• Latimer Hoke: When Green Up Day is treated as free trash pickup day

    Latimer Hoke: When Green Up Day is treated as free trash pickup day
    This commentary is by Latimer Hoke of Milton.
    In lieu of Adopt-a-Highway programs, Vermont has “Green Up Day.” It recently made WCAX news that the town of Milton had a noticeable problem with people dumping their household trash and piles of tires on the side of the road, treating Green Up Day as something of a “free trash pickup day.” I’m certain Milton was not the only town with this problem.I recently moved home to Vermont after seven years in Montana. In Montan
  • iSun, a major Vermont solar installer and the parent company of SunCommon, files for bankruptcy

    iSun, a major Vermont solar installer and the parent company of SunCommon, files for bankruptcy
    Electricians install the last solar panels at the home of SunCommon’s 1,000th customer in Barre Town. Photo by John Herrick/VTDigger
    One of Vermont’s largest publicly traded companies has filed for bankruptcy.iSun, the Williston-based solar energy company, is seeking permission to sell off its assets after years of financial woes, according to federal bankruptcy court filings. iSun is the parent company of SunCommon, a solar panel installer that’s based in Waterbury. Jeff
  • Protests of president punctuate rainy graduation for Dartmouth’s Class of ’24

    Protests of president punctuate rainy graduation for Dartmouth’s Class of ’24
    Abigail Bordelon holds up a red-gloved hand after opting not to shake hands with Dartmouth President Sian Leah Beilock while walking across the stage during the Dartmouth College commencement ceremony on the green in Hanover, N.H., on Sun., June 9. Photo by Alex Driehaus/Valley News
    This story by Christina Dolan was first published in the Valley News on June 9.HANOVER — The Dartmouth Green was the scene of celebration and defiance Sunday morning as the college awarded degrees to more than
  • Rev. Ken White: Christians insisting that the state conform to their beliefs is a moral error

    Rev. Ken White: Christians insisting that the state conform to their beliefs is a moral error
    This commentary is by Rev. Ken White of Winooski. He has been an ordained minister in the United Church of Christ for 14 years, and is pastor at College Street Church in Burlington.
    I am writing in response to your recent article, “Families sue Vermont DCF over LGBTQ+ foster care requirements,” from my perspective as a Christian pastor.Growing up in a fundamentalist church smackdab in the middle of the Bible Belt, I remember there being some people in the church that people whispere
  • Advertisement

  • Rev. Karen A. Mendes: DCF is correct to protect children from the imposition of intolerant beliefs

    Rev. Karen A. Mendes: DCF is correct to protect children from the imposition of intolerant beliefs
    Dear Editor, As a Baptist pastor, religious liberty is important to me. Intrinsic to religious liberty is freedom of conscience: that no person, religious establishment or civil government can interfere with or impede a person’s relationship to God. Each person is free to have their own relationship with the Divine (or no relationship).What they are not free to do is impose their religious understanding upon another person. 
    READ MORE
    Historically, Baptists have supported the rig
  • Mapping Vermont’s wildlife highway: how advanced data is helping species one road at a time

    Mapping Vermont’s wildlife highway: how advanced data is helping species one road at a time
    Robert Zaino, a biologist with the Vermont Fish and Wildlife Department, uses the BioFinder mapping platform in Barnet on Wednesday, May 1, 2024. BioFinder allows people to see connections between land that allow plants and animals to migrate as climate change continues.“High priority” wildlife road crossings are shown in dark purple. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerOn a recent weekday morning, two Vermont Fish & Wildlife Department staff members pulled to the side of a dirt road
  • Colchester Causeway now under state ownership

    Colchester Causeway now under state ownership
    Cyclists pedal along the Colchester causeway, a path built on a former railway that connects Colchester and South Hero (far right). Seen on Tuesday, June 4, 2024. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger
    The state of Vermont first purchased what is now called the Island Line Trail in 1963, before handing it over to the town of Colchester. Nearly 60 years later, it’s become one of the most treasured recreational paths in Vermont, and, as of last year, it’s back in the state’s hands.When
  • Jenna’s Promise enters new phase

    Jenna’s Promise enters new phase
    An open house for Jenna’s Promise. File Photo by Gordon Miller/News & Citizen
    This story by Aaron Calvin was first published by the News & Citizen on June 6.Five years after founding Jenna’s Promise, Greg Tatro is stepping down as president and board chair of the holistic opioid addiction treatment organization.He will remain on the board while his wife, Dawn Tatro, steps down from the board to take on a volunteer role in the organization named after the couple’s daugh
  • Advertisement

  • Young Writers Project: ‘Traveling’

    Young Writers Project: ‘Traveling’
    “Light,” by Phoebe Gresham, 14, of Huntington
    Young Writers Project is a creative online community of teen writers, photographers and artists, which has been based in Vermont since 2006. Each week, VTDigger features the writing and art of young Vermonters who publish their work on youngwritersproject.org, a free, interactive website for 12- to 18-year-olds. To find out more, visit youngwritersproject.org, or contact Executive Director Susan Reid at sreid@youngwri
  • Bill Schubart: The health care crisis and the ‘ghost quartet’

    Bill Schubart: The health care crisis and the ‘ghost quartet’
    If we zoom out and look with cynicism at the health care crisis in America, we see a remarkably effective business plan: Grow the burgeoning health care business even larger from its current $4.5 trillion per year in spending, and do so using two other lucrative industries — the chemical-industrial-agriculture partnership and the ultra-processed food industry. By design or by default, these four industries — the “ghost quartet” — are an extraordinarily profitab
  • Kevin Ellis: Get ready for the foundations of our government and politics to be questioned and then changed

    Kevin Ellis: Get ready for the foundations of our government and politics to be questioned and then changed
    This commentary is by ​​Kevin Ellis of East Montpelier. He is a writer, podcaster and former lobbyist.
    In 1985, a Jewish refugee from Switzerland named Madeleine Kunin became the first female governor of Vermont. Kunin had been a member of the legislature from Burlington and then lieutenant governor. Her election shifted the sands of Vermont politics forever. She brought women into government in historic numbers and focused new attention on the needs of children’s health care
  • Gov. Phil Scott signs bills on emergency medical services, capital projects, miscellaneous reforms

    Gov. Phil Scott signs bills on emergency medical services, capital projects, miscellaneous reforms
    Gov. Phil Scott answers a question during his weekly press conference at the Statehouse in Montpelier on Wednesday April 3, 2024. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerVermont Gov. Phil Scott signed a raft of bills Thursday, codifying legislation that will make changes to various areas of state government and policy.The nine bills, which include four “miscellaneous” bills — pieces of legislation that generally include many small changes on a particular topic — were signed on th
  • Residents worry Colchester’s $18.8M sewer project will spur development at Malletts Bay

    Residents worry Colchester’s $18.8M sewer project will spur development at Malletts Bay
    A rendering of the Malletts Bay sewer service area. Construction for the first phase of the three year, $18.8 million project is scheduled June 2024 – August 2025. Rendering courtesy of the Town of Colchester.
    Colchester is breaking ground this month on one of the biggest public infrastructure projects ever undertaken in inner Malletts Bay: an $18.8 million sewer project that has been talked about for more than 60 years.The “pollution abatement project” is being undertaken &ld
  • Becca Balint jokes about popping ‘a gummy’ during US House Judiciary Committee hearing

    Becca Balint jokes about popping ‘a gummy’ during US House Judiciary Committee hearing
    Becca Balint listens during the Vermont Democratic Party’s unity press conference in Montpelier on Aug. 30, 2022. File Photo by Natalie Williams/VTDigger
    Should her reelection bid fail, U.S. Rep. Becca Balint, D-Vt. may or may not have a career in comedy. At the end of Attorney General Merrick Garland’s tense testimony before the U.S. House Judiciary Committee on Tuesday, Balint tried lightening the mood. Democrats and Republicans had sparred for nearly five hours, with GOP law
  • Cows in electric collars: Vermont farmers pilot virtual fencing technology

    Cows in electric collars: Vermont farmers pilot virtual fencing technology
    Cattle wear Nofence collars, which use GPS tracking and mobile networks to communicate with virtual fence lines. The technology allows farmers to track cattle and change boundaries in real-time from the Nofence app. Photo courtesy of Nofence.Fence posts and spools of wire are being swapped for cell phone apps and electric collars on several Vermont farms this summer as farmers pilot virtual fencing technology to manage herds of livestock.Using technology called Nofence, farmers can create virtu
  • Hartford Selectboard approves banner policy

    Hartford Selectboard approves banner policy
    An example of the “Hometown Heroes” banners proposed for downtown White River Junction. Courtesy town of Hartford
    This story by Patrick Adrian was first published in the Valley News on June 5.WHITE RIVER JUNCTION — The Hartford Selectboard adopted a new policy on Tuesday that will allow banner displays on public street lights.The board’s 5-2 vote was a relief to organizers of the “Hometown Heroes” project, which plans to display up to 12 banners this summer i
  • Brian Richard Searles

    Brian Richard Searles
    Born March 12, 1947Died June 5, 2024Tampa, FloridaDetails of servicesA celebration of Brian’s life will be planned for a time during the summer.The family of Brian Searles is sad to announce his passing on June 5 in Tampa Florida. Brian’s death came as he was receiving treatment for Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. A full obituary will follow at a later date.
    Read the story on VTDigger here:Brian Richard Searles.
  • Balint, Welch introduce legislation to ban ‘price fixing’ software for rental properties

    Balint, Welch introduce legislation to ban ‘price fixing’ software for rental properties
    U.S. Rep. Becca Balint, D-Vt., answers questions after speaking at a demonstration calling for the re-opening of the Montpelier Post Office on Monday, January 8, 2024. The post office has been closed since the July 2023 flood. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger
    U.S. Rep. Becca Balint, D-Vt., and U.S. Sen. Peter Welch, D-Vt., want to outlaw the use of rental property management software that allows landlords to compare and set rental prices using algorithms — behavior that, the two membe
  • Seeking to build a Vergennes youth facility, state officials confront skepticism — and history

    Seeking to build a Vergennes youth facility, state officials confront skepticism — and history
    A rendering of the proposed Green Mountain Youth Campus. Photo courtesy of Vermont Department for Children and FamiliesFor decades, the city of Vergennes was host to some of Vermont’s most troubled youth. Between 1874 and 1979, the Addison County city was the site of an institution most recently known as the Weeks School, a detention and reform facility for juveniles. According to the state’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission, children at the facility — some of whom wer
  • Darn Tough is wrestling with ‘rampant’ social media scams. In Vermont, it’s not alone.

    Darn Tough is wrestling with ‘rampant’ social media scams. In Vermont, it’s not alone.
    Darn Tough Vermont socks on display at a retail store. File photo courtesy of Darn Tough Vermont.
    For as long as there’s been the internet, there have been internet scammers. For people like 40-year-old Windsor resident Brendan Dangelo, that risk feels more or less easy to navigate with a few simple rules: Be careful which download button you click, and don’t send personal information over email.“We think we’re pretty internet literate,” Dangelo said of himsel
  • Phil Scott vetoes property tax bill, unsettling next year’s school funding

    Phil Scott vetoes property tax bill, unsettling next year’s school funding
    Rep. Jill Krowinski, D-Burlington, left, and Gov. Phil Scott. File Photos by Glenn Russell/VTDigger
    Gov. Phil Scott vetoed the annual property tax bill on Thursday, setting up a veto session showdown on a piece of legislation that must pass for schools to be funded as normal. “We must provide property tax relief now. This can’t wait for another study before implementing cost containment strategies,” Scott said in a statement. Known as the “yield bill,” th
  • Burlington police’s mock shooting exercise rattles high school students

    Burlington police’s mock shooting exercise rattles high school students
    Insignia of the Burlington Police Department. File Photo by Aidan Quigley/VTDigger
    Burlington High School students were rattled on Wednesday after local police detectives staged a demonstration to students during which a supposed gunman pretended to open fire.The incident occurred Wednesday at the Burlington Police Department’s headquarters at One North Avenue. About 20 students in the school’s year-end forensics class had traveled to the police station for a field trip, Russ Elek,
  • Welcome to Green Vision Cleansing

    Welcome to Green Vision Cleansing
    Photo by Jenna Rice/Jenna Rice CreativeWelcome to Green Vision Cleansing, your trusted partner in creating a healthier and cleaner home environment in Vermont. We believe that a clean home should not come at the expense of your health or the environment. That’s why we specialize in eco-friendly, customized cleaning solutions designed to promote human wellness and environmental sustainability.Our unique approach sets us apart: we develop and use our own 100% natural cleaning products, formu
  • Tom McKone: Enslavers, abolitionists and the Underground Railroad

    Tom McKone: Enslavers, abolitionists and the Underground Railroad
    This commentary is by Tom McKone of Montpelier.
    The Rokeby Museum in Ferrisburgh has a long historical reach and two big stories to tell, yet it is less known outside of Addison County and the Champlain Valley than it deserves to be. “Seeking Freedom: The Underground Railroad and the Legacy of an Abolitionist Family,” its excellent new exhibit, could change that.Rokeby, as it is familiarly known, from 1793 until 1961 was the homestead of several generations of the Robinson family, a
  • Sam Liss: Sen. Dick Sears will be missed by many

    Sam Liss: Sen. Dick Sears will be missed by many
    Dear Editor,I am greatly saddened to hear of Sen. Dick Sears’ passing. However gruff Dick could appear to be, and however explosive he could be at times, after getting to know him, I realized how compassionate he really was and how much he valued his constituents’ needs and input.Dick was as effective as any Vermont senator — indeed more than most — in pushing forward his moderate but salient agenda from his influential positions in the Legislature. I worked with him as I
  • Norwich officials seek solution to bridge’s chemical leak

    Norwich officials seek solution to bridge’s chemical leak
    Peter Orner points to contaminants dripping down the wall of Bridge 12, which carries Moore Lane over Bloody Brook, near his home in Norwich on May 30, 2024. Photo by Alex Driehaus/Valley NewsThis story by Patrick Adrian was first published in the Valley News on June 3.NORWICH — Hazardous chemicals appear to be leaking again from a town bridge that crosses Bloody Brook, driving town officials to consider new solutions to mitigate the continuing environmental threat.Petroleum-based chemica
  • State’s Public Utility Commission to cut net metering rates even further

    State’s Public Utility Commission to cut net metering rates even further
    The Public Utility Commission buildingin Montpelier on Wed. June 5, 2024. Photo by Emma Malinak/VTDiggerThe precipitous fall of Vermont’s net metering payment rates shows no signs of stalling. For years now, the compensation Vermonters receive when they install solar panels and send excess power back to the grid has been declining — and the state’s Public Utility Commission announced further cuts in a report last week.The move angered an array of state climate groups, who
  • A Yale grad student from Newport studied Vermont’s school mergers. She found they don’t save much.

    A Yale grad student from Newport studied Vermont’s school mergers. She found they don’t save much.
    A third-grade student in Jennifer Montgomery’s class raises her hand at theCoventry Village School on September 5, 2019.File Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger
    While studying economics and education at Yale University, Grace Miller found a surprise topic on the agenda: Vermont’s one-of-a-kind school funding formula. The 22-year-old from Newport and her classmates learned about the “Brigham decision,” a 1997 Vermont Supreme Court case that found the state’s educat
  • A Yale grad from Newport studied Vermont’s school mergers. She found they don’t save much.

    A Yale grad from Newport studied Vermont’s school mergers. She found they don’t save much.
    A third-grade student in Jennifer Montgomery’s class raises her hand at theCoventry Village School on September 5, 2019.File Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger
    While studying economics and education at Yale University, Grace Miller found a surprise topic on the agenda: Vermont’s one-of-a-kind school funding formula. The 22-year-old from Newport and her classmates learned about the “Brigham decision,” a 1997 Vermont Supreme Court case that found the state’s educat
  • Phil Scott vetoes a restorative justice bill, drawing Attorney General Charity Clark’s rebuke

    Phil Scott vetoes a restorative justice bill, drawing Attorney General Charity Clark’s rebuke
    Gov. Phil Scott, left, and Attorney General Charity Clark. File photos by Glenn Russell/VTDigger
    Gov. Phil Scott has vetoed a bill that proponents said would ensure people have equitable access to restorative justice programs across the state — with the governor arguing on Tuesday that the legislation lacked funding to support its proposals.But Vermont Attorney General Charity Clark, whose office would be among those most impacted by H.645 , fired back at the governor’s veto on Wedn

Follow @NewsVermont_ on Twitter!