• Trump nominates new U.S. marshal for Vermont

    Brad LaRose has been named by President Trump to be the new U.S. marshal for Vermont. U.S. Marshals Service photo
    WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump nominated former Essex Police Chief Brad LaRose to serve as the next U.S. marshal in Vermont Wednesday.
    If longtime police officer Bradley LaRose is confirmed by the Senate, he will head the operations of the U.S. Marshals Service in the state.Get all of VTDigger's political news.You'll never miss a political story with our weekly headlines i
  • Sen. Tanya Vyhovsky: Does Gov. Scott see himself as beholden to the Vermont Constitution?

    Sen. Tanya Vyhovsky: Does Gov. Scott see himself as beholden to the Vermont Constitution?
    This commentary is by Sen. Tanya Vyhovsky, P/D-Chittenden Central. 
    Much has been made lately about the appointment of Zoie Saunders as interim secretary of education. Saunders’ nomination for Vermont’s highest executive educational position raised eyebrows among senators given she only had three months of public school experience while actively pursuing the top education job in another state. After an outpouring of grassroots messages from parents, teachers and concerned Vermo
  • Phil Scott and Vermont legislators found at least some common ground on crime bills this year

    Phil Scott and Vermont legislators found at least some common ground on crime bills this year
    Sen. Dick Sears, D-Bennington, listens to other senators chat during a brief recess on the floor of the Senate at the Statehouse in Montpelier on Wednesday, March 20, 2024. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger
    In a session that was marked by contentiousness between Republican Gov. Phil Scott and the Democratic supermajority in the Legislature, there was one area, at least, where Vermont leaders seemed to find some common ground: crime policy.“I think that’s one of the bright spots of thi
  • Chellie Nayar and Dr. David Rand: We support the Climate Superfund Act

    Chellie Nayar and Dr. David Rand: We support the Climate Superfund Act
    This commentary is by Chellie Nayar, a rising fourth-year medical student and a member of the Vermont Climate and Health Alliance, and Dr. David Rand, an internal medicine physician on the steering committee of the Vermont Climate and Health Alliance. 
    One of us is a 27-year-old approaching her final year of medical school; the other is 45-year-old internal medicine physician and father of a young child. Despite these differences, we feel a shared sense of horror and urgency as we watch ou
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  • Matthew John Lomasney

    Matthew John Lomasney
    Born April 29, 1977
    Barre, VermontDied May 13, 2024
    St. Johnsbury, VermontDetails of servicesNo public services are planned at the time. Donations in Matthew’s honor may be made to Long Trail Canine Rescue in Wilder, VT or Kingdom Recovery Center, St. Johnsbury, VT or plant a tree in memory of Matthew. He was especially fond of Cedar and Hemlock trees. Matthew loved trees. He will never be forgotten. May he rest in eternal peace.“Fare you well, fare you well, I love you more than wor
  • Plan for 240 apartments in White River Junction completes planning and zoning review

    Plan for 240 apartments in White River Junction completes planning and zoning review
    An artist’s rendering of one of four market-rate apartment buildings proposed in a planned development on a 25-acre lot on Sykes Mountain Avenue in White River Junction. Image courtesy of the Town of Hartford
    This story by Patrick Adrian was first published by The Valley News on May 22.WHITE RIVER JUNCTION — Planning and zoning officials have approved a plan to build more than 200 apartments off Sykes Mountain Avenue.A partnership of White River Junction-based Simpson Development Co
  • ‘More good than harm’: Phil Scott signs $8.6 billion state budget into law

    ‘More good than harm’: Phil Scott signs $8.6 billion state budget into law
    Gov. Phil Scott speaks during a press conference at the Statehouse on Wednesday, Jan. 10, 2024. Photo by Natalie Williams/VTDigger
    Republican Gov. Phil Scott on Thursday signed Vermont’s $8.6 billion budget into law, funding state government for the fiscal year starting July 1. Negotiations over the state budget, H.883, were notably more amicable this legislative session than last, when it became a proxy war over the fate of the state’s emergency motel housing program. Last yea
  • Phil Scott vetoes Vermont lawmakers’ priority energy bill

    Phil Scott vetoes Vermont lawmakers’ priority energy bill
    The solar array at Crossest Brook Middle School in Duxbury on Wednesday, August 25, 2021. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger
    Gov. Phil Scott on Thursday vetoed a bill that would require Vermont utilities to buy more renewable energy at a faster pace, with most utilities purchasing all of their energy from renewable sources by 2030. Scott cited the cost of H.289 as his main concern. “I don’t believe there is any debate that H.289 will raise Vermonters’ utility rates, lik
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  • Biden nominates Mary Kay Lanthier, Rutland County public defender, to Vermont federal judgeship

    Biden nominates Mary Kay Lanthier, Rutland County public defender, to Vermont federal judgeship
    Mary Kay Lanthier in 2016. President Joe Biden announced Thursday, May 23, 2024, that he would nominate her to a federal judgeship in Vermont. Photo by Caleb Kenna.President Joe Biden plans to nominate Mary Kay Lanthier, the supervising attorney in the Rutland County Defender’s Office, to be the next federal judge for Vermont, the White House announced Thursday morning.Lanthier, who has served in her current role since 2007, would succeed Judge Geoffrey Crawford on the federal bench if co
  • Felicia Kornbluh and Matt Vogel: Jewish communities at UVM — and in Vermont — are diverse

    Felicia Kornbluh and Matt Vogel: Jewish communities at UVM — and in Vermont — are diverse
    This commentary is by Felicia Kornbluh, professor of history and of gender, sexuality and women’s studies at the University of Vermont; and Matt Vogel, executive director of UVM Hillel. 
    An old Jewish saying has it that where there are two Jews, you get three opinions. When it comes to Israel and Gaza, the number of opinions in Jewish communities, and even in the minds of individual members of those communities, might be a lot higher. Every Jewish person feels something about the cur
  • In Cornwall, newly conserved grasslands are for the birds 

    In Cornwall, newly conserved grasslands are for the birds 
    Jill Kilborn, right, and Will Duane, both of the Vermont Fish and Wildlife Department, walk through the Lemon Fair Wildlife Management Area in Cornwall on Thursday, May 16, 2024. The open area provides habitat for grassland and shrub-dwelling birds. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDiggerCORNWALL — Jill Kilborn spent the morning of May 16 in tall wading boots, roaming the wet, grassy expanses of a newly conserved, 110-acre piece of land and looking for birds. An abundant assortment of songbi
  • Child care program directors and owners: Act 76 is leading to newfound stability for child care programs and families

    Child care program directors and owners: Act 76 is leading to newfound stability for child care programs and families
    This commentary is by 15 child care program directors and owners from across the state. They are listed below the text of the commentary.
    Last year, we came together as child care program owners and early childhood educators from around Vermont to sound the alarm on the dire state of Vermont’s child care system. Pandemic-era federal funding was running out, and we were facing the impossible decisions of drastically raising tuition for families that already struggled with the cost, decreas
  • Vermont search and rescues are rising — and first responders fear more people are headed out unprepared

    Vermont search and rescues are rising — and first responders fear more people are headed out unprepared
    A member of Stowe Mountain Rescue with a person in a litter, a type of stretcher. Photo courtesy Stowe Mountain RescueLauryn Katz is a reporter with Community News Service, part of the University of Vermont’s Reporting & Documentary Storytelling program.At any moment Drew Clymer could be pulled out of rest or running errands to answer the phone and listen to the anxious voice of a hiker on the other end, lost with daylight fading. Say the hiker is in good shape, has the right gea
  • Vermont Conversation: Journalist Jonathan Mingle on how a rural community defeated a major gas pipeline


    Jonathan Mingle and his new book, “Gaslight: The Atlantic Coast Pipeline and the Fight for America’s Energy Future.” Courtesy photosThe 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.
    “Im
  • Journalist Jonathan Mingle on how a rural community defeated a major gas pipeline

    Journalist Jonathan Mingle on how a rural community defeated a major gas pipeline
    Jonathan Mingle and his new book, “Gaslight: The Atlantic Coast Pipeline and the Fight for America’s Energy Future.” Courtesy photosThe 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.
    “Im
  • Families with kids at Vermont schools can now get money for summer meals

    Families with kids at Vermont schools can now get money for summer meals
    Photo via Pixabay
    Eligible Vermont families will soon be able to get federal assistance to help pay for their children’s meals during summer break, the state announced in a Wednesday press release. This benefit, called the Summer Electronic Benefit Transfer, could provide up to $120 per child for low-income households as part of a new program launched by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. In Vermont, the program is administered by two state agencies, the Agency of Human Services and
  • Report shows trooper driving 88 mph before crash into fire truck, and up to 86 mph at impact

    Report shows trooper driving 88 mph before crash into fire truck, and up to 86 mph at impact
    Vermont State Police Cpl. Eric Vitali. Photo courtesy of Vermont State PoliceThe cruiser Vermont State Police Cpl. Eric Vitali was driving when he crashed into a parked fire truck on Interstate 89 in March was traveling at 88 mph just before the crash and between 79 mph and 86 mph at impact.That’s according to a standard crash report submitted by the Vermont State Police to the Department of Motor Vehicles and obtained Wednesday by VTDigger. WCAX and WPTZ had  reported on the documen
  • A state coordinator delves into Native American affiliation as part of child custody cases

    A state coordinator delves into Native American affiliation as part of child custody cases
    Marshall Rich and Lindsay Barron, of Vermont’s Department for Children and Families. Photo courtesy of Lindsay Barron
    For about a year and a half now, Marshall Rich’s workdays have involved getting in touch with various Native American tribes to determine whether certain Vermont children are affiliated with them.He has sent out at least 150 inquiries to tribes around the country, following up with calls or letters, and sometimes reaching out to the federal Bureau of Indian Affairs f
  • How do you choose a student loan? With eyes wide open!

    How do you choose a student loan? With eyes wide open!
    For many students, attending college or training after high school likely involves taking out an education loan to help cover tuition bills, along with room, board, books, supplies, and transportation costs. Seven out of ten Vermont families need to borrow to help pay education costs. So, if your family is considering borrowing for college expenses, you’re not alone. Borrowing money to pay for education can feel overwhelming. But with a bit of background and some tips, you can go thr
  • Patrick Leahy: The Leahy law should be applied to Israel

    Patrick Leahy: The Leahy law should be applied to Israel
    This commentary is by Patrick Leahy. He served as a U.S. senator from Vermont for 48 years.
    In the 1980s and ’90s, the United States gave training, weapons and ammunition to Latin American security forces with a long history of violating human rights. In Guatemala and El Salvador, soldiers trained and equipped by the United States killed hundreds of thousands of civilians with near-total impunity. I conceived and introduced the Leahy law in 1997 because our Latin partners, and security fo
  • Eve Frankel: Biodiversity is nature by another name 

    Eve Frankel: Biodiversity is nature by another name 
    This commentary is by Eve Frankel of Waitsfield. She is the state director for The Nature Conservancy in Vermont. 
    Growing up as part of an immigrant family in Queens, New York, my childhood could be categorized as “nature deficient.” Aside from walks in the park or the special day trip to Jones Beach on a hot summer day, there was no camping, boating or hiking. When we moved to the suburbs, a sign of upward mobility that my parents strived for, I truly thought we were in the g
  • Mary Louise Sayles

    Mary Louise Sayles
    Born Jan. 26, 1935Boston, Massachusetts
    Died May 16, 2024Lebanon, New Hampshire
    Details of servicesA visitation will be held Friday, May 24, 2024, at the Knight Funeral Home in Windsor from 4-6pm. A memorial service will be held On Saturday June 15, 2024, at Cedar Hill Community in Windsor at 11am. A private interment will follow in the Ascutney Cemetery in Windsor.Windsor, VT- Mary Louise Sayles died Thursday, May 16, 2024, at the Jack Byrne Palliative and Hospice Center in Lebanon, NH followin
  • Dozens of layoffs at former Vermont Teddy Bear distribution center due to start Thursday

    Dozens of layoffs at former Vermont Teddy Bear distribution center due to start Thursday
    A Vermont Teddy Bear worker uses a die and press to cut through multiple layers of fur to create the fabric pieces that will be sewn into bear parts. File photo by Mike Dougherty/VTDigger
    Roughly 30 people will lose their jobs at a distribution center for the former apparel brands of the Vermont Teddy Bear Company, according to a letter the new owner sent to the Vermont Department of Labor. The first round of layoffs are expected to begin Thursday and proceed in stages until June 5, accord
  • Unhoused Vermonters get extra help in bitter cold but must largely manage extreme heat on their own

    Unhoused Vermonters get extra help in bitter cold but must largely manage extreme heat on their own
    The Fletcher Free Library has served as a cooling site in Burlington available for people to seek relief from the heat. File 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.As Vermont sees temperatures spike for the first time this year, unhoused people who lack stable access to shelter face limited options as they try to stay cool.Amid a rise in homelessness, the state’s sh
  • State trooper receiving care for ‘severe’ traumatic brain injury from March crash

    State trooper receiving care for ‘severe’ traumatic brain injury from March crash
    Vermont State Police Cpl. Eric Vitali. Photo courtesy of Vermont State PoliceA Vermont State Police trooper seriously injured in March when his cruiser slammed into a fire truck that had stopped at a crash scene is undergoing treatment for a “severe traumatic brain injury.”Mike O’Neil, executive director of the Vermont Troopers’ Association, provided an update on Cpl. Eric Vitali’s condition in a statement issued late last week. O’Neil said he did so at the r
  • Dartmouth faculty censures college president over response to protest

    Dartmouth faculty censures college president over response to protest
    Dartmouth College President Sian Beilock takes selfies with students during a lunch event on campus in Hanover, N.H., on Wednesday, July 12, 2023. Photo by James M. Patterson/Valley NewsThis story by Frances Mize was first published in the Valley News on May 20.HANOVER — Members of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences have voted to censure Dartmouth College President Sian Leah Beilock, publicly rebuking her handling of a pro-Palestinian protest on campus earlier this month.The resolution pass
  • Gov. Phil Scott appoints Andy Julow to former Sen. Dick Mazza’s seat

    Gov. Phil Scott appoints Andy Julow to former Sen. Dick Mazza’s seat
    Gov. Phil Scott on Tuesday appointed North Hero resident and former Democratic candidate for the Vermont House Andy Julow to the state Senate seat previously held by former Sen. Dick Mazza. Julow is the executive director of the Lake Champlain Islands Economic Development Corp. He’ll serve the Grand Isle Senate district, which includes the five towns on the Champlain Islands as well as parts of Colchester on the mainland. Andy Julow. Courtesy photo.
    Mazza resigned from the Senat
  • Sen. Kesha Ram Hinsdale: It’s time for the Vermont Kids Code

    Sen. Kesha Ram Hinsdale: It’s time for the Vermont Kids Code
    This commentary is by Sen. Kesha Ram Hinsdale, D-Chittenden Southeast.
    As a Vermont senator and the mother of a toddler with a new baby on the way, I feel a deep personal responsibility to make sure the digital world our children grow up in is as safe and nurturing for them as the physical one. That’s why I’m grateful our Legislature came together at the end of this session to pass the Vermont Kids Code. I’m proud to have sponsored this bill, not only as a lawmaker but al
  • With prescription drug bills, Vermont lawmakers hope to lower pharmaceutical prices  

    With prescription drug bills, Vermont lawmakers hope to lower pharmaceutical prices  
    Stock photo via Pexels
    Vermont lawmakers are hoping that new legislation headed to the desk of Gov. Phil Scott will help patients afford prescription drugs, as rising pharmaceutical prices push up health care costs across the state. As legislators scrambled to wrap up the legislative session earlier this month, they passed two bills that aim to reform how prescription drugs are priced and distributed. “We’ve known about the impact that skyrocketing prescription drug costs
  • Lisa Jablow: Does the truth matter anymore?

    Lisa Jablow: Does the truth matter anymore?
    This commentary is by Lisa Jablow of Brattleboro. She is a longtime animal advocate and a board member of Protect Our Wildlife and the Windham Disaster Animal Response Team.
    The wildlife advocacy movement has never been stronger in Vermont. Over the past few years, the Statehouse has been bustling with bills seeking to improve wildlife protection and conservation, thanks to a completely dysfunctional, intractable and self-serving Fish & Wildlife Board. At this point, the only route to

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