Current News

by tim

Mace Security International Inc, formerly based in Bennington, (OTCPINK: MACE) has announced audited financial results for the fourth quarter and year ended December 31, 2013 and unaudited results for the first quarter ended March 31, 2014. Fourth quarter and year end audited results were delayed due to the Company’s decision to save significant audit fees by having the audit commence in mid March.

Financial Results, Fourth Quarter Ended December 31, 2013 and 2012

Net revenues for the fourth quarter of 2013 totaled $2,099, as compared to prior year fourth quarter revenues of $2,146, a decrease of approximately $47 or 2.2%. The decrease is mainly attributed to a $40 decrease in shipments of TG Guard product.

by tim

by Tom Brown vtdigger.org More often than not, bills run into trouble in the Vermont Legislature for being too broad, but one measure is headed for the scrap heap this session for perhaps being too narrow. A proposal to ban the use of hand-held cellphones while driving is all but dead in the Senate after it failed to emerge from the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Dick Sears, D-Bennington, conducts a hearing about firearm storage. Photo by Laura Krantz/VTDigger

Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Dick Sears, D-Bennington, conducts a hearing about firearm storage. Photo by Laura Krantz/VTDigger

by tim

Mayor Miro Weinberger today announced the successful negotiation of the contract between the Burlington Police Officers’ Association (BPOA) and the City, the first union contract negotiated by the Weinberger Administration. Last night, the City Council ratified a Collective Bargaining Agreement between the BPOA and the City that is retroactive to the start of fiscal year 2014.

“We are fortunate to have a dedicated and hard-working police force whose members focus every day on making our community an even better, safer place in which to live,” said Mayor Weinberger. “I am pleased that after nearly a year of hard work, we were able to successfully reach a negotiated contract settlement with the Burlington Police Officers’ Association. I also am pleased that, in a time of much concern about rising property taxes, the agreement limits cost-of-living adjustments to 1.3%.”

by tim

Senator Patrick Leahy (D-Vermont) chairs the State Department and Foreign Operations Subcommittee, the Appropriations Committee panel that oversees the State Department’s budget as well as foreign aid programs. In his role as chairman, Leahy has put a hold on the Administration’s April 25 request to obligate $650 million in military assistance for Egypt that was provided under the Fiscal Year 2014 Appropriations bill enacted early this year. Leahy has worked on writing current and previous congressional conditions on aid to the Egyptian Government.

Leahy announced his hold Tuesday on the Senate Floor.

"Mr. President, on another matter, events in Egypt continue to concern people of goodwill, in this country and across the globe, who have shared the Egyptian people’s yearning for greater freedom under the rule of law.

by tim

by Laura Krantz vtdigger.org Senators on Monday approved a proposal for a bureaucratic shuffle that has alarmed some state health officials. The Senate OK’d a budget amendment that would transfer oversight of the state office that runs substance abuse programs from the Health Department to the Department of Vermont Health Access, which manages the state’s publicly funded health insurance programs. The switch of the program away from the Health Department is not final because the budget has not passed in final form. The Secretary of Human Services, whose agency oversees both departments, opposes the proposal, as does the health commissioner.

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by Morgan True vtdigger.org The House Judiciary Committee passed a greatly revised version of a Senate bill late Monday that is meant to streamline the judicial review process for involuntary treatment and medication of psychiatric patients. The bill, S287, is focused on a small number of patients who the state determines should be treated for mental illness — and in some cases medicated — against their will. Vermont had 52 involuntarily committed patients at four psychiatric facilities in January. There are more awaiting beds in emergency departments across the state.

Only 14 of those had symptoms severe enough for clinicians to petition the court for them to be medicated against their will, according to figures from the Department of Mental Health.

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by Anne Galloway vtdigger.org Senator Dick Sears, D-Bennington, will travel to Washington, DC, on Tuesday to moderate a discussion on the impact of heroin and opiate addiction on the criminal justice system. The discussion about addiction treatment, alternatives to incarceration and recidivism rates is part of a forum sponsored by the Council of State Governments Justice Center, according to a press release from the senator and the council. Vermont has seen an increase in use of heroin and opiates in recent years, according to state data.

“Coming from a state like Vermont, there are unique challenges that rural communities face when it comes to these issues,” Sears said in a statement.

Sears, who is chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said the state’s experiences and successes with addiction has been “well-documented.”

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by Kate Robinson vtdigger.org The US Department of Labor’s Wage and Hour Division has stepped up enforcement of fair labor laws affecting agricultural operations. In the past two years, several farms have faced heavy fines for “inadvertent violations.” Vermont farmers face penalties for wage and hour violations most often when they diversify and employ domestic or foreign “seasonal” workers in handling or producing value-added products or sell products from other suppliers. Anything, in fact, that the law regards as “non-agricultural” labor.

Historically, the government has been “more intent on whether [foreign workers] are legal or not,” according to Roger Albee, the former secretary of the Vermont Agency of Agriculture under Gov. Jim Douglas. Now regulators appear to be more focused on fair wages, and Albee says that shift may signal a change in government policy.

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by John Herrick vtdigger.org The House on Tuesday gave approval to a bill designed to prepare for the implementation of a universal recycling overhaul set to phase in this summer under Act 148. The House passed S208 by a voice vote on a second reading. The House will hold a final vote before it goes to the Senate for approval. The Agency of Natural Resources will set up a working group this summer and report to lawmakers next year on the state’s solid waste infrastructure needs, costs of the programs and a plan on how to dispose of architectural waste – drywall, metal, asphalt shingles, clean wood and treated or painted wood, as defined under the bill.

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Vermont Business Magazine Green Mountain Power announced Monday that under a revenue sharing agreement stemming from the sale of Vermont Yankee in 2002, GMP will receive as much as $17.8 million. That money will be directed to GMP customers in the form of lower rates. Entergy reported last week in its first quarter 2014 financial report that Vermont Yankee contributed more than $100 million to Entergy's $400 million of pre-tax profits in its wholesale business. Entergy stated that higher demand because of the cold weather and rising natural gas prices in the Northeast made its nuclear fleet more profitable, especially VY which was not burdened with utility contracts and could simply sell to the open market at market prices. Entergy will shut down VY by the end of this year.

by ayla

Dartmouth will serve as a Lead Academic Participating Site in the National Cancer Institute’s (NCI) new National Clinical Trials Network (NCTN). The NCTN will improve the speed and efficiency of conducting cancer clinical trials, using select groups of investigators and distributing resources in a more effective way across fewer groups.

“Everyone—patients, providers, and family members—wants to see faster access to new treatments for cancer,” said Konstantin H. Dragnev, MD, principal investigator for the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Norris Cotton Cancer Center site. “This new framework will cut the startup time for a clinical trial by 75 percent in some cases. It removes obstacles we used to face for reporting and oversight, so we can now offer therapeutic advances to patients sooner.”

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by Laura Krantz vtdigger.org It could soon be illegal to sell or possess powdered alcohol in Vermont after the Senate on Tuesday approved an amendment calling for more information about the new product. Federal regulators this month gave and then rescinded approval of Palcohol, which is mixed with water to create an alcoholic beverage. Palcohol also carries a warning against snorting the product, USA Today reported. The Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau, part of the Treasury Department, said its vote was in error.

Worried about the potential abuse of powdered alcohol in Vermont, Sen. Kevin Mullin, R-Rutland, proposed an amendment to study the substance and make sale and possession illegal until officials know more.

“This is a product that could be used very unwisely,” Mullin said.