Current News

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The Regional Development Corporations of Vermont (RDCs of Vermont) announced their support on Thursday of S138, a bill developed by the Senate Economic Development, Housing and General Affairs committee, which is currently working its way through the Vermont Senate. The proposed legislation includes a number of provisions to stimulate economic development in the state.

Springfield's Bob Flint, President of the RDCs of Vermont, said that the group appreciated the efforts of the committee, and others in the State House, who have made economic development a priority this session.

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by Amy Ash Nixon vtdigger.org A step taken last week to freeze education property tax rates for the coming fiscal year was partly scaled back by the House Ways and Means Committee on Thursday. Representative Johannah Donovan, D-Burlington, ranking member of the committee, made a motion to increase the nonresidential rate by a penny, but leave the base homestead rate at this year’s level. Donovan’s motion was approved. Three members of the committee voted against the proposal: Reps. Adam Greshin, I-Warren; George Till, D-Jericho; and William Canfield, R-Fair Haven.

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Maponics, a leading provider of spatial data based in White River Junction, has announced the acquisition of Urban Mapping's Neighborhood product and related assets from Silicon Valley-based Urban Mapping, Inc. Urban Mapping is a geospatial web and data service company with more than 10 years of experience in precise mapping of neighborhood data. As part of the transaction the company will receive the complete Urban Mapping Neighborhood portfolio, including over 100,000 neighborhood boundaries spanning 40 countries; as well as the Urban Mapping trademark. The procurement of assets is part of Maponics' broader strategy to deliver advanced geospatial solutions to the market.

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Vermont Business Magazine Weekly unemployment claims fell for the second week, which continues an up-and-down trend this year. For the week of March 14, 2015, there were 682 new, regular benefit claims for Unemployment Insurance in Vermont. This is a decrease of 82 from the previous week's total, and 20 fewer than they were a year ago.

jobs, seasonally adjustedAltogether 7,828 new and continuing claims were filed, an decrease of 399 from a week ago and 711 fewer than a year ago. The Department processed 0 First Tier claims for benefits under Emergency Unemployment Compensation, 2008 (EUC08), the same as the previous week.

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The Vermont House of Representatives on Thursday passed a bill to enhance protections for residents of mobile home parks. The proposal, H123, requires that mobile home park owners ensure tenant safety by maintaining safe roads and access points for emergency use. When Tropical Storm Irene struck Vermont, 16 mobile home parks experienced flooding. First responders and advocates reported that the dilapidated roadway conditions in some mobile home parks slowed disaster response times. As a result, the General Assembly directed the Department of Housing and Community Development to investigate the difficulties confronting mobile home communities. Representative Bill Botzow introduced H.123 to act on the Department’s recommendations.

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Vermont Business Magazine With the median price heading back up toward $200,000, Vermont's housing market finally showed some strength in February, in a year-over-year analysis. The number of homes sold was also up, according to the RE/MAX of New England February Monthly Housing Report. However, the effects of record-snowfalls during the first two months of 2015 reverberated throughout New England’s housing market. Month-over-month, home sales again reflected the inclement weather with a decrease of 13.5 percent over January’s numbers across New England.

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Mayor Miro Weinberger today announced the appointment of Neale Lunderville as the new General Manager of the Burlington Electric Department. Lunderville has been serving as the interim GM for the past eight months. Weinberger has asked the City Council to approve the appointment at its March 23, 2015 meeting. Lunderville will be paid $133,555.

Neale Lunderville, left, with Mayor Weinberger last summer. File photo.

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by John Herrick vtdigger.org The House Ways and Means Committee gave preliminary approval Wednesday to a 0.2 percent increase in the property transfer tax. The money will be used to restore polluted waterways in Vermont. The tax is paid by property buyers. It can be added to the total closing cost of the property. The current rate is 1.25 percent the total value of the property. The 0.2 percent surcharge would increase the tax to 1.45. Properties under $100,000 or those purchased through the the Vermont Housing Finance Agency under $110,000 would not pay the surcharge.

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by Jeffrey R Wakefield Quebec has an abundance of electric power. Vermont and New England have a growing need for it. But what are the political, environmental, economic and policy issues involved in getting power from north to south? A conference at the University of Vermont March 23 and 24, "Power from the North," will put context around those questions, examine current realities and develop potential pathways for the future.

“The energy relationship between Vermont and Quebec has had its ups and downs over the last 30-plus years, but it’s been durable, with the state today purchasing large amounts of power from the north,” said Richard Watts, director of the Center for Research on Vermont and one of the conference organizers.

“The conference," Watts said, "will take a close look at the past and present in order to determine what the future relationship might look like."

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Seventh Generation, a leading brand of non-toxic and renewable bio-based household, baby and personal care solutions, has called on Congress to strengthen the country's outdated chemical policy. Seventh Generation, along with the American Sustainable Business Council, are founding members of Companies for Safer Chemicals, a group of the country's leading consumer brands -- 3,000 businesses strong -- joining together to press Congress to modernize the nation's ineffective chemical safety laws. Strong lobbying by other industry groups has given policymakers the impression that business is monolithic in its support for weak legislation. Companies for Safer Chemicals makes a business argument for strong reforms that support the industry innovating safer and cleaner products.

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Julia Alvarez, a highly regarded novelist, poet, and essayist, and a 1971 Middlebury graduate, will deliver the 2015 Middlebury College commencement address on Sunday, May 24. Alvarez’s acclaimed novels In the Time of the Butterflies and How The García Girls Lost Their Accents are based on her life experience, the foundation for much of her work. She spent most of her childhood in her parents’ native Dominican Republic before her family was forced to flee the dictatorship of Rafael Trujillo in 1960. Among her many awards is the National Medal of Arts, bestowed by President Barack Obama in 2013, and the highest honor given to artists and arts patrons by the United States government.

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US Senator Patrick Leahy will welcome US Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell to Vermont this Friday, as she delivers the keynote address at the 2nd Leahy Center Environmental Summit. Leahy will introduce Jewell’s remarks at 2 pm, followed by a question and answer session with local news media representatives. Immediately following, Leahy and Jewell will visit a US Geological Survey lake gage on the Burlington waterfront.

The theme of this year’s summit is “Climate Change Resilient, Floodwater Smart.”

FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2:00 P.M.;

ECHO AT THE LEAHY CENTER FOR LAKE CHAMPLAIN;

1 COLLEGE STREET, BURLINGTON