Current News
Vermont Business Magazine Vermont’s correctional facilities compost nearly 11,000 pounds of food scraps each week. Annually, these correctional facilities keep 572,000 pounds of food waste out of the garbage. At the facilities, inmates separate coffee grounds, banana peels, and spoiled food before sending these items to compost facilities that feed the soil at farms and gardens throughout Vermont. Composting food scraps also helps reduce greenhouse gas emissions. When food scraps end up at landfills, they produce methane, a greenhouse gas 30 times more potent than carbon dioxide.
Vermont Business Magazine The Vermont House on Wednesday evening gave preliminary approval to gun violence prevention measures in S.169 on a vote of 82-58. The law is intended to provide a "cooling off" period for people considering suicide. The bill also updates language regarding the purchase and use of high-capacity ammunition magazines.
Vermont Business Magazine Green Mountain Power (GMP) is bringing back its popular tours at the Kingdom Community Wind Project in Lowell, Vermont this summer. It will be the seventh season that Vermonters and tourists alike can see a wind farm up close to learn more about how wind energy works. The tours are free, but you have to register in advance.
Vermont Business Magazine The 18th Annual Strolling of the Heifers weekend (June 7,8,9) celebrates local agriculture and food, attracting thousands of residents and visitors to the Friday evening festival, Saturday morning parade, and all-day Slow Living Expo at the Brattleboro Common, and Sunday Tour de Heifer dirt road bicycle ride and Farm Tours. The Stroll’s festivities feature hundreds of vendors, exhibitors, and entertainers. A new theme is selected each year and participants in the parade are encouraged to decorate their parading heifers, horses, and floats to reflect this year’s theme, “Farmers Are Our Heroes.”
Vermont Business Magazine Today, the Vermont House gave preliminary approval to S.23, the Minimum Wage bill on a vote of 90 - 53. The amended House version would increase the minimum wage by 2.25 times the inflation rate. The original Senate version called for a minimum wage of $15 an hour starting on January 1, 2024. However, the House inflation-based (Consumer Price Index) bill would achieve $15 an hour, at current inflation levels, in about seven years. The just-released US CPI now stands at 2.0 percent, up one-tenth from year-end 2018. The Vermont minimum wage is now $10.78, up 2.7 percent from 2018's $10.50. If the CPI stays at 2 percent, the next hike would be 4.5 percent, or $11.26 for 2020. It would reach $15 an hour (about $15.30) in 2027 at current rates.
Vermont Business Magazine US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) will expand its Information Services Modernization Program to the St Albans field office on May 28. The St Albans field office provides immigration benefits to all of Vermont in addition to three counties in New York. Detailed information on the office service area is available online. USCIS anticipates expanding the program to all remaining field offices by the end of FY 2019.
Vermont Business Magazine Castleton University and SUNY Schenectady have formed a collaborative agreement that will allow students who graduate with an associate's degree in Performing Arts: Music at the upstate New York community college to earn their bachelor's degree in Music Education with licensure at Castleton.
Vermont Business Magazine Governor Phil Scott on Tuesday signed S154, an act relating to miscellaneous banking provisions. Present for the signing included Department of Financial Regulation (DFR) Commissioner Michael Pieciak, Deputy Commissioner Molly Dillon, and other members from the DFR’s Banking Division. The bill comprehensively overhauls DFR’s non-depository licensing regime to consolidate, modernize and streamline compliance. The revised regime will simplify doing business in Vermont for Fintech companies and other non-depository licenses and will reduce compliance costs for the department and the industry.
Vermont Business Magazine Dealer.com, the premier digital marketing solution and partner for auto dealerships, today announced it has teamed up with AudioEye, Inc (NASDAQ: AEYE), to create Empathy Day 2019. AudioEye is a leading provider of digital accessibility solutions that provide barrier-free website access for individuals with disabilities.
Vermont Business Magazine Rutland Regional Medical Center was awarded an ‘A’ rating from The Leapfrog Group’s spring 2019 Leapfrog Hospital Safety Grade, something the hospital has received consistently since 2013! Rutland Regional was one of only 832 hospitals out of over 2600 nationwide, and the only hospital in Vermont, to be awarded an “A” for its efforts in protecting patients from harm and providing safer healthcare.
Vermont Business Magazine The Community College of Vermont (CCV) will hold its 52nd commencement ceremony at Norwich University’s Shapiro Field House in Northfield, Vermont on Saturday, June 1. The ceremony will begin at 2 pm. Nearly 500 students will be awarded associate degrees. Students representing all of Vermont’s 14 counties will be graduating, along with students from 8 other states and 13 countries. Also among the graduates are 45 veteran and military students. The youngest graduate is 17 and the oldest is 76.
The College also announced that Ric Cabot, president and CEO of Cabot Hosiery Mills/Darn Tough Vermont, will deliver this year's commencement address. Cabot started Darn Tough in 2004 in an effort to save Cabot Hosiery Mills after their brands began to outsource labor. With a focus on quality and a healthy local economy, Darn Tough has become an industry leader in the outdoor and lifestyle sock markets.
Vermont Business Magazine The Senate Tuesday evening unanimously passed Vermont Senator Patrick Leahy’s legislation to permanently reauthorize and increase support for the lifesaving Bulletproof Vest Partnership grant program. The bill, S1231, cosponsored by Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham (R-SC) and 18 other bipartisan cosponsors, also increases funding for the program by $5 million to $30 million each year. The House of Representatives is expected to pass identical legislation shortly.
During the committee markup of the Senate bill last week, Chairman Graham offered an amendment naming the program after Leahy (D-Vt.), recognizing his decades of dedication to the program. This is the sixth time Leahy has led efforts in the Senate to reauthorize this lifesaving program since former Republican Senator Ben Nighthorse Campbell (Colo.) and Leahy first authored legislation creating it more than 20 years ago.
