Current News

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by Morgan True vtdigger.org Health care providers and insurers joined Governor Peter Shumlin Wednesday to announce two new programs they hope will contain system-wide costs and improve treatment quality.
“We all know that as we move to the first sensible health care system in America we’ve got to find a way to deliver better quality care for less of a cost increase,” Shumlin told a group of reporters at the Green Mountain Care Board offices in Montpelier.
The so-called “shared-savings” programs announced at the press conference are offered by payers, in this case Medicaid and commercial insurers, to provider groups called Accountable Care Organizations.
Under the agreement, ACO providers will meet quality standards for the care of a patient population at an agreed upon cost. If the providers can meet the quality standards for less, they split the savings with the payer.

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by Anne Galloway vtdigger.org Burlington area bus drivers are scheduled to go on strike March 17. Members of the drivers’ union, Teamsters Local 597, voted 54-0 on Wednesday to reject the latest offer from the Chittenden County Transit Authority. CCTA has 68 drivers; all are in the union.
During the strike, there will be no CCTA service: All local and LINK routes operated by CCTA bus drivers would no longer be available. LINK services to Montpelier would be limited to five trips a day and Hinesburg would be limited to two.

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by Hilary Niles vtdigger.org
Lawmakers are considering letting Vermonters keep more money they earn from part-time work while they collect unemployment insurance benefits.
House Commerce Chair Bill Botzow, D-Bennington, said Wednesday afternoon that his committee has “great interest” in increasing the “earnings disregard” — the amount of earnings kept out of calculations that set a worker’s unemployment benefits.

Bill Botzow, D-Bennington, chair of the House Committee on Commerce and Economic Development, at a news conference at the Statehouse in January. Photo by John Herrick/VTDigger

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Burlington Mayor Miro Weinberger has announced his support of Champlain College’s Eagles Landing project, based on the project’s furthering two key Administration goals: repairing the City’s finances and addressing Burlington’s housing shortage. A letter from the Mayor to the City’s Development Review Board follows and a PDF copy of the letter is attached.

Weinberger Letter

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Campaign for Vermont today announced the hiring of Cyrus Patten as the new executive director of the non-partisan public advocacy organization.
"Cyrus has a diverse and proven background in social services, non-profit management, fundraising, community outreach, as well as public and government relations, said Louise McCarren, chair of the CFV board. "We are thrilled to have someone of his caliber as our first-ever Executive Director."
Patten most recently served as the Director of Comprehensive Care Programs at the HowardCenter in Burlington, where he supervised a continuum of programming for children and families while managing a multimillion dollar budget and over 100 staff and foster parents.
During his tenure, Patten oversaw a significant overhaul of programming that eliminated redundancies, identified new revenue and strengthened relationships with stakeholders.

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Nine Vermont companies have joined a Continuous Energy Improvement partnership with Efficiency Vermont. The first of its kind in the Northeast, the partnership provides participating companies with technical assistance and support to develop a comprehensive approach in energy management to reduce waste and improve energy performance over time.
“These companies have some of the largest energy needs in the state,” says Greg Baker, Senior Account Manager with Efficiency Vermont. “They’ve made a commitment to prioritize energy considerations in every aspect of their operations. As a result, they’re getting significantly greater return on their efficiency investments than by viewing energy savings as a series of unrelated upgrades. In other words, they’re not only installing efficient equipment, they’re also using it in the most efficient way for their specific needs.”

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by John Herrick vtdigger.org Vermont lawmakers passed a committee bill Wednesday that sets a plan to restore Lake Champlain’s water quality and raises some money to back it up. Federal regulators have ordered the state to clean up the lake.

Lake Champlain and the Adirondack Mountains in New York as seen from the waterfront in Burlington. Photo by Roger Crowley/for VTDigger
The House Fish, Wildlife and Water Resources Committee voted 7-1 in favor of an omnibus water quality bill, H.586, just before Friday’s crossover deadline, the date by which a bill must pass from one chamber to the other.

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by John Herrick vtdigger.org Rutland Superior Court awarded $1 million in December to landowners challenging the state’s transmission line company after it constructed a radio tower on their mountaintop property in Wells.
Vermont Electric Power Corp, or VELCO, sought a new trial, but the court denied the motion Wednesday and awarded the landowners an additional “prejudgment” interests rate for compensation.
The company said it will appeal the decision to the Vermont Supreme Court.
“It wasn’t a surprise,” said VELCO Vice President Kerrick Johnson. “And we are continuing to prepare our appeal to the Vermont Supreme Court.”

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Senators Patrick Leahy (D–Vermont) and Bernie Sanders (I–Vermont) are part of a bipartisan coalition of US senators who are asking US trade negotiators to block an initiative by the European Union (EU) to prohibit the use of generic cheese names, like Muenster, Havarti, feta, Brie or ricotta, on cheeses made in Vermont and across the country.
In a bipartisan letter signed by 55 senators, Leahy and Sanders urged the US Department of Agriculture and the US Trade Representative to push back on the EU initiative, which could confuse consumers and hurt Vermont dairy farmers and cheesemakers.
Leahy said, “Vermont is well known for our high quality cheeses carrying these and other names, and Vermont Cheddar has become the gold standard. This proposal is foolish, short-sighted and only serves to confuse customers and hurt those who make fine American products that compete with imports.”

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The Small Business Administration announced today it will award grants to state and local economic development agencies, business development centers, colleges and universities to support programs for innovative, technology-driven small businesses under SBA’s Federal and State Technology partnership program. Applications for the grants are open to Vermont entities through April 11.
The FAST Program is designed to stimulate economic development among small, high technology businesses through federally-funded innovation and research and development programs like the Small Business Innovation Research and Small Business Technology Transfer. The project and budget periods are for a 12-month period.
FAST may provide up to $100,000 per award to pay for outreach and technical assistance to science and technology-driven small businesses.

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Although Vermont’s populations of cave-dwelling bat species continue to drastically shrink in number every year, the rate of decline may be slowing down. Biologists with the Vermont Fish & Wildlife Department are working to determine if some individuals that remain are naturally resistant to the syndrome that has killed millions of bats to date.
Fish & Wildlife bat project leader Scott Darling hopes to determine if there is anything that can be done to prevent further declines in bats before it is too late for some species.
“We’re observing the most precipitous decline of a group of species in recorded history and it’s happening right here in our region,” said Darling. “Several species, such as northern long-eared bats, have virtually disappeared in less than a decade and we are getting increasingly skeptical that they will ever be able to rebound.”

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by John Herrick vtdigger.org The Senate Natural Resources and Energy Committee Wednesday unanimously passed a bill designed to prepare for the implementation of the state’s universal recycling law.
Under the law, mandatory composting for some large food producers begins July 1, and next year recyclables will be banned from the landfill.
The bill creates a special fund to support the infrastructure and capital costs of collecting and processing mandated recyclables, food scraps and leaf and yard debris. The Agency of Natural Resources will decide where the money will go, according to the bill. Lawmakers want to see more money go to rural waste districts that may already have insufficient infrastructure.
The bill increases the waste disposal franchise tax from $6 to $7. The tax, which has not changed since the 1980s, is placed on each ton of trash brought to a transfer station.