Current News

by tim

Dr Joseph Bertolino will be the 15th president of Lyndon State College. Vermont State Colleges Board Chairman Gary Moore made the announcement February 19.
Moore stated, "I am pleased that JoeBertolinowill be the next president of Lyndon State College. He is a very enthusiastic individual who impressed the faculty, staff, and students during his two-day campus visit. I am sure his enthusiasm will prove to be contagious and look forward to great things happening atLSCduring histenure."
A 13-member Search Committee made up ofLSCfaculty, staff, students,VSCTrustees and members of the Lyndon community at-large began a national search in October 2011. Four semi-finalists visited the campus in late January for two days of meetings and interviews. The search committee recommended the two finalists who returned toLSCon February 15 for interviews with theVSCBoard of Trustees.

by tim

The Vermont Republican State Committee met in Montpelier this past Saturday and unanimously elected Jack Lindley as the new VT GOP Chair.
"It will take all of our energy and a lot of hard work, but this can and will be a great year for Vermont Republicans," Lindley said. "We are going to engage our neighbors and talk about the issues, and we will lead the way towards greater growth, opportunity and prosperity for all Vermonters."
"Growing our economy and creating new and better jobs for Vermonters is our only hope to save our beautiful state and preserve our quality of life," Lindley continued. "We need to push back against single-party rule in Montpelier, and we need to bring common sense back to the State House."

by tim

AT&Tinvested more than$50 millionin itsVermontwireless and wireline networks from 2009 through 2011 with a focus on improving the company's mobile broadband coverage and overall performance of its networks.
During 2011, AT&T made more than 250 wireless network upgrades in four key categories inVermont. These enhancements include:

Activating five new cell sites or towers to improve network coverage.
Deploying faster fiber-optic connections to more than 50 cell sites. Combined with HSPA+ technology, these deployments enable 4G speeds**.
Adding capacity or an extra layer of frequency to cell sites ‘ like adding lanes to a highway ‘ with the addition of nearly 120 of these layers, or "carriers".
Upgrading nearly 80 cell sites to provide fastmobile broadbandspeeds.

by tim

Collaboration, clear policies and consumer outreach are fueling the successful implementation of Central Vermont Public Services’ smart grid plan, according to results of the first case study in Vermont Law School’s national smart grid research project.
CVPS, Vermont’s largest investor owned utility, this month begins a year-long process of installing smart meters for its customers. According to VLS’s case study results:
· Collaboration is arguably the most important lesson that the CVPS study provides. It has made developing and implementing CVPS SmartPower and other utilities’ smart grid investments more efficient, cost-effective and technically sound.
· Since 2007, Vermont’s Legislature and Public Service Board have been looking to develop smart grid infrastructure and dynamic rate options, which balances flexibility for investments in a rapidly developing field of technology with measures to ensure those investments are prudent.

by tim

Attorney General William H Sorrell has filed an appeal of the federal district court’s recent decision in favor of Entergy Nuclear Vermont Yankee. The district court, in its January 19 ruling, invalidated two Vermont statutes that gave the Legislature a say on the ability of Vermont Yankee to continue operations when its current state license expires on March 21, 2012.
Attorney General Sorrell announced today that the State has appealed all aspects of the judgment entered by the district court.

by tim

(Host) Vermont Business Magazine editor and commentator Tim McQuiston suggests that the best source of funding for the repair and maintenance of our roads and bridges may in fact be found at the neighborhood gas pump.
McQuiston: The Gas Tax

Friday, 02/17/12 5:55pm
LISTEN(3:04)
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by tim

Repro is the new owner of Hard Copy, a Burlington area provider of copies, manuals, posters business cards and many other printed products.
Hard Copy’s personnel and assets will be relocated from its present location at 30 Main Street, Burlington, to Repro’s location at 450 Weaver Street, Winooski. Repro states that this acquisition will enable it to offer all of our customers more capabilities and services.

by tim

Vermont will receive more than $5.75 million in federal grants from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS), U.S. Senator Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) announced Friday. The grants will help Vermont develop prevention and preparedness programs to respond to and recover from acts of terrorism and other catastrophic events.
‘As a rural, border state, prevention and preparedness plans are a must in Vermont,’ said Leahy. ‘I tragically saw firsthand this summer how devastating natural disasters can be in rural areas in Vermont. These grants will both help us ensure our first responders are prepared to respond to incidents threatening national security and help our state prepare for future natural disasters.’
Vermont will receive grant awards from two DHS programs:

by tim

Vermont’s congressional delegation ‘ Senator Patrick Leahy and Senator Bernie Sanders and Representative Peter Welch ‘ has introduced legislation to extend a vital safety net that helps dairy farmers ride out downturns in milk prices. Without action, dairy farmers could face a severe drop in support from the MILC safety net by September 1st.
The MILC Continuation Act of 2012 would extend for one year the Milk Income Loss Contract (MILC) program at current support levels, which helps dairy farmers when the price of milk falls below $16.94 per hundredweight. Once triggered, farmers receive 45 percent of the difference between that price and the current price of milk, which also takes into account feed costs as a factor in triggering program payments.

by tim

Senator Patrick Leahy (D-VT) says a fresh influx of funding from the US Department of Agriculture’s Farm Service Agency (FSA), using disaster relief funds that Leahy helped to add in November, will assist Vermont farmers whose lands were harmed by Irene.

Vermont learned Thursday that the state will receive an additional $2.56 million, more than doubling an earlier allocation of $2.18 million, for a total of $4.7 million in federal funds from the Environmental Conservation Program (ECP) to rehabilitate farmland damaged by Irene.

Landowners, individuals and communities across the nation endured major hardships because of the intensity and number of natural disasters last year, and the ECP program was severely under-funded and had a national backlog even before Hurricane Irene hit. As a senior member of both the Senate Agriculture and Appropriations panels, Leahy fought successfully after Irene to supplement the program’s depleted coffers.

by tim

They both have wireless technology.Both use GPS in new, innovative ways.Now Apple’s iPhone and the Vermont-made AllSun Tracker have something else in common with the installation of a new solar tracker farm.
Small Dog Electronics, one of the largest Apple suppliers in the United States, has installed ten AllSun Trackers at their company headquarters.

The42kW installation outside the company’s Waitsfield office will make 58,800 kWh per year. This will provide the power needed to run their retail store in South Burlington as well as half of the power for the company’s Waitsfield headquarters.The new locally manufactured solar trackers are the latest in a series of investments made by Small Dog Electronics toward a goal of achieving net zero usage of non-renewable energy.

by tim

by Alan Panebaker vtdigger.orgA proposal to study whether the state should purchase up to 51 percent of Vermont’s electric transmission system is ruffling feathers.
Lobbyists filled the Senate committee rooms this week as financial experts and utility executives ticked off reasons why state ownership of half the state’s electric transmission utility is a bad idea.
It’s such a bad idea, in their view, that it doesn’t warrant study.
The proposal, introduced in the form of a bill by Sens. Vince Illuzzi, Tim Ashe and Peter Galbraith, is for an independent study of the costs, benefits and risks associated with the state’s acquisition of an ownership interest in Transco, the company that owns most of the electric transmission assets in the state, and VELCO, the company that manages it.
In committee discussions, the proposal by the trio of senators appears to have many critics and few allies.