Current News
Senator Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) Monday joined local, state and federal officials to break ground on Burlington’s new Downtown Transit Center, a project 15 years in the making. Leahy, the most senior member of the Senate Appropriations Committee, played a pivotal role in securing $8 million for the long planed center, as well as nearly $40 million in federal funding for public transit stations and buses across Vermont over the past 15 years. Burlington Mayor Miro Weinberger, Vermont Transportation Secretary Sue Minter, Chittenden Country Transit Authority (CCTA) leadership and representatives of the Federal Transit Administration joined Leahy for the ceremony.
by Public Assets Institute Desperate to find a way to reduce property taxes, the Vermont Legislature’s latest idea is to increase property taxes in scores of communities. Huh? Seriously. The plan is to impose property tax penalties on districts with per-pupil spending that is higher than the Legislature thinks it should be. Each school district will have its own assigned spending threshold per pupil, and voters will pay a tax penalty if their district exceeds the threshold.
According to data from the Agency of Education, about 150 school districts in Vermont would have to keep their per-pupil spending growth under the rate of inflation in fiscal 2017 in order to avoid additional tax penalties. In other words, more than half of the school districts in the state would face an extra property tax hike if their spending per pupil just kept pace with normal cost-of-living increases.
On Saturday and Sunday, May 16 and 17, Vermont Tech celebrated the college’s 149th annual commencement ceremony. The Ceremony returned to Vermont Tech’s Randolph Center campus location for the first time in more than five years. Vermont Tech graduates students in both bachelor’s and associate’s degree programs.
“Leave here today with the confidence that graduates from this college will lead the way, because you know how to get things done,” said Vermont Tech President Dan Smith to the graduating class. “That is the exception in this day and age.”
NASA Flight Director Zebulon Scoville, a native of Middlesex, Vermont, and graduate of Union 32 High School in East Montpelier, returned to Vermont to inspire and encourage Vermont Tech’s graduates with this year’s commencement speech.
Given that she was sharing the speaker’s platform with Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist Annie Proulx, a less confident person than Nina Totenberg might have had second thoughts about starting her speech at the University of Vermont’s 2014 commencement Sunday morning with two extended pieces of creative writing.
But courage, mixed with intelligence, verve and humor, has been the hallmark of Totenberg’s 40-year career covering legal affairs for National Public Radio, so she launched quite happily into two rhyming odes to graduates, one for the women and one for the men in the audience. Both were variations, in multiple stanzas, on the commencement-appropriate theme of wanting to have it all.
Proulx, a UVM alum who received an honorary degree at the ceremony along with Totenberg, wasn’t visible, but one can imagine her smiling at lines like:
I want to be Loretta Lynch and Loretta Lynn
Lock 'em up and sing a hymn.
Progress for Vermont
by Governor Peter Shumlin We convened the legislative session in January with the goal of making this economy work for every single Vermonter and resolving the challenges that undermine our quality of life. It was an agenda focused on jobs, quality of life, our environment, and making Vermont a place that works for everyone, not just those who are already doing well. Five months later, we have taken great steps toward that goal.
The University of Vermont officially broke ground May 15 on its $104 million STEM project, the largest capital project in UVM history. Speakers at the event included Governor Peter Shumlin, who has urged the university to produce more STEM graduates to meet the needs of Vermont’s high-tech sector, as well as Burlington Mayor Miro Weinberger, UVM Board of Trustees chair Deborah McAneny, president Tom Sullivan, doctoral student Lane Manning, and Richard Bundy, president and CEO of the University of Vermont Foundation.

Trustees chair Deborah McAneny aboard an excavator during the groundbreaking. Sally McCay photos.
Lieutenant Governor Phil Scott issued the following statement in response to the House and Senate passage of S138. “Paving the way toward a more prosperous future for Vermont requires putting our full focus on growing the economy," Scott said. "Today, with the passage of S138, the Vermont House and Senate took a solid first step down that path. This bill makes it easier for entrepreneurs to access capital, repeals the cloud tax, provides assistance to first-time homebuyers, invests in marketing Vermont as a place to live, work and play, facilitates the creation of a trained, modern workforce, and starts discussions at both the regional and statewide levels on a number of fiscal priorities.
by Anne Galloway vtdigger.org After two weeks of intense back and forth, Vermont Governor Peter Shumlin and lawmakers have agreed to a $29.6 million tax package. Shumlin had insisted that lawmakers find more budget cuts, and he used his bully pulpit to push back on the elimination of income tax deductions proposed by the Legislature.

The University of Vermont will celebrate its 214th Commencement on Sunday, May 17. Since Sunday’s forecast calls for pleasant weather, the University Commencement Main Ceremony and College of Arts and Sciences Ceremony will take place outdoors on the University Green. Graduates and guests are urged to dress appropriately for the weather. Tickets are not required.
Nina Totenberg, National Public Radio Legal Affairs Correspondent, will deliver the commencement address at the Main Ceremony.
UVM Commencement 2014. Sally McCay photo.
Faculty and graduates dressed in academic regalia are asked to assemble for the Main Ceremony academic procession on the Bailey-Howe/Davis Center Green at 7:45 a.m. The ceremony will begin at 8:20 a.m.
Berkshire Bank, America’s Most Exciting Bank®, has announced its winner for “Get Pumped Gas for a Year Sweepstakes.” David and Terrie Churchill of North Clarendon, VT were awarded $2,000 as the winners of the Get Pumped Sweepstakes. More than 2,600 entries were received for the sweepstakes, which included consumers applying for a new or used auto loan, website entries and Berkshire Bank customers with current auto loans.
Whether you're buying a new or used car—or you want to refinance the car you have—Berkshire Bank can help steer consumers in the right direction. Berkshire’s online application takes only five minutes to complete, includes a credit check that does not affect one’s credit score and pre-approves applicants in one hour. The application process informs consumers how much they’re pre-approved to borrow, helping them stick to a budget.
Vermont Business Magazine after three weeks of tumult, weekly unemployment claims in Vermont showed little change last week. For the week, there were 504 new, regular benefit claims for Unemployment Insurance in Vermont, a decrease of 11 from the previous week's total and 32 fewer than they were a year ago. Generally, claims have been running below last year's totals.
Altogether 5,543 new and continuing claims were filed, a decrease of 978 from a week ago, and 746 fewer than a year ago. The Department processed 0 First Tier claims for benefits under Emergency Unemployment Compensation, 2008 (EUC08), the same as the previous week.
Quantum physics on tap: Nano-sized faucet offers experimental support for longstanding quantum theory
We all know intuitively that normal liquids flow more quickly as the channel containing them tightens. Think of a river flowing through narrow rapids. But what if a pipe were so amazingly tiny that only a few atoms of superfluid helium could squeeze through its opening at once? According to a longstanding quantum-mechanics model, the superfluid helium would behave differently from a normal liquid: far from speeding up, it would actually slow down.
For more than 70 years, scientists have been studying the flow of helium through ever-smaller pipes. But only recently has nanotechnology made it possible to reach the scale required to test the theoretical model, known as the Tomonaga-Luttinger theory (after the scientists who developed it).
