Current News

by tim

The US Army Corps of Engineers has granted Vermont Gas the final permit necessary to begin construction of Phase 1 of the Addison Rutland Natural Gas Project. “This final permit from the Army Corps of Engineers makes it possible for Vermont Gas to begin the work to bring the economic and environmental benefits of natural gas to more Vermont homeowners and businesses,” said Eileen Simollardes, vice president at Vermont Gas and director of the Addison Rutland Natural Gas Project. Vermont Gas plans to move forward with delivery of materials to its staging areas and the South Burlington-based natural gas utility plans to hold a groundbreaking ceremony in the near future.

The delay in receiving the permit had put of the start of the project from June 1. The Public Service Board had rejected a request from Vermont Gas to move ahead with the initial phase of the pipeline project before it had received the Army Corps permit.

by tim

Vermont’s business and government leaders are determined to do whatever they can to maintain employment at the IBM plant outside Burlington. If it were up to the Greater Burlington Industrial Corp, that would start with a $4.5 million cash payment to IBM or its successor, as soon as possible. IBM, ensconced in Essex Junction for decades and with satellite operations in Williston, is reportedly looking to unload its computer chip-making division. The potential sale likely would include the company’s Vermont facilities — and could jeopardize the jobs of an estimated 4,000 people who work there.

by tim

Since its formation in 1954 and successful recruitment of IBM to Vermont, the Greater Burlington Industrial Corp has worked with IBM executives and state and local leaders on growth, new investment and maintaining a competitive standing within IBM itself and across the world. Current IBM Vermont Operations directly affect the economic wellbeing of over 8,000 Vermonters. Moreover, many communities are positively impacted by IBM’s investments in people and innovation that have made the Burlington area and the State of Vermont a cluster of excellence in research, development, design and high-tech manufacturing.

by tim

The US Senate today confirmed the nomination of Geoffrey Crawford to the US District Court in Vermont by a vote of 95-0. Crawford is stepping down as a Vermont Supreme Court justice to take the position on the federal bench. US Senator Patrick Leahy, who chairs the Judiciary Committee, steered the nomination through the committee and through the Senate. Crawford was confirmed in less time than any judicial nominee in many years. Leahy, who also is President Pro Tempore of the Senate, presided over the Senate for the vote and announced the outcome.

“Justice Crawford came highly recommended, well qualified, and broadly experienced," Leahy said in a statement. "He’s a well-grounded Vermonter and a good fit for Vermont and our federal court. I appreciate the bipartisan cooperation that has helped me steer his nomination through this intricate process in pretty much record time. His prompt confirmation will ease the transition.”

by tim

by Morgan True vtdigger.org A new state health care law will require the administration to report on whether Vermont should prohibit insurers from paying independent physician practices less than hospitals for the same services. Lawmakers framed the need for the report as a discussion of whether Vermont should protect its private physician practices or encourage the current trend toward hospital employment. The number of full-time physician equivalents employed by Vermont’s hospitals grew 22 percent between 2007 and 2012, from 947 to 1,207, according to figures from the Green Mountain Care Board.

That’s a good thing according to the CEOs of the two largest hospital networks serving the region.

by tim

Governor Peter Shumlin today signed multifaceted legislation providing support for start-up, expansion and retention to high tech companies that offer good wages and a bright future in Vermont. In addition, the law creates the Vermont Strong Scholars Program to help families afford a college education for their children in the cutting edge employment fields. The law adds $500,000 in State General Funds to the $1 million in federal funds available to VEDA’s Vermont Entrepreneurial Lending Program. The program creates a loan-loss reserve to reduce the risk of lending to start-up tech and other companies in Vermont promoting high value jobs. The program is intended to help foster the next generation of successful, home-grown companies.

by tim

Vermont Public Radio has launched Traces, a statewide crowdsourcing project that aims to catalog how drug addiction affects us all. “Traces isn’t a project about statistics, policy, or crime – it’s about people,” said Digital Reporter Taylor Dobbs. “Whether they are addicts, parents, victims, or bystanders, many Vermonters have stories of addiction that go deeper than the speeches and treatment strategies that often make the news. The impacts of addiction are many, and Traces is an effort to explore those impacts and the way addiction shapes our communities.”

The project began with a story about a family struggling to move forward after losing one of its members to a heroin overdose. The Dekeersgieter family memorialized Brennan, their son and brother, with a bench at Oakledge Park in Burlington.

by tim

The leadership of Lund’s 50 Joy Drive Capital Campaign - Governor Jim Douglas, Commissioner Melinda Moulton, and State’s Attorney for Chittenden County TJ Donovan - will welcome guests Thursday to Lund’s new building at 50 Joy Drive in South Burlington for a ribbon cutting and official dedication of the facility as The Hoehl Family Building. The capital campaign facilitated the purchase and renovation of the building. Lieutenant Governor Phil Scott will also be present.

The 50 Joy Drive building is now home to Lund’s 5 STAR Early Childhood Program, New Horizons education program for pregnant and parenting teens, adoption department, parent child center services and business office. Governor Howard Dean who, with Governor Douglas, was an honorary co-chair of the campaign, refers to the new building as, “a huge step forward in making essential services more comprehensive, well organized, and more broadly available.”

by ayla

The Stern Center for Language and Learning is celebrating 30 years of helping students with learning style differences reach their full potential. Over the past three decades the Stern Center has supported more than 20,000 children and adults in overcoming their struggles with dyslexia, learning disabilities, autism, language disorders and other learning style differences, including giftedness.

“I know so many parents who have read to their children since they were in the womb and yet see sad faces on these same children who later hate reading- because they don’t know how,” said Stern Center president and founder, Dr. Blanche Podhajski. “If your child has trouble with sounds, reading words, spelling or understanding vocabulary and text, she or he may need more explicit teaching.”

by tim

by Laura Krantz vtdigger.org Lynne Klamm, who has been tapped to straighten out the Rutland office of the Department for Children and Families is married to the county’s top juvenile prosecutor, but that connection is not a conflict of interest, the state’s attorney said Monday. In addition to being the lead juvenile prosecutor in Rutland County, Kevin Klamm last year prosecuted Sandra Eastman, the mother of a Poultney 2-year-old who died in February, on a charge of child cruelty, according to court records. It is impossible to know whether Kevin Klamm was involved in Dezirae Sheldon’s reunification case because the name of the attorney is redacted in a damning report about that case issued a week ago.

by tim

by John McClaughry The mounting VA hospital scandals have now moved Sen. Bernie Sanders’s cherished “socialized medicine” to center stage. For Vermonters, it’s worth understanding clearly how the Veterans Health Administration works, and how it compares with “single payer” Canadian Medicare and Vermont’s coming Green Mountain Care.

The VHA has 288,000 employees (two thirds of them unionized) serving 8.3 million veterans in 150 VHA hospitals and 1,400 affiliated centers. VHA is funded almost entirely by Congressional appropriations. The scandals have arisen because at least 42 VHA hospitals (so far) regularly miss waiting time benchmarks for patient appointments, and their staffs are fudging the data base to make it look like the benchmarks were met.

by tim

Dartmouth researchers have found that early exposure to the ultraviolet radiation lamps used for indoor tanning is related to an increased risk of developing basal cell carcinomas (BCC) at a young age. Their findings are reported in “Early-Onset Basal Cell Carcinoma and Indoor Tanning: A Population-Based Study,” a study that will be published in the July 2014 issue of Pediatrics. Since indoor tanning has become increasingly popular among adolescents and young adults, this research calls attention to the importance of counseling young people about the risk of indoor tanning.