Current News

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Vermont Business Magazine A group of local investors led by Ralph DesLauriers and his son, Evan DesLauriers, closed Friday on the purchase of Bolton Valley Resort. Bolton Valley, located in the town of Bolton in Chittenden County was founded by DesLauriers and his father Roland in 1966. DesLauriers owned and operated the resort from its founding until 1997. Since then, the resort has changed hands several times and until Friday, was owned by two real estate developers from Burlington, Larry Williams and Doug Nedde. The purchase of the resort by DesLauriers and his partners brings the resort full circle after 20 years.

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Vermont Business MagazineChamplain College will bestow honorary doctorates upon NBC's Today Show host and founder of Roker Media Labs, Al Roker, and CEO of the Forney Group and the Executive Managing Director of Global Cyber Security Management at Equinoxys Inc., Renee Forney, during the College's Commencement exercises on Saturday, May 13, 2017.

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Vermont Business Magazine The Vermont House Committee on Energy and Technology voted unanimously today that they will allow Executive Order 06-17. Per 3 V.S.A. Section 2002, the Executive Order will go into effect next week. Executive Order 06-17 intends to unify the state’s information technology operations and forms the Agency of Digital Services, transferring most IT positions to the new agency. This was one of Governor Phil Scott's first orders he signed in January.

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Vermont Business Magazine OnMonday, April 17, Governor Phil Scott will help launch the first ever statewide substance use disorder workforce summit at Vermont Technical College. Following through on one of his campaign proposals, Scott, the State of Vermont and Vermont State Colleges are partnering to host more than 150 leaders including health care, higher education, state government, and nonprofit professionals as well as elected officials to evaluate substance use disorders in Vermont and the workforce challenges of providing treatment. The three panels will address barriers, challenges, and opportunities to meet the workforce needs of the substance use disorder provider community. Recommendations – both immediate and long-term – will arise from the summit dialogue for the organizing groups to act on in the coming months.

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Vermont Business Magazine The Vermont Department of Taxes reminds taxpayers that the deadline to file Vermont personal income tax returns is Tuesday, April 18. The April 18 deadline also applies to homestead declarations, property tax adjustment claims, renter rebate claims, and applications for the extension of time to file a personal income tax return.

Taxpayers who are not ready to file their Vermont returns may request an extension using Form IN-151 or online, but they must file extension requests by April 18. This extends the due date six months to Oct. 16, 2017. Requesting an extension does not extend the period to pay tax. Taxpayers must submit tax owed by April 18 to avoid penalty and interest for late payment.

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Vermont Business Magazine Attorney General TJ Donovan urges Vermont residents to file claims on a $125 million multistate settlement that provides $35 million to consumers who paid for the brand-name drug Provigil or generic modafinil from June 24, 2006, to March 31, 2012.At the States’ request, the court extended the time to file claims on the settlement to June 25, 2017.

Provigil, which includes the active ingredient modafinil, is approved by the federal Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to improve wakefulness in adult patients with excessive sleepiness associated with narcolepsy, obstructive sleep apnea and shift work disorder.

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Vermont Business MagazineFairPoint Communications announced today the completion of broadband expansion projects in 25 Vermont towns that extend and enhance FairPoint’s approximately 18,000 mile fiber optic network, which is the largest, fully-owned and managed fiber-based network in northern New England. As a result of these completed projects, improved broadband speeds are available to more than 4,500 locations throughout Vermont. In Williston, more than 375 locations have been impacted – providing broadband service to some locations for first time.

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US District Court, Southern District of FloridaThis Settlement Agreement and Release (the “Agreement”) is entered into by and among Michael I. Goldberg, in his capacity as receiver (the “Receiver”) for the entities identified on Schedule A to this Agreement (collectively, the “Receivership Entities”), Thomas A. Tucker Ronzetti, Harley S. Tropin, and Kozyak Tropin & Throckmorton, LLP, as interim class counsel (“Class Counsel”) on behalf of the plaintiffs in the Investor Class Action (as defined below), and Raymond James & Associates, Inc. (“Raymond James”). (The Receiver, Class Counsel, and Raymond James shall each be referred to as a “Party” and shall collectively be referred to as the “Parties.”)

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Vermont Business MagazineAll the creditors, immigrant investors, contractors and vendors who were caught up in the massive fraud in the Jay Peak EB-5 case will be made whole "100 cents on every dollar they were owed."Governor Phil Scott, Vermont Department of Financial Regulation Commissioner Michael Pieciak and Jay Peak Receiver Michael Goldberg this evening announced a $150 million settlement agreement with financial firm Raymond James Financial, Inc, over its role in the alleged fraud relating to EB-5 projects in Vermont’s Northeast Kingdom.

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Vermont Business MagazineEvolving small businesses and start-ups in the Northeast Kingdom may now access new sources of business loan funds. The loans will be made from self-replenishing pools of money from the Town of Jay, where new loans are capitalized by the interest and principal payments from existing loans. Backing will be directed to small entrepreneurs who otherwise may not qualify for traditional financing due to lack of credit or collateral.

The Town of Jay has assigned the loan funds to Community Capital of Vermont (CCVT) and the Northeastern Vermont Development Association (NVDA), in consultation with the Vermont Agency of Commerce and Community Development. The funds will be distributed by CCVT and NVDA, and a partnership with Top of Vermont, the Jay Peak Region’s chamber of commerce, will help with marketing the funds.

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by Joyce Marcel, Vermont Business Magazine William Ernest McKibben, 56, sits in the eye of the hurricane of climate change, trying to save the world from the danger in which it finds itself. You’d think that after the recent presidential election, where climate change deniers took over the levers of power, this renowned environmentalist, lecturer, author, journalist, the Schumann Distinguished Scholar in Environmental Studies at Middlebury College, Ripton resident, cross-country skier and co-founder of the climate change organization 350.org, would be hiding in bed with his head covered by quilts. Or at the very least, he would have lost his sense of humor.

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by John McClaughry Act 250, Vermont’s landmark land use and environmental control act of 1970, is coming up on its 50th anniversary, and the people who promoted it then have a lot more of the same in store for us. The organization that went all out to pass Act 250 is the Vermont Natural Resources Council (VNRC). Its present leadership is urging the passage of a bill to create a “Commission on Act 250: The Next 50 Years” (H.424). It passed the House on March 31 without any recorded vote.