News

This commentary is by Alis Headlam of Rutland. Gov. Phil Scott of Vermont proclaimed the second week in May as Inclusion Week ...
Laws don't eliminate crime: they set reasonable limits with clear consequences and hold scofflaws accountable. S.131 would ...
Your voice I heard daily during the Covid pandemic. You were a comfort. Your voice I heard during Vermont’s severe storms and flooding disasters. You were a reassurance.
Vermont Governor Phil Scott focused on legislative deliberations over an expansive education reform bill during his weekly ...
At his weekly press conference, Scott said that he had not yet read the final version of the bill, but indicated that lawmakers “would have had to move a long ways” before gaining his signature.
Once a measure to aid struggling restaurants and bars during the COVID-19 pandemic, cocktails-to-go are now permanently legal ...
Vermont, one of the domiciles for captive insurance companies in the United States, has enacted important updates to its captive insurance laws through ...
The state legislature blessed the measure into law in 2021, but included a two-year sunset clause, which they extended for another two years in 2023. Now, lawmakers have finally decided to kick that ...
There’s a battle happening over your child’s safety — and most Vermonters have no idea it’s underway. That’s because it’s being waged behind closed doors: not in press conferences or public hearings, ...
Beginning this July, the state plans to provide $7 million to municipalities and organizations to begin implementation, with full rollout expected by the summer of 2026.
The governor indicated that the current timeline and spending levels in the proposals are major sticking points for him. Scott opposes the four-year timeline before implementation of a foundation ...