Current News

by tim

Connor Homes received a national home building accolade, capturing the three award(s) or honorable mention(s) in the 2010 BSC Excellence in Home Design and Marketing Awards program. The honor was awarded by the Building Systems Councils (BSC) of the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB)—a trade association that represents the concrete, log, modular, and panelized building system industries—at their annual awards program on November 2, 2009.
Sponsored by the NAHB Building Systems Councils, the BSC Excellence in Marketing and Home Design Awards has promoted excellence in the systems-built housing industry for more than ten years. All winners were announced at an awards luncheon in Marco Island, Fla., held in conjunction with the BSC SHOWCASE event—the leading trade show and conference based centered on the systems-built housing industry. Home manufacturers, builders and industry associates were among the groups recognized.

by tim

City Market, Onion River Co-op donated the proceeds from its 12th annual Holiday Tree sale to the Committee on Temporary Shelter (COTS). City Market staff presented the check totaling $8,500 to COTS Director of Development Kim Borsavage. The annual tree sale to benefit COTS has been held at the Co-op for the past 12 years, bringing the total donation to over $52,000.
“We are so grateful to City Market for this annual event, these are difficult times for many struggling Vermonters and the number of families turning to COTS for shelter has increased dramatically,” said Borsavage. “The funds raised through the Holiday Tree Sale will go directly to providing a warm, safe refuge for those who have no place left to turn.”

by tim

Governor Douglas this afternoon gave his final State of the State address before the Vermont Legislature. His budget address will come next week. But most of this speech dealt with the budget and the economy. Certainly the centerpiece of this speech concerned public education reform.

by tim

The State of Vermont licensed 39 new captive insurance companies in 2009 as it approaches the 900-license milestone, according to data released by the Vermont Department of Banking, Insurance, Securities and Health Care Administration (BISHCA). Despite challenging economic conditions, Vermont licensed its 6th highest tally of captives in its 29-year history.
A strong and growing captive industry is good for our economy, Governor Jim Douglas said. That this industry is growing in Vermont, even during this difficult time for our economy, is a testament to the hard work of our economic development officials and the professionals at BISHCA. It also demonstrates our state s economic potential when we put in place policies that make us competitive in an industry or sector.

by tim

This past June a television production team came to Vermont to scout out locations, food producers and chefs for a series of Vermont-based episodes of celebrity Chef Emeril Lagasse's Emeril Green fresh, whole foods cooking show airing on Planet Green, a division of Discovery Communications. The Inn at Weathersfield, an historic 12-room inn and restaurant in Perkinsville, and Cedar Circle Farm, a 50-acre certified organic farm and education center in East Thetford, were selected to represent southeastern and central Vermont. Filming took place in September and the Emeril Green episode premieres next week.

by tim

The Two Rivers-Ottauquechee Regional Commission (TRORC) was recently awarded a $235,000 economic development grant from the US Department of Commerce, Economic Development Administration (EDA) to support the region’s businesses in minimizing economic dislocations resulting in natural or man-made disasters.
In 2008, towns within the TRORC area were impacted by severe flooding and Congress appropriated funding to EDA to assist businesses in disaster recovery efforts by conducting proper planning in advance of disasters. TRORC sought this nationally competitive funding to meet with the region’s businesses and conduct “business continuity of operations planning”. This effort will identify the vulnerability of a business to disruptions in raw materials and supplies, finished product transportation, employee movement and other factors.

by tim

Governor Jim Douglas will deliver his final State of the State message to a joint session of the General Assembly today (Thursday) at 2 pm at the State House. The governor will focus on ways to strengthen the Vermont economy to help employers create jobs. He will also propose reforms needed to curb property tax increases. In that regard, the governor is expected to propose a plan to reduce dramatically the number of school districts and/or supervisory unions across the state to reduce overhead. It is unlikely he will propose closing actual schools or at least specific schools, but he may suggest that there could be some high school consolidation. Vermont currently has 290 school districts. A recent report proposed cutting that number to as few as 13.

by tim

According to information supplied by Vermont Yankee, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission recently completed a security inspection at the plant involving a review of selected procedures and records, observed activities, and interviewed personnel and identified one finding which they describe as a non-cited violation of very low security significance. The details are withheld from the public because they are related to nuclear plant security, but according to the NRC, the deficiency was promptly corrected or compensated for, and the plant was in compliance with applicable physical protection and security requirements within the scope of the inspection before the inspectors left the site. Vermont Yankee agreed with the inspector’s conclusions.

by tim

During a tour Wednesday of the firm s newly expanded manufacturing facility in Essex, Senator Patrick Leahy and Revision Eyewear CEO Jonathan Blanshay Wednesday announced $2.4 million in additional funding has been made available for the U.S. Army to supply soldiers with state-of-the-art protective goggles.

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The Commission on the Design and Funding of Retirement and Retiree Health Benefit Plans for State Employees and Teachers has released their final recommendations to the Governor and the General Assembly. The report notes that required state pension contributions will increase from $73.5 million this year to $105.1 million in fiscal year 2011. Most of the increase is on the teacher pension side, with an increase of $22 million.
The executive summary is attached.
The report is posted online at the Vermont State Treasurer s web site. http://www.vermonttreasurer.gov/retirement/retirement-commission-update.

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Executive_Summary_Retirement_Commission_Report_Dec_09.pdf184.74 KB

by tim

A record 83,342 or 1 in 8 Vermonters currently rely on 3SquaresVT (formerly Food Stamps) to buy their monthly food and participation continues to rise. 3SquaresVT is designed to be a nutrition supplement for limited-income Vermonters; yet as the economic recession lingers and jobs remain scarce, more Vermonters count the benefits as their only source of support. 4,706 Vermonters, 1 in 16 getting 3SquaresVT, have no other source of income, according to a recent New York Times article, “Living on Food Stamps and Nothing Else.” That’s a 66% increase in two years.

by tim

A $4.8 million economic stimulus grant awarded today to the Central Vermont Community Action Council will train about 2,400 Vermonters under a green jobs program authored by US Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT). The Vermont grant – one of 25 announced by the U.S. Department of Labor – was among the largest awarded under the $100 million Energy Training Partnership program. The awards ranged from $1.4 million to $5 million.
“One way to move our country toward energy independence, slow global warming and create good-paying jobs is to use energy in a smarter way,” said Sanders, the chairman of the Senate Green Jobs and New Economy Subcommittee. “As a nation we have to cut consumption by making our homes and businesses more energy efficient and move to renewable energies. Trouble is, today you would have a hard time finding workers qualified to do those jobs. This funding helps address the problem by training thousands of Vermonters for good-paying green jobs.”