Current News

by tim

Powdr, one of the largest, privately owned and operated, lifestyle and mountain sports companies in North America and owner of the Killington and Pico resorts in Vermont, surprised the skiing world today by announcing the sale of its flagship Park City Mountain Resort (PCMR) base area, parking, lower ski terrain and lifts, as well as water and snowmaking for the entire mountain to Vail Resorts, Inc, effective immediately. This comes just two days after Powdr said it would pay a $17.5 million court-mandated bond to keep Park City open for this coming ski season. A failed lease renewal had left Park City potentially without access to the top of its own mountain. Through a management error, the Utah resort simply forgot to renew a 50-year lease in 2011, which gave the right to the top of the mountain to Vail, its rival in business and skier visits.

by tim

by Timothy McQuiston, Vermont Business Magazine NG Advantage CEO Tom Evslin said during a ribbon-cutting on a rainy October day in 2012 that his new company would be Vermont Gas’ largest customer by the end of 2013. NG has delivered on that promise. NG compresses natural gas at a facility at the Catamount Industrial Park in Milton and trucks it to industrial customers up to 200 miles away. A new facility in New Hampshire and another planned west of Albany will create a web of hubs to serve industrial customers in the Northeast.

NG was the first company in the nation to take advantage, literally, of the higher cost of fuel oil and propane and the abundance of natural gas in North America, said Mary Evslin, co-founder and VP of Marketing. The industrial customers that NG seeks out are typically plants, like paper mills and hospitals, which have both high energy uses and are off the natural gas pipeline.

by tim

SunCommon, Vermont’s largest residential solar company, has teamed with Excel Plumbing and Heating of Rutland to make the move toward solar heating easy and affordable for all Vermonters. Every year, Vermonters spend approximately $2.6 billion on energy, $800 million or more of which is spent on heating fuel. SunCommon said in a statement that Vermonters should be reminded of the looming financial and environmental impact of fossil fuels. By switching to solar heat via heat pumps, SunCommon said, Vermonters will tap into the least expensive, most efficient and safest way to heat and cool their home.

“SunCommon’s program has been an excellent opportunity for customers to install these products at an affordable price,” said Caroline LaCoille of Excel Plumbing and Heating. “When heat pumps are paired with SunCommon’s PV solar arrays net-zero heating capabilities are within reach, nearly eliminating the need for fossil fuel.”

by tim

A new solar tracker in Craftsbury funded by Good Neighbor Fund payments provided by GMP is helping the town go green and generate its own power. The ribbon cutting is September 11th at 5:30 pm at the Craftsbury Town Garage, and GMP will attend to honor the launch of this important community project. In March, Craftsbury residents voted overwhelmingly to use its Good Neighbor payment from the Kingdom Community Wind Project to pay for a Solar Tracker. The 10-kilowatt solar electric system was installed in August and is generating enough power to cover approximately one-third of Craftsbury’s municipal electric needs.

“This is such an exciting project for our town,” said Lisa Sammet who serves on the Craftsbury Energy Committee. “GMP’s Good Neighbor Payment helped residents make the decision to build this clean energy project that is already providing a great benefit to taxpayers.”

by tim

Farmers, a hard-cider producer and Middlebury College will begin to receive natural gas service sooner than they had expected. For the first time in the nation, a local natural gas distribution company and a “virtual pipeline” provider have partnered to provide natural gas to new customers - in advance of a pipeline extension. Vermont Gas and NG Advantage LLC have begun construction of the “gas island,” consisting of an Off-Loading Station and a small pipeline network that will connect Agri-Mark’s Middlebury plant, Vermont Hard Cider LLC, and Middlebury College.

by tim

The Spirit of Ethan Allen, the Lake Champlain tour boat operating out of Burlington, is experiencing a 75 percent reduction in electricity usage since enlisting the support of Burlington Electric Department’s Energy Services, according to the company. Starting in March 2013, several efficiency projects have been completed, with a bulk of the projects funded through BED’s On-Bill Financing Program.

Mike Shea, owner of the Spirit of Ethan Allen, said: “Following the work we did with BED, we realized a reduction in our electric bill of almost $18,000 a year. BED played a critical part in that process – education of the crew on the benefits of energy efficiency, helping identify opportunities for efficiency upgrades, providing technical assistance and project support, and On-Bill Financing were all needed to make these changes happen. The savings we experienced are beyond our wildest dreams.”

by tim

During its third quarter (May through July), the TD Charitable Foundation gave a total of $498,326 to non-profit organizations that provide affordable housing, financial literacy, education and environmental programs throughout New England. The grant recipients included two Vermont organizations.

· Aroostook Mental Health Services Inc. (Caribou, ME) – Aroostook Teen Leadership Camp

· Ruth's Reusable Resources (Portland, ME ) – Office Chop Shop Program

· WinterKids Education Foundation (Portland, ME) – WinterKids: Move, Learn, Explore!

· Mercy Connections, Inc. (Burlington, VT) – Women's Small Business Program Expansion Initiative

· Center Vermont adult Basic Education, Inc. (Barre, VT) – Functional Literacy Program

· Harbor Homes. (Nashua, NH ) – Permanent Housing for the homeless

· Girls At Work, Inc. (Goffstown, NH) – Afterschool Carpentry Workshop Program

by tim

Three local nonprofit housing developers were joined by Vermont Governor Peter Shumlin Wednesday morning to celebrate the opening of Harrington Village and the Wright House in Shelburne’s village center. Scores of community members, representatives of funder agencies and new residents of the housing joined in the celebration. The three nonprofits – Champlain Housing Trust, Housing Vermont and Cathedral Square –collaborated to build a mixed-income, mixed-generation neighborhood of 78 new homes including 42 family apartments and 36 senior apartments. A second partnership with between Champlain Housing Trust and Green Mountain Habitat for Humanity will result in four affordable homes for sale in two duplexes currently under construction. Residents of the apartments started moving in this July, with full occupancy expected within weeks.

by tim

Vermont Business Magazine It took 17 and a half hours, traveling at only 100 miles an hour, with required stops every few hundred miles to refuel, but Vermont Tech got its plane. VTC's Professional Pilot Technology Program, in partnership with the Vermont Flight Academy, has received a Twin Seabee amphibious aircraft that was recently donated by a southern California couple. The donation of this aircraft has made Vermont Tech the first college in the US to offer training in multi-engine seaplanes, in addition to single-engine seaplanes. The Twin Seabee is the sixth airplane donated to the program, making up about 30 percent of the fleet. The new plane, which is an amphibious aircraft that operates on both land and water, was unveiled at the Burlington International Airport on Wednesday.

by tim

by Anne Galloway vtdigger.org Democratic Governor Peter Shumlin declared at his campaign launch Monday night that he has put Vermont on a “progressive path” through a “bold” leadership style and investments in job creation, renewable energy, early childhood education and opiate addiction treatment. Shumlin touted the new GMO labeling law and his single payer health care reform plan as signature Vermont initiatives.

“This election, I am going to be asking Vermonters to continue to say yes to progress and to continue to make bold choices that will lift incomes for middle class Vermonters and keep Vermont moving up,” Shumlin said.

by tim

Senator Patrick Leahy (D-Vermont) Wednesday announced that the US Department of Justice is awarding a $1.8 million grant to the Vermont-based National Center for Campus Public Safety to expand services and launch new initiatives related to safety on university and college campuses across the country. The funding is in addition to an earlier DOJ grant of $2.3 million that Leahy announced last year for the center, which is based in Burlington, and is partnered with the University of Vermont.

Leahy, who chairs the Senate Judiciary Committee, was the lead author and sponsor of the 2013 reauthorization of the Violence Against Women Act. The legislation included new requirements for colleges and universities to prevent sexual assault and expand resources for students who become victims.

by tim

Interested citizens, including several small business owners, gathered in Brookfield, Braintree and Randolph in July, August, and September as ECFiber, based in Roylaton, began holding a series of informational meetings. Their purpose was to discuss new developments regarding broadband expansion. On June 30 the Vermont Telecommunications Authority (VTA) announced that it will be building 51 miles of open-access dark fiber optic routes to connect its Business Broadband Improvement Districts (BBIDs) in the ECFiber towns of Braintree, Brookfield, North Randolph, Pomfret and Sharon. As the anchor tenant on this new VTA infrastructure, ECFiber will be able to offer connections to businesses and residences along the VTA routes. The VTA BBID fiber optic project must include a $200,000 contribution from ECFiber, an amount that needs to be raised by September 30, 2014.