• The Deeper Dig: What’s next for Montpelier’s water system?

    The Deeper Dig: What’s next for Montpelier’s water system?
    Water seeps through the road and flows down Bingham Street in Montpelier on Monday, November 7, 2022. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerThe Deeper Dig is a weekly podcast from the VTDigger newsroom. Listen below, and subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Google Play, Spotify or anywhere you listen to podcasts.
    Montpelier residents put up with an unusually high number of water main breaks, which, in recent years, have led to boil water notices, expensive emergency repairs and school
  • Despite broad support in the Legislature, Phil Scott vetoes data privacy legislation

    Despite broad support in the Legislature, Phil Scott vetoes data privacy legislation
    Members of the House of Representatives work on legislation at the Statehouse in Montpelier on Friday, May 10, 2024. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger
    Gov. Phil Scott on Thursday vetoed a sweeping data privacy bill that won broad support this year in the Vermont Legislature. The bill, H.121, was a subject of fierce debate throughout the legislative session. The final deal struck between House and Senate negotiators marked a compromise between those who wanted to see strict limitations on the
  • Tanya June Tarshis

    Tanya June Tarshis
    Born July 18, 1956Stanford, CaliforniaDied May 29, 2024Toronto, OntarioDetails of servicesThere will be a committal service at Robinson Cemetery in Calais at a later dateTanya June Tarshis, 67, of Toronto Ontario, died at Toronto General Hospital on Monday, May 27, 2024 after years of deteriorating health.  She was the daughter of Inga Rappaport Tarshis and Lorie Tarshis, both of whom predeceased her.  Tanya grew up in California and moved to Toronto in the 1980s.&n
  • Phil Scott vetoes bill that would make sweeping changes to Act 250

    Phil Scott vetoes bill that would make sweeping changes to Act 250
    Gov. Phil Scott speaks during his weekly press conference on Tuesday, June 11, 2024. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger
    This story, by Report for America corps member Carly Berlin, was produced through a partnership between VTDigger and Vermont Public.Gov. Phil Scott has vetoed a major housing and land-use bill that would make sweeping reforms to Act 250, a law that has governed and guided development in Vermont for over half a century.One of lawmakers’ landmark pieces of legislation this ye
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  • After Vermont bear video goes viral, officials warn that such encounters aren’t harmless 

    After Vermont bear video goes viral, officials warn that such encounters aren’t harmless 
    Officials from the Vermont Department of Fish & Wildlife are warning that a viral video showing two black bears in a Waitsfield backyard — one of which appears to be relaxing on a hammock — isn’t as cute as it looks. Instead, it’s an example of increasingly common human-bear encounters in Vermont, which can turn dangerous for both bears and people. In May, a game warden euthanized a bear in Underhill after it repeatedly displayed aggressive behavior toward a per
  • Emerson Warner Shedd

    Emerson Warner Shedd
    Born March 11, 1934North Ferrisburgh, VTDied June 9, 2024Berlin, VTDetails of servicesNo memorial services are planned at this time. Memorial contributions may be made to Palliative Care at CVMC, PO Box 547, Barre, VT 05641.Emerson Warner Shedd, “Warner” to all who knew and loved him, died peacefully on June 9th. He was 90 years old. He was born on March 11, 1934, to Emerson and Eleanor Shedd of North Ferrisburgh, and spent his early years on the family farm, where he learn
  • Officials alarmed by apparent rebuilding of manufactured home park in floodplain

    Officials alarmed by apparent rebuilding of manufactured home park in floodplain
    Several new-looking manufactured home units were staged in a parking lot next to the Berlin Mobile Home Park on June 11, 2024. Photo by Carly Berlin/VTDigger and Vermont Public
    This story, by Report for America corps member Carly Berlin, was produced through a partnership between VTDigger and Vermont Public.Construction activity at a manufactured home park in Berlin that flooded catastrophically last summer is raising alarm bells among state and town officials, who have hinted at possible legal
  • Experience Pendeza, a Swahili name for “beautiful”

    Experience Pendeza, a Swahili name for “beautiful”
    Pendeza is a new online boutique specializing in jewelry handcrafted by Maasai artisans in Kenya. Owned and operated by Burlington resident Tony Tukai and his business partner Peggy Nderi in Kenya, the spirit of Pendeza is grounded in cultural appreciation, sustainability and empowerment. Choose from our gorgeous collection of handmade bracelets, earrings and necklaces and we’ll ship your selection straight to your doorstep. Every purchase supports women artisans and their children&r
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  • Barre man drowns in Moretown while carrying child on his back

    Barre man drowns in Moretown while carrying child on his back
    A 34-year old Barre man drowned Wednesday evening at the Big Rock swimming hole in Moretown, according to Vermont State Police.Witnesses told police that the man, later identified as Anthony Goddard, was swimming in the Mad River around 5:25 p.m.Wednesday with his young daughter on his back. As he attempted to cross the river, he began to struggle before eventually going underwater, police said in a press release.Onlookers entered the water and were able to rescue the child, but were unable to f
  • Michael A. Powers: Independent schools are not responsible for out-of-control education costs

    Michael A. Powers: Independent schools are not responsible for out-of-control education costs
    Dear Editor,In her commentary, “Vermonters deserve affordability, but Gov. Scott has no ‘grand plan’,” Rep. Rebecca Holcombe repeats her claim that independent schools are one of the culprits in the huge deficit in financing education in Vermont.This is a false premise for which she offers no proof. The approximately 3,500 students served by independent schools are not responsible for the out-of-control cost of education in Vermont. It would appear that Rep. Holcombe
  • State police say struggle over shotgun preceded fatal police shooting in Orange

    State police say struggle over shotgun preceded fatal police shooting in Orange
    A Vermont State Police cruiser. Photo courtesy of Vermont State Police
    Vermont State Police said the trooper who shot and killed a man in Orange on Wednesday afternoon was in a struggle with the man to secure sawed-off shotgunThe name of the man who was killed is expected to be made public on Thursday following an autopsy at the Vermont Chief Medical Examiner’s Office in Burlington to confirm his identity and determine his cause and manner of death, according to a press release issued lat
  • Matthew LeFluer: Override the veto of the Renewable Energy Standard

    Matthew LeFluer: Override the veto of the Renewable Energy Standard
    The Vermont State Legislature should override Gov. Phil Scott’s veto of H.289, the Renewable Energy Standard. We need to act now to make sure Vermont’s electricity is clean, reliable and affordable. Investing in local renewable energy makes sense for our state economy and for generations of future Vermonters. The effects of climate change are already costing our state millions of dollars (for example, in flood cleanup). It is irresponsible not to do what we can to redu
  • UVM plans to nearly double its graduate student population as it nears ‘top-tier’ research designation

    UVM plans to nearly double its graduate student population as it nears ‘top-tier’ research designation
    Ira Allen Chapel on the University of Vermont campus in Burlington on Sept. 20, 2023. File Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger
    Holger Hoock admits his most recent job change was a “slightly unusual” move. Leaving the University of Pittsburgh, a school with the highest level of research classification and a member of the American Association of Universities, he joined the University of Vermont as its first full-time graduate college dean in June 2023.Vermont’s flagship public resea
  • Vermont State Police arrest suspect in Massachusetts fatal stabbing

    Vermont State Police arrest suspect in Massachusetts fatal stabbing
    Vermont State Police say they have arrested a suspect wanted in Massachusetts on murder and other charges related to a stabbing that occurred there on Monday. Police arrested Kevin Digregorio, 33, of Randolph, Massachusetts, on Wednesday morning in Lunenburg, Vermont, after being notified by Massachusetts State Police that Digregorio was thought to be in the area of Waterford, according to a press release issued by Vermont State Police.Authorities found Digregorio sleeping in a vehicle on U
  • Prospects dim for property tax compromise after sour meeting between administration and lawmakers

    Prospects dim for property tax compromise after sour meeting between administration and lawmakers
    From left: Gov. Phil Scott, Rep. Jill Krowinski, and Senate President Pro Tempore Phil Baruth. Photos by Glenn Russell/VTDigger
    Negotiations between Gov. Phil Scott’s administration and legislative leadership soured after a Wednesday afternoon meeting to discuss the executive branch’s property tax and education finance proposal. The meeting and subsequent fallout followed Scott’s veto of the annual property tax legislation last week. If enacted, the legislation would incr
  • Margaret Anne Nourse

    Margaret Anne Nourse
    Born Feb. 9, 1944Cleveland, OhioDied April 20, 2024Richford, VermontDetails of servicesA mass of Christian Burial in Margaret’s honor will be held at Christ the King Church at 3001 Belmont Blvd, Nashville, Tennessee at 10 am on Friday, June 21.  In keeping with her wishes, smaller events to celebrate her life will be held by her daughters in California, Florida, Vermont, and Denmark in the future. Margaret Anne Nourse, (aged 80), a resident of Richford, Vermon
  • After more than a century, sturgeon return to Bellows Falls

    After more than a century, sturgeon return to Bellows Falls
    A sign at Riverfront Park in Bellows Falls warns anglers to be on the lookout for sturgeon and to return them to the river if they inadvertently catch them.This story by Robert F. Smith was first published in The Commons on June 12.BELLOWS FALLS — It has taken two years since researchers first began accumulating evidence, but on June 7, scientists announced that shortnose sturgeon are living in the Connecticut River as far north as the hydroelectric dam in Bellows Falls.Sturgeon exist in
  • Vermont Conversation: How Rob Mermin ran away with the circus and spent a life under the Big Top


    Rob Mermin and his new book “Circle of Sawdust: A Circus Memoir of Mud, Myth, Mirth, Mayhem and Magic.” 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 1969, with the country i
  • Vermont Supreme Court ruling reinstates murder charge against former Orleans County man

    Vermont Supreme Court ruling reinstates murder charge against former Orleans County man
    The Vermont Supreme Court in March 2020. Photo by Mike Dougherty/VTDigger
    A divided Vermont Supreme Court has reversed a lower court ruling that threw out a murder charge against a former Orleans County man whose daughter died in 2016 from what police described as complications from an intentional injury he inflicted on her as a 1-month-old in 2001.The high court’s 3-2 decision, issued Friday in the case against Jason Roberts, stems from prosecutors’ appeal of the dismissal of the m
  • Authorities probe death of man shot and killed by state police trooper in Orange

    Authorities probe death of man shot and killed by state police trooper in Orange
    A Vermont State Police cruiser. Photo courtesy of Vermont State Police
    Vermont State Police say they are investigating the death of a man shot and killed Wednesday afternoon by a state trooper in Orange. Few details related to the shooting were immediately available late Wednesday afternoon, including the identity of the man who was killed. State police said in a press release that the shooting took place around 1:25 p.m. outside a home on Spencer Road, and the man was pronounced dead
  • What happens if Vermont school districts can’t pass budgets by July 1?

    What happens if Vermont school districts can’t pass budgets by July 1?
    High school student Aubrey Fadden of Enosburg Falls works with third-graders at the Richford Elementary School on Friday, Jan. 27, 2023. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerMore than 100 school district budgets in the state have passed this year, but at least six still need voter approval, according to the Vermont Superintendents Association and the Vermont School Boards Association. Those half-dozen are quickly approaching a July 1 deadline, at which point districts face a slate of rarely used
  • VSAC helps an aspiring musician hit the right notes as he prepares for college and career

    VSAC helps an aspiring musician hit the right notes as he prepares for college and career
    I wonder sometimes
    About the outcome
    Of a still verdictless life
    Am I living it right?-“Why Georgia” by John MayerThe song “Why Georgia” by John Mayer was a surprising choice for Blue Mountain Union senior Matt Webster to perform at his senior concert this spring. (If you don’t recognize the words of the chorus above, look it up on your streaming music service of choice; chances are, the tune will ring a bell.) Matt, who lives in Groton and has been playing guitar
  • Brian Searles, 2-time Vermont transportation secretary, dies at 77

    Brian Searles, 2-time Vermont transportation secretary, dies at 77
    Brian Searles died on June 5 in Tampa, Florida, at 77 years old. Courtesy photo
    During his nearly half-century career in Vermont, Brian Searles developed a reputation as a modest but brilliant public servant — capable of efficiently managing the wide variety of organizations he led.  Searles died on June 5 in Tampa, Florida, at 77 years old. He had been receiving treatment for Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia before his death, according to an obituary prepared by his family. Af
  • Marc Boglioli: UVM conference provided important context to debates over Abenaki identity

    Marc Boglioli: UVM conference provided important context to debates over Abenaki identity
    Dear Editor,It was with great interest that I read University of Vermont historian David Massell’s recent commentary in which he discusses his role in the 2022 “Beyond Borders” conference and provides historical context regarding the emergence of the Vermont state-recognized tribes.
    READ MORE
    I was reminded of how educational that conference had been. Despite the fact that my Ph.D. dissertation covered a fair amount of Abenaki history and I currently teach Native American studi
  • Graham Unangst-Rufenacht and Grace Oedel: Farmers support the pollinator protection bill

    Graham Unangst-Rufenacht and Grace Oedel: Farmers support the pollinator protection bill
    This commentary is by Graham Unangst-Rufenacht, policy director at Rural Vermont, and Grace Oedel, executive director of the Northeast Organic Farming Association of Vermont.
    In May, Gov. Phil Scott had the opportunity to sign into state law a landmark bill that would restrict uses of neonicotinoid insecticides (neonics) that are harming birds, bees and other insects that sustain Vermont’s agricultural economy and environment. Modeled after New York’s Birds and Bees Protection Act,
  • A Vermont GOP rule bars it from backing felons. The state party chair says that’s not a problem for Trump — yet.

    A Vermont GOP rule bars it from backing felons. The state party chair says that’s not a problem for Trump — yet.
    Vermont Republican Party Chairman Paul Dame marches in the Essex Memorial Day parade in Essex Junction on May 28, 2022. File Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger
    The bylaws of the Vermont Republican Party prohibit it from backing candidates who have been convicted of a felony. That could pose a problem for the party, given that its likely standard bearer, former President Donald Trump, was convicted last month of 34 felony counts of falsifying business records to conceal a $130,000 hush money paymen
  • David Stirling Peebles

    David Stirling Peebles
    Born 1947Died May 20, 2024.Berlin, VermontDetails of servicesPer David’s wishes, there will be no services. If you wish to celebrate David, he would love for you to send a donation to Montpelier’s Kellogg Hubbard Library, the Vermont Historical Society, in Barre, or the Outdoor Heritage Museum in Oquossoc, Maine. To send online condolences to his family and see photos of a joyful David, please visit awrfh.com.David Stirling Peebles, 77, passed away unexpectedly but peaceful
  • Vermont to get $3 million from nationwide settlement with Johnson & Johnson over products that may have contained asbestos

    Vermont to get $3 million from nationwide settlement with Johnson & Johnson over products that may have contained asbestos
    Attorney General Charity Clark discusses a settlement between Vermont and 42 other states with Johnson & Johnson during a press conference in Montpelier on Tues., June 11, 2024. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger
    MONTPELIER — Attorney General Charity Clark announced Tuesday that Johnson & Johnson will pay Vermont more than $3 million to settle allegations the company long misled customers over the safety of its baby powder and body powder products that contained the mineral talc.&nbs
  • Pride flag goes missing at Harwood Union Middle and High School

    Pride flag goes missing at Harwood Union Middle and High School
    The Pride flag flies on the flagpole at Harwood Union Middle/High School on Sat., June 8. Photo by Lisa Scagliotti/Waterbury Roundabout
    This story by Lisa Scagliotti was first published in the Waterbury Roundabout on June 11.The Pride flag flying for the past three weeks on the flagpole in front of Harwood Union Middle and High School was stolen over the weekend, school administrators announced on Tuesday.In a letter to school students, staff and families, Superintendent Mike Leichliter along w
  • Vermont’s brown pine trees aren’t dead. They’re just a little sick.

    Vermont’s brown pine trees aren’t dead. They’re just a little sick.
    A tree gets rid of White Pine Needle Disease by shedding all the needles infected by fungi. Before the needles fall, they will turn shades of yellow and brown. Photo by Emma Malinak/VTDigger
    Drive around Vermont and you may notice that Eastern white pine trees have been turning shades of yellow and brown and shedding new needle growth. But the trees aren’t dying, said Savannah Ferreira, the forest health specialist for the Vermont Department of Forests, Parks and Recreation. They&rsq

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