Current News

by tim

Vermont Business Magazine This weekly report is a list of planned construction activities that will have traffic impacts on state highways throughout Vermont beginning the week of May 1, 2023. Please remember to drive safely in all work zones. Lives depend on it. Also, VTrans announced on Friday that the Floating Bridge in Brookfield on VT-65 is now open for the season.

by tim

by Anson B. Tebbetts As spring comes to the Green Mountains, shades of green slowly paint the contours of our rolling hills, valleys, and farm fields. Farmers are planting crops; gardeners are sowing seeds in earnest. Food and beverages are making their way to market. Visitors are traveling to Vermont for food, drink, experiences, and beauty. Vermont once again unfolds into a new season, and the Green Mountains continue to provide the backdrop for farmers, producers and those making their living off the land. Life meanders on - but clouds hang in the air as the Vermont Legislature, too, moves toward summer recess. If we do not invest in our food and farms, the system

by tim

by Jack Bell, Paul Lang, and Allen Fortier We at Long View Forest are writing in support of the Right to Repair legislation in the House this week. This bill would empower loggers and farmers like us to make faster and less expensive repairs to the machines we use to do our work. It would accomplish this by requiring original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) to make all the necessary tools, parts, manuals and diagnostic equipment needed to perform repairs available to loggers, farmers, and the independent repair shops we often use. Long View Forest is an employee-owned Vermont company founded 24 years ago. We started as a three-person logging crew and have grown into a diversified operation with 35 employees providing complete services to owners and managers of forestland.

by tim

Vermont Business Magazine The United States Attorney’s Office, the Vermont Attorney General’s Office, and the Rutland Area NAACP will be co-hosting a Hate-Free Vermont Forum in Randolph on May 8, 2023, from 5:30 pm to 7:30 pm. This forum will be the fourth held in an ongoing series; last month, a Hate-Free Vermont Forum was held in St. Albans. Last year, forums took place in Rutland and Bennington.

by tim

Vermont State Police On April 29, 2023, at approximately 0920 hours, the Vermont State Police were notified of a collision between a pick-up truck and bicyclist near the intersection of Brook Road and Carter Road in the Town of Burke. The preliminary investigation indicated the bicyclist was traveling south on Brook Road, while participating in a local bicycle race, when it entered into the northbound side of the roadway.

by tim

Vermont Business Magazine Lt. Col Enoch Woody Woodhouse, Jr., one of the last members of the all-Black World War II fighter pilot unit known as the Tuskegee Airmen, is honored with an Honorary Doctorate Degree from Norwich University during their 2023 Commencement Ceremony. The ceremony was held on Saturday, April 29, 2023, in Northfield, Vt.

by tim

Leonine Public Affairs The House and Senate have now both passed their own versions of the FY2024 budget, setting up the home stretch of the legislative session when the budget conference committee negotiates the final spending package. The budget conferees have been appointed - House Appropriations Chair Diane Lanpher, Vice-Chair Robin Scheu and House Human Services Chair Theresa Wood. On the Senate side the conferees are Senate Appropriations Chair Jane Kitchel, Vice-Chair Andrew Perchlik and Senator Richard Westman. Westman is the only Republican on the conference committee as all House Republicans voted against the budget.

by tim

Vermont Business Magazine Tri-Valley Transit is proud to announce that the Upper Valley Community Transportation Center (UVCTC) designed by Black River Design, Architects has recently been awarded an Efficiency Vermont Small New Construction Best of the Best award and a Net Zero Award and Vermont Green Building Award from the Vermont Green Building Network in the non-residential/commercial/multi-family category.

by tim

Northeastern Vermont Development Association Saturday, May 6th is Green Up Day: Every year Vermont calls on volunteers to pitch in and help clean up Vermont's neighborhoods and natural landscape. This Springtime tradition raises public awareness about keeping VERMONT beautiful and litter-free. Each town has a Green Up Coordinator. Click Here for town details and find out where to pick up and drop off bags in your community. Volunteers make a huge difference!

by tim

by Lauryn Katz, Community News Service Vermont continues to see spikes in housing prices with the median home price rising 15% in 2022, according to the Vermont Housing Finance Agency. Communities and state officials alike have spent a lot of time discussing how the growth of short-term rentals in Vermont has contributed to the state’s housing crisis. But Randolph’s Josh Hanford— Vermont’s commissioner of Housing and Community Development—thinks too much regulation on the rentals from the state could prove ineffective and that short-term rentals (such as those advertised on Airbnb.com) are only a small part of the housing problem. Instead, he thinks regulating short-term rentals is best done at the local level.