Current News
Fourteen entrepreneurs from seven climate solution start-ups graduate from the Vermont-based business accelerator to help reduce fossil fuel consumption and greenhouse gas emissions in the heating and transportation sectors.
Vermont Business Magazine Vermont State Treasurer Beth Pearce today announced that participants in the state’s investment account for Vermonters with disabilities, VermontABLE, have accumulated $1.25 million in assets. The news comes as the Treasurer’s Office highlights #ABLEtoSave Month, a nationwide initiative to raise awareness about ABLE accounts.
Vermont Business Magazine Tax revenues are still coming in largely above targets, continuing their strong showing from the spring. The personal income tax, the most important General Fund revenue source, was up nearly 7 percent over expectations. Meanwhile the corporate tax, which tends to spike, was almost 70 percent ahead of targets. Secretary of Administration Susanne Young released Vermont’s Revenue Results for July 2019 today.
A limited number of tickets to the women’s World Cup at Killington go on sale today for select viewing areas. Standing areas to view race will be free and open to public.
Vermont Business Magazine The City of Winooski has announced that the Northern Border Regional Commission (NBRC) has awarded the City a $450,000 grant through their Economic & Infrastructure Development Investment program to support the Main Street Revitalization Project. This grant will reduce the project cost to taxpayers in Winooski by approximately $600,000 in debt and interest.
Vermont Buiness Magazine The threat for thunderstorms across central and southern Vermont has Green Mountain Power (GMP) rescheduling today’s EV Test Drive Event in Rutland. The National Weather Service says thunderstorms are possible in Vermont throughout the day, and especially across central and south-central Vermont this afternoon. Forecasters say the storms this afternoon could cause localized flash flooding.
by Rob Roper This past spring the Lake Champlain Chamber of Commerce surveyed 500 young professionals, primarily Burlington area residents between the ages of 22 and 34, and learned that over 40 percent intend to leave Vermont. Now we can put some faces on those statistics. Taylor Dobbs, 29, a prominent reporter who worked for VPR and most recently Seven Days, has decamped with his wife, an educator, for North Carolina. Ben Jickling, 25, a two-term independent Representative from Brookfield, is leaving to take a job with a medical software company in Wisconsin. Both were life-long Vermonters.
Vermont Business Magazine Representatives from Middlebury College, Vanguard Renewables, Vermont Gas, Goodrich Farm, and the State of Vermont gathered on August 20 at the farm in Salisbury, to mark the official groundbreaking for an anaerobic digester. The facility will combine cow manure and food waste to create Renewable Natural Gas (RNG). The project is a milestone toward the college’s goal of using 100 percent renewable energy sources, and Middlebury will be the primary consumer of the RNG produced at the dairy farm. During the event, speakers from each organization discussed the facility, which will be the largest anaerobic digester east of the Mississippi River.
Vermont Business Magazine Senators Patrick Leahy (D-Vermont), Patty Murray (D-Wash) and Gary Peters (D-Mich) on Tuesday requested that the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) conduct a comprehensive review of the Border Patrol’s use of interior immigration checkpoints as part of their border security mission and their compliance with the Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, which protects the right of Americans to be secure in their persons, houses, papers and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures. Two-thirds of Americans live within 100 miles of the Northern, Southern and maritime borders of the United States, and could be stopped and searched within that “border zone.”
Vermont Business Magazine Attorney General TJ Donovan today joined New York, Connecticut, and New York City in a lawsuit filed against the Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) new rule that aims to deny green cards and visas to immigrants that use, or have used, government assistance programs.
Vermont Business Magazine The 14th annual Last Mile Ride drew record crowds to the Gifford Green last weekend with 497 community members walking, running, or riding to support end-of-life care and special services for central Vermont patients and families. The event, which included a 5K and family-friendly walk Friday evening and a motorcycle ride Saturday, raised more than $120,000, bringing the grand total to more than $880,000 raised since the inaugural LMR in 2006.
It was an emotional two days, as many in attendance participated in honor of deceased loved ones or family and friends experiencing advanced illness. Among them was Eaton Snow of Brookfield, a longtime rider who took part in Saturday’s opening ceremony from his hospital bed, which had been wheeled outside by family and Gifford providers. Unable to ride this year, Snow wished friends a safe journey.
Vermont Business Magazine Following new limits on how federal Title X funding can be used, Health Commissioner Mark Levine, MD notified the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) that it will stop using those funds provided to Planned Parenthood of Northern New England for family planning services in Vermont. Instead, the Vermont Department of Health will use State funds that have been reserved to ensure these services can continue.
Title X is a federal grant program created in 1970 dedicated to providing comprehensive family planning and related preventive health services to low-income families or uninsured people who might not otherwise have access to these basic health care services. HHS recently issued a Final Rule that prevents Title X funds from being used to provide the full range of family planning and reproductive health care services.
