Current News

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Vermont Business Magazine Central Vermont Home Health and Hospice (CVHHH) has announced that Tom MacLeay of Montpelier is the Honorary Chair of its year-end appeal. Tom is Chair of the National Life Group Foundation and a former President, CEO, and Chair of the Board of National Life Group. Tom shared his story with CVHHH’s extended community in a letter that mailed mid-November. Tom’s connection to CVHHH was forged several decades ago through his wife, Charlotte, to whom he was married for 49 years. Nursing was Charlotte’s calling, according to Tom, and wherever the pair lived, Charlotte found work helping others. She was passionate about public health, and home health and education were her favorite parts of nursing. 

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Vermont Business Magazine An innovative collaboration between the Lyndon Institute and Northeastern Vermont Regional Hospital (NVRH) in St Johnsbury is offering Licensed Nursing Associate (LNA) instruction to high school students during the 2025-2026 academic year. Students currently enrolled in the program take daily classes and gain hands-on health care experience to prepare for Vermont licensure testing. The use of scenarios with simulated patients, modeled after medical students' training, allows students to practice their skills in realistic situations.  

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Vermont Business Magazine The holiday season is a time for celebrating old traditions and making new ones. This year, add giving blood to your holiday activities! Your gift can bring hope and healing to patients in need. The 2025 Gift of Life Marathon Blood Drive will offer four days of giving – with hundreds of donation appointments available. This year, the drive aims to collect 421 pints of blood. “My family knows firsthand how precious blood donation truly is. No one ever expects their loved one to need a transfusion. But when it happens, those bags of blood and platelets become lifelines,” said Shanti Gallo-McKenna, the Gift of Life Marathon 2025 blood drive ambassador.

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Vermont Business Magazine The First Assistant United States Attorney for the District of Vermont announced that on November 24, 2025, Chief United States District Judge Christina Reiss sentenced Serhat Gumrukcu, 43, of Los Angeles, California, to life imprisonment for his role in the January 6, 2018, murder of Gregory Davis in Barnet, Vermont. Gumrukcu was convicted by a jury on April 18, 2025, of murder-for-hire and conspiracy to commit murder-for-hire. Gumrukcu was also convicted of conspiracy to commit wire fraud. Gumrukcu’s co-conspirators were sentenced in September 2025. 

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Vermont Business Magazine Secretary of Administration Sarah Clark today released Vermont’s revenue results for October 2025. All three funds were below monthly consensus revenue expectations, although General Fund receipts remain ahead of target on a cumulative basis. The State’s General Fund, Transportation Fund, and Education Fund receipts were a combined $287.0 million, representing collections -$4.9 million, or 1.68%, below the $291.9 million monthly target in the consensus forecast adopted by the Emergency Board at its July 2025 meeting. Total General Fund revenues for October were $190.0 million, -$2.3 million or 1.2% below the $192.3 million monthly cash flow target, driven primarily by underperformance in Personal Income Tax, Meals & Rooms Tax, and Corporate Income Tax revenues. 

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Senator Bernie Sanders (I-Vermont) I wanted to mention to you an issue of enormous consequence that I believe is not getting the attention that it deserves. Artificial intelligence (AI) and robotics are going to have a profound and transformative impact on our country and the entire world. The question is not whether these technologies will advance. They will. The question is: Who will control this technology? Who will benefit from it? And who will be left behind? That’s why last Tuesday, at Georgetown University, I sat down with the “Godfather of AI,” Nobel laureate Dr. Geoffrey Hinton, to discuss the extraordinary opportunities and dangers that AI and robotics pose for humanity, the world economy and the working families of Vermont and our country. I’m grateful to Dr. Hinton for joining me, and I hope you’ll take a few moments to watch our conversation.

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Vermont Business Magazine Sixteen Vermont news organizations have been honored with the Local Civic Journalism Awards, a new program designed to steer state and philanthropic dollars to news outlets that inform Vermonters and foster civic engagement. The recipients represent a broad cross-section of local and regional news organizations — including newspapers that have served their communities for well over a century and digital-only enterprises that have sprung up in recent years to fill a void. They include nonprofit and for-profit entities and are mostly locally controlled. Many of the recipients are based in regions of the state that are otherwise underserved, including the Northeast Kingdom, southern Vermont and the Upper Valley. Each Local Civic Journalism Award-winner will receive $5,000 or $10,000 to further their existing mission.  

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Vermont Business Magazine Average gasoline prices in Vermont are $3.13/g, up 3.1 cents per gallon from last week's $3.10/g. The lowest price in the state yesterday was $2.83/g while the highest was $3.29/g, a difference of 46.0 cents per gallon. The national average price of gasoline is unchanged in the last week, averaging $3.03/g today. The national average is down 2.0 cents per gallon from a month ago and stands 2.5 cents per gallon higher than a year ago.

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Agency of Agriculture, Food & Markets The Request for Applications is now available for the 2026 Trade Show Assistance Grant! $30,000 is available to provide Vermont agricultural, food, and forestry businesses with funds to exhibit and sell their Vermont products at trade shows targeting out-of-state wholesale buyers. These matching grants can partially offset the expenses associated with exhibiting at trade shows, which provide excellent opportunities to network with wholesale buyers and expand into new domestic and international markets. Applicants may request between $2,000 and $7,500 to help offset the costs of up to four trade shows. Grant funds can cover up to 75% of eligible costs.

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by Gabby Blanchard, Community News Service, Rutland On Tuesday evening, Treviso Vermont was filled with the smell of fresh cheeses and the roaring laughter of local businesswomen. Made possible by a Vermont Women’s Fund grant, the night marked the Downtown Rutland Partnership’s third and final Women in Business Mixer of the year. Showcasing one of Rutland’s newest women-owned businesses, Treviso Vermont, the “Stories to Inspire” event was accompanied by their authentic Italian cuisine that holds a modern twist.

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Vermont Business Magazine The Vermont Chamber of Commerce has announced the winners of the 2025 Coolest Thing Made in Vermont Awards, recognizing the state’s most innovative manufacturers and the next generation of technical talent. The awards were presented during the annual Vermont Manufacturing Summit, the state’s premier gathering for manufacturers from across Vermont, New England, and Canada. BETA Technologies’ ALIA Aircraft and Hannaford Career Center’s Tiny House on Wheels were named the 2025 winners.

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by Emily Bradbury Long before Beta Technologies put Vermont on the aerospace innovation map, Harbour Industries in Shelburne was already there – designing the cables that run through the world’s most advanced aircraft. For nearly six decades, Harbour Industries has manufactured high-performance cables for commercial and military aircraft. In fact, chances are very good that if you’ve ever settled into your seat on a Boeing or Airbus flight and plugged in your headphones to stream a movie, it came to you through cables that were made in Vermont.