Current News

by tim

The Community Health Center of Burlington will be awarded a $250,000 grant to expand their mental health services, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) announced today. The Burlington center is one of 221 Federally Qualified Health Centers in 47 states that will receive a total of $55 million in funding for mental and behavioral health service expansion. This funding from the Health Resources and Services Administration comes from $11 billion in health center funding that Sanders helped to secure in the Affordable Care Act.

Health centers across the country provide high quality care to 22 million people, including behavioral health services for 1.2 million. The 11 Vermont health centers operate more than 50 clinics around the state. They will provide health care this year for 1 in 4 Vermonters, including mental health services for more than 6,000 Vermonters.

by tim

The historic Juniper Hill Farm - Maxwell Evarts House (now known as Juniper Hill Inn) located in Windsor, Vermont, is set to be auctioned by the Thomas Hirchak Company in August. Added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1988, the grand 28-bedroom colonial revival was built in 1902 by Maxwell Evarts, a prominent New York attorney and a captain of American industry. US Presidents Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson, among other prominent figures, artists and celebrities, have been entertained at the mansion.

Of more recent fame, the mansion was featured in 2012 on Fox’s Hotel Hell. In the 2-part premier episode, celebrity Chef Gordon Ramsay worked with then-owners to revamp the Inn, giving it further national exposure.

by tim

FairPoint Communications, Inc (Nasdaq: FRP), a leading provider of advanced communications in northern New England, has expanded broadband to 175 homes and businesses in Irasburg. According to FairPoint, its new fiber-based, high-capacity network offers customers a better, faster way to communicate.

“Our next-generation network allows us to expand broadband service into areas with no high-speed Internet access and provide enhanced services across the state,” said Beth Fastiggi, FairPoint state president for Vermont. “Broadband availability opens the doors to the world for the residents and businesses in Vermont and is fundamental to the state’s future economic growth.”

by tim

The first patent in the young United States was issued on this date, July 31, in 1790 to Samuel Hopkins of Vermont for a new method of making potash — useful in producing soap, fertilizer and glass, according to US Census Bureau. The Constitution recognized, for the first time in history, the intrinsic right of an inventor to profit from his invention. Hopkins' application was initially reviewed by Thomas Jefferson and approved by President Washington.

By 1802, the US Patent Office was established to process applications. Annually, more than 244,000 patents are granted. Individuals receive 6 percent of patents — the remainder are granted to US and foreign corporations, with slightly more granted to foreign companies. Agricultural chemical manufacturing is now a $32 billion a year industry in the US. .

by tim

According to the Northeastern Vermont Development Association, Sweet Tree Holdings, a Connecticut company, has purchased the former Ethan Allen furniture manufacturing facility. Renovations have begun on the 82,000 square foot building, vacant since 2000. Sweet Tree 1, a maple syrup processing operation, plans to hire 20-30 employees over time. The enterprise fits into the Brighton Town Plan and the facility is located within an industrial zone. The developers are seeking a local site plan and Act 250 permit amendment.

by tim

Ledyard Financial Group, Inc (ticker symbol LFGP), the holding company for Ledyard National Bank, today reported its financial results for the second quarter of 2014. Net income for the quarter ended June 30, 2014, was $987,650 or $0.97 per share compared to $794,418 or $0.79 per share for the same period in 2013, an increase of $193,232 or 24.32%. Net income for the six months ended June 30, 2014 was $1,925,956, or $1.90 per share compared to $1,553,498 or $1.54 per share for the same period in 2013, an increase of $372,458 or 23.98%. The increase in net income for the quarter and first six months when compared to the prior year is due to an increase in lending activity and an increase in revenue from Ledyard Financial Advisors.

by tim

The protests of the Vermont Gas pipeline that will extend into Addison County and eventually to Rutland and the Ticonderoga paper plant in New York were renewed Wednesday when opponents of the natural gas pipeline staged a walk-through and sit-in at the Williston staging area. Pipe laying has already begun in Williston as the line is extended from Colchester, but protesters chose to block the entrance to the staging and office location, which stopped trucks and workers from entering or leaving for a short time. Once company officials approached the protesters, they dispersed to public areas to avoid being cited for trespassing. At a protest in May at the VGS headquarters in South Burlington, one protester who had chained herself to the front door was arrested and two others were eventually cited for trespassing. No arrests were made this time, but each side issued tersely worded statements (see below).

by tim

At a news conference on Capitol Hill and in testimony at an Environmental Protection Agency public hearing, Senator Bernie Sanders (I-Vermont) on Wednesday strongly endorsed an EPA proposal to limit carbon pollution from power plants to curb global warming.

“If we do not address this crisis, our children and grandchildren will look back on this problem and we will be judged by history in a very negative way,” Sanders said.

The EPA hearings here and in Denver and Atlanta were held to take public comment on President Barack Obama's plan to address climate change by cutting carbon-dioxide emissions from electric power plants by 30 percent by 2030.

by tim

Vermont’s Secretary of Agriculture, Chuck Ross, will join Rutland County legislators at the Rutland Downtown Farmers’ Market to kick-off National Farmer’s Market Week this Saturday, August 2. The market, located at 98 Merchant’s Row in Rutland’s Depot Park, is one of eighty farmers’ markets across the state. Per capita, Vermont has more farmers’ markets than any other state in the nation. According to Ross, Vermont’s thriving farmers’ market community is a reflection of the values of Vermonters.

“Farmers’ markets bring communities together, provide local, healthy food, create opportunity for farmers, and preserve the Working Landscape, which is why so many Vermonters are proud to support them.” Ross said.

He also believes the markets play an important educational role.

by ayla

Oil storage and distribution company CV Oil of Pittsfield, Vermont, paid a $3,000 penalty to settle EPA claims that it did not have a spill prevention plan. This Vermont business is one of seven oil storage and distribution companies in New England that have all created or updated spill prevention plans and come into compliance with federal oil pollution prevention laws, thereby ensuring that the local environment in the communities in which they operate are better protected from the potential of a damaging oil spill.

by tim

by John Herrick vtdigger.org Federal nuclear regulators say storing spent nuclear fuel on-site indefinitely is safe. The US Nuclear Regulatory Commission this week released a study on the environmental impacts of storing spent nuclear fuel. The report found that dry casks designed to store spent nuclear fuel can withstand natural disasters, and the risk of a terrorist attack is unlikely. Entergy’s Vermont Yankee nuclear power plant in Vernon is scheduled to close at the end of the year for economic reasons. The Louisiana-based company plans to store spent fuel from the reactor in steel dry casks on site indefinitely.

by tim

On August 15, Green Mountain College will ban the sale of bottled water on its Poultney campus. Like many campus sustainability initiatives, the ban comes largely as a result of a student-led project. Andrea (Dre) Roebuck ’14 consulted with the College’s sustainability coordinator Aaron Witham about the most effective way to go about banning the sale of bottled water. Roebuck’s concerns were economic (bottled water is more expensive than tap water) and environmental (only about 14 percent of plastic bottles make it into the recycling bin, and producing plastic bottles takes about 1.5 million barrels of oil per year, according to the Earth Policy Institute). According to Witham, Roebuck and other students were also concerned about the commodification of water, which is becoming an ever more precious resource.