolph and is a retired physician. John Bossange lives in South Burlington and is a retired school principal. Both serve on the Board of Directors of Better (Not Bigger) Vermont.The panic stirred up by some of our leaders regarding the so-called housing crisis appears to be rooted in a loosely defined abundance narrative that has been adopted to justify rapid growth without fully accounting for its consequences.Recent commentaries published in VTDigger by Julie Moore, secr
  • Waterbury’s former dairy farm owners struggle to move on

    George Woodard now raises beef cattle after closing his Waterbury dairy operation of 48 years. Photo by Sarah Andrews.Sarah Andrews is a reporter with the Community News Service, part of the University of Vermont’s Reporting & Documentary Storytelling program.
    WATERBURY — For 48 years, George Woodard woke up before dawn and milked his cows. His day would end the same way, in his barn with the herd. For many of those years, Woodard’s 200-acre farm was booming. Now, the
  • Ludlow police chief ID’d as shooter of man allegedly armed with knife in New Year’s Day incident

    Ludlow Police Chief Jeffrey Warfle shot and injured a man on New Year’s Day after the man allegedly pulled a knife at a downtown hotel where he had been living, according to Vermont State Police. The wounded man, Jaime Gomez, 18, was taken to Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center in Lebanon, New Hampshire, where he was continuing to receive care, Vermont State Police said in a press release Friday.Ludlow Police Chief Jeffrey Warfle. Courtesy Vermont State Police.State police, who are he
  • Two lawmakers appointed to fill Vermont House and Senate vacancies before session begins

    Gov. Phil Scott speaks during his weekly press conference at the Statehouse in Montpelier on Wednesday, April 2, 2025. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerGov. Phil Scott has appointed two new lawmakers to fill vacancies in the Vermont Legislature days before the start of the session next week. John Benson, a managing partner at the engineering firm DuBois & King who currently serves as chair of the Brookfield Selectboard, will fill the vacant Orange County Senate seat left by Republican La

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