Current News

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Vermont Business Magazine Conscious consumers are demanding products and services from environmentally and socially responsible companies in all industries. Burlington-based digital marketing provider, Localvore, is expanding operations outside of Vermont to connect conscious consumers with restaurants dedicated to local sourcing. In recognition of Localvore’s growth potential to create jobs in Vermont and support the in-state supply chain, the Flexible Capital Fund announces an investment of $400,000 in royalty financing to expand Localvore’s reach into consumer conscious cities nationwide and grow the company here in Vermont.

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Vermont Business Magazine The Burlington School District is pleased to announce that both the School Board and the Burlington Education Association have signed the teachers’ contract ratified this past September. With the signing, the contract becomes legal and binding, and teachers will soon begin receiving retroactive pay for raises granted by the contract. The contract also provides teachers with health insurance savings and will help the District support students whose needs are not easily met by traditional models.

“The signing of this contract is great news for all parties,” said District Superintendent Yaw Obeng. “This means we can begin to pay teachers their raises, and can put the process behind us and learn from it.” Obeng mentioned that finalizing the contract will allow the district to focus on presenting the school board with a sustainable budget that the community can support in March.

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Vermont Business Magazine At its 31st Annual Membership Meeting held at Stoweflake Mountain Resort & Spa, the Vermont Business Roundtable elected two new directors to their first three-year term: Mark Crow, Tenth Crow Creative and Don George, BCBSVT. Elected to their second three-year term were the following directors: Tom Dee, Southwestern Vermont Health Care; Mark Foley, Foley Services; Walter Frame, Trapp Family Lodge; Judy O’Connell, Champlain Investment Partners; and Mike Walsh, NFP.

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By Senator Patrick Leahy Once again Congress finds itself lurching toward another manufactured made-in-Washington crisis. We are four months into a new fiscal year, and our government is still operating under last year’s fixed funding levels with little flexibility to adapt to today’s world. We have not reauthorized the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP), putting the health care of 9 million children, including more than 4700 Vermont children, at risk. And 800,000 DREAMers live under a cloud of uncertainty and fear of deportation.

It was President Trump’s cruel, cynical and senseless decision, a crisis of his own making, to end the DACA program that put America’s DREAMers in an untenable situation. Their lives as productive contributors to our communities have been thrown into chaos. Meanwhile, the clock keeps ticking quickly down to the artificial deadline that the President imposed on their lives.

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Public Assets Institute “The vast majority of the most rigorous modern research on the impact of higher minimum wages—including robust increases to $13 or more—shows that these policies boost worker earnings with little to no adverse impact on employment.” Testimony to the Minimum Wage Study Committee from Yannet Lathrop of the National Employment Law Project on November 21, 2017. In other words, there is no credible evidence that minimum wage increases cause significant job loss.

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Vermont Business Magazine Weather forecasts for Friday evening through Sunday include freezing rain, sleet, snow and wind across the state that could cause outages. Green Mountain Power has activated its workforce and brought in additional crews from around New England and Canada to ensure a strong response to whatever the storm brings.

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Vermont Business Magazine As a benefit to customers all over the Northeast Region, Twinstate Technologies has partnered with FirstLight Fiber out of Albany, New York to broaden products and services. FirstLight, a leader in fiber-optic data, Internet, data center and voice services has become a tech giant throughout the Northeast for the past several years, stretching from Western New York to Vermont to Eastern Maine and as far North as Montreal to Southern New York State and New York City.

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by Timothy McQuiston Vermont Business Magazine Governor Phil Scott today at Burlington International Airport announced the Vermont at-par lodging promotion for passengers who travel from Toronto to Burlington aboard Toronto-based Porter Airlines. In a promotion created by the Vermont Department of Tourism and Marketing, more than 20 lodging properties in Burlington, the Stowe area, Smugglers' Notch and the Mad River Valley are offering Porter Airlines’ passengers lodging packages at a rate equivalent to the value of the Canadian dollar. Details and rates will vary for each participating property.

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Vermont Business Magazine Weekly unemployment claims began the new year on a down note, which is good. Hiring and then layoffs spike around the holidays as first retailers and mail order operations hire seasonal workers and then release them. Volatility is common this time of year. For the week of January 6, 2018, there were 945 claims, 625 fewer than than they were the previous week and 5 more than they were a year ago. Altogether 6,917 new and continuing claims were filed, an increase of 783 from a week ago, but 848 fewer than a year ago. For most weeks of 2017, including the last several months, claims have registered below the year before, until recently when they've been similar.

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by Timothy McQuiston Vermont Life Magazine will remain part of state government, Commerce Secretary Michael Schirling told the House Appropriations Committee Thursday. The Agency of Commerce & Community Development received nine bids last fall following a state request for proposal that solicited bids to privatize the 70-year-old publication.

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Vermont Business Magazine US Senator Patrick Leahy (D-Vermont) and Vermont Governor Phil Scott (R) have recommended Essex Police Chief Brad LaRose to President Trump to be Vermont’s next US Marshal. If nominated and confirmed, LaRose would oversee all US Marshals Service operations in Vermont. With offices in Burlington, Rutland, and Brattleboro, the Marshals Service plays a crucial role in protecting public safety in Vermont and is responsible for apprehending fugitives and sex offenders as well as managing federal prisoners and protecting federal courthouses.

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Vermont Business Magazine Vermont Attorney General TJ Donovan announced recent actions taken by his office to protect Vermont’s environment and issued the following statement: “Vermonters deserve clean air to breathe and clean water to drink,” said Attorney General Donovan. “Pollution knows no geographic boundaries and we will do our part to make sure that Vermont’s environment is not harmed by out-of-state sources. Sometimes that means opposing proposed federal budget cuts to the EPA, joining a lawsuit to make the EPA follow its statutory obligations, or fighting dangerous roll-backs coming from Washington that could hurt Vermont’s environment. We will continue to work to protect our environment.”

Recent actions taken by the Attorney General include: