Current News
Vermont Business Magazine Today, the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced the State of Vermont was awarded a total of $18,966,000 in Clean Water and Drinking Water State Revolving Loan Fund (SRF) grants to finance community-based water infrastructure projects, such as upgrades to municipal sewage plants and public drinking water systems.
“Communities across Vermont will enjoy cleaner water and make important infrastructure upgrades thanks to this funding,” said EPA New England Regional Administrator Alexandra Dunn. “These low-cost loans further EPA’s commitment to ensuring American communities have access to clean water, safe drinking water and the infrastructure necessary to support local needs.”
Vermont Business Magazine The Visiting Nurse Association of Chittenden and Grand Isle Counties has changed its name to The University of Vermont Health Network Home Health & Hospice. The new name and brand identity signify a formal affiliation with The University of Vermont Health Network, which began on January 1, 2018. The UVM Health Network Home Health & Hospice is the first affiliate of The UVM Health Network to provide post-acute, community-based care.
“This new name reflects our partnership with The UVM Health Network’s member hospitals and physician organization and our shared commitment to providing seamless, patient-centered care across all providers. High-quality home health and hospice services are integral to a fully integrated, regional health care system. Our new name and brand identity align with our role in the Network,” said Judy Peterson, The UVM Health Network Home Health & Hospice president and CEO.
Vermont Business Magazine Copley Hospital has completed its 2018 Community Health Needs Assessment (CHNA) and posted the results and implementation plan on its website, copleyvt.org. Through the CHNA process, Copley has determined the top health needs of the community are: Preventative Care, Mental Health, Chronic Health Conditions, and Substance Use/Abuse. The Hospital has developed an implementation plan for addressing these needs including services/programs the hospital already offers, new services/programs the hospital may add, other organizations the hospital may partner with and metrics the hospital will use to track progress.
Vermont Business Magazine The Friends of Norris Cotton Cancer Center has announced the election of seven new members, including three from Vermont, and a new chairperson to its Lebanon Board of Directors and two new members to its Friends South board. As active community members, each person will serve as an ambassador for Dartmouth-Hitchcock Norris Cotton Cancer Center to people in Vermont and New Hampshire, finding ways to increase awareness and fundraising for this nationally recognized center.
“The Friends of Norris Cotton Cancer Center plays a crucial role in achieving the Cancer Center’s mission,” says Steven Leach, MD, cancer center director. “The Friends’ ongoing work with the people in our region – producing events, conveying important information to the community as well as bringing important messages back – creates a strong relationship with the people we serve. I very much look forward to working with these new Friends.”
Vermont Business Magazine Copley Hospital, in partnership with Dartmouth-Hitchcock (D-H) Connected Care, is expanding Copley’s TeleHealth services to include TeleNephrology and TelePulmonology in addition to TeleRheumatology. The partnership brings together D-H specialists and Copley’s patients via telemedicine to provide evaluations, follow-up exams and recommendations for relevant therapies or interventions. These specialty services use live, two-way secure video on large format, high-definition mobile carts in the Multi-Specialty Clinic at Copley Hospital.
TeleNephrology and TelePulmonology will start in October. These new services will help overcome current barriers to accessible care and improve access for patients living with renal and respiratory diseases and disorders in the greater Lamoille Valley area. In addition, a
second D-H TeleRheumatology provider, Stephanie Mathew, DO, has been added to the service.
Vermont Business Magazine After PETA shared a horrifying video exposé of China's badger-brush industry with The Vermont Country Store, the Manchester-based retailer banned badger hair. According to the PETA report, its Asia's eyewitness investigation revealed that in order to make brushes used for shaving, makeup, and paint, badgers are captured using snares and other cruel methods while others are bred and confined to small wire cages on farms before being violently killed.
Vermont Business Magazine The Vermont Department of Public Safety is receiving $400,000 from the Department of Justice to fund new school safety initiatives. The DPS said in a statement that federal grants will pay for programs that allow the whole community to play a role in protecting schools.
"There's no single strategy to follow to make our schools safe," Vermont Public Safety Commissioner Thomas Anderson said. "School safety is not just about locking doors - it requires partnerships at the local level in order to ensure the network that supports our children is strong and has the tools it needs. These funds will help us continue with a multi-faceted approach to ensuring our kids enjoy a safe learning environment."
by John McClaughry For a century or more politicians and economists and have argued about the relationship, if any, between economic freedom and human wellbeing. The Fraser Institute, Canada’s leading market-oriented think tank, has just released its 2018 report on Economic Freedom of the World (EFW) to provide hard data to answer this question. These reports have been issued annually since 1980.
Vermont Business Magazine 107.1 Frank FM’s TJ Michaels and Auctioneer Extraordinaire Jamie Polli will headline Central Vermont Home Health & Hospice’s 19th Annual Seasons of Life Fashion Show, Live Auction, and Dinner, Friday, October 26 at the Capitol Plaza Hotel & Conference Center in Montpelier.
Vermont Business Magazine The Ladies League at the Lake Saint Catherine Country Club hosted the 5th Annual Donna Taft Memorial Golf Tournament on June 16, 2018. The event raised $2,200 to benefit the Southwestern Vermont Regional Cancer Center, part of Southwestern Vermont Medical Center (SVMC) and Southwestern Vermont Health Care (SVHC). An additional, $2,200 donation was made to Rutland Regional Medical Center’s Foley Cancer Center.
Southwestern Vermont Medical Center’s Director of Oncology Services Jean Huntington (left) and Dr. Matthew Vernon, radiation oncologist at the Southwestern Vermont Regional Cancer Center (right) stand with Mary Landon, a Southwestern Vermont Medical Center volunteer and a committee member of the Donna Taft Memorial Golf Tournament.
Vermont Business Magazine Governor Phil Scott and members of his Cabinet will be in Orleans County on Tuesday, October 9 for its eighth Capitol for a Dayvisit. The initiative has brought the Governor and dozens from his Cabinet and Extended Cabinet to Rutland, Caledonia, Windsor, Franklin, Bennington, Addison and Chittenden counties since the start of the summer.
“It’s so important for those of us in state government to get outside Montpelier and listen to Vermonters around the entire state, because each community has unique challenges and opportunities,” said Scott.
Capitol for a Day gives local constituents, municipal governments and other partners the opportunity to connect directly with State leadership and staff. The Administration will visit each of the state’s 14 counties as part of this initiative.
Follow along on social media using the #VTCapitol4aDay hashtag.
Vermont Business Magazine The Winooski River Apartments, consisting of three buildings (11 Bailey Avenue, 15 Baldwin Street, 37 Barre Street) have undergone an extensive rehab to address structural issues, weatherization, energy efficiency and ADA requirements. The goals of this project were to rehabilitate the properties such that they will be affordable to Vermonters in perpetuity, mitigate any potential hazards (lead and asbestos), extend the useful life of the buildings by at least 20 years, and to increase energy efficiency. As a result of the rehab, the City of Montpelier has been strengthened as a diverse community with the availability of more high-quality, affordable housing units, raising the bar for housing stock in Montpelier.
