He served in the U.S. Army, attaining the rank of captain and earned the Bronze Star and Army Commendation Medal for his service in Vietnam.
Guy Page is the editor and publisher of the Vermont Daily Chronicle.
He served in the U.S. Army, attaining the rank of captain and earned the Bronze Star and Army Commendation Medal for his service in Vietnam.
An aggressive Legislature is pushing fear and unaffordable climate, housing and school meals policies.
Why would three separate oil facilities owned by a Mexican company have explosions in a 24-hour period?
Nearly one in three girls seriously considered attempting suicide – up nearly 60% from a decade ago.
Every weekday I go to my post office box in Montpelier, slip the big, industrial strength key into #1547, and hope to see a letter from a reader.
Long-expected repeal of criminal prostitution introduced into Vermont House.
My mother told me when you point a finger be careful because you have four fingers pointing back at you. And there has been no bigger purveyor of malarkey throughout this process than Bray.
Anna Gagne of Swanton says no matter what Montpelier does, the fight to end abortion will never be over. And MM from Montpeculiar wonders about those speeding, cell-phone talking lawmaker/motorists he views around the Capitol City.
Senators spar over the costs, straightforwardness, and even the name of the controversial Affordable Heating Act (AHA).
Bills to repeal state law prohibiting prostitution and disorderly conduct and mushroom hallucinogen have been introduced into the Vermont House.
Samuel Bankman-Fried and others agreed that he and his co-conspirators should contribute at least a million dollars to a super PAC that was supporting a candidate running for a United States Congressional seat and appeared to be affiliated with pro-LGBTQ issues, a new federal indictment says.
The victim of a Feb. 5 shooting is recovering, and the alleged shooter is being held in the women’s prison.
No-one was injured in a big weather-related commuter pileup in Franklin County this morning. However, a single-car crash in Hartford yesterday killed the driver and a passenger.
It’s probably easier to explain how crypto currency works than to explain how this bill will work. Or what it will cost.
“Crumbling infrastructure will not heal itself,” a municipal leader echoed Gov. Phil Scott’s call for budgeting $150 million in matching funds for federal $$ to repair state highways and bridges.
WCAX has footage of a young man looking and acting out of his mind attacked a Burlington woman in a wheelchair at night as she was going to the drugstore.
A woman from Ecuador driving a car with Connecticut license plates was charged in court for attempting to transport three illegal aliens.
Francois Clemmons won a Grammy, played a lead supporting role on Mr. Rogers, and returned to Addison County to teach and perform at Middlebury College.
“We withdrew from the tournament because we believe playing against an opponent with a biological male jeopardizes the fairness of the game and the safety of our players,” a Vermont school headmistress said.
S.5, the Affordable Heating Act, goes to the ‘how much will it cost the taxpayer’ committee this afternoon.
A very low standard of proof combined with bureaucratic timidity makes it very easy to be added to the registry.
Peter Welch wants home energy report accessibility (yawn). Becca Balint joins gun safety task force (no surprise). HEY – what’s Bernie doing in a TikTok dance video?!
Thanks to new American Academy of Pediatrics guidelines, child obesity may join the already long list for which lawyers bring malpractice suits against doctors.
A Hartland woman finally knows who murdered her sister in Burlington in 1971.
Will America soon be begging for immigrants to come? And by the way – all the climate doomsday scenarios are bogus because they ignore Peak People.
In the age of ‘equity,’ wealth-creating home equity becomes less and less attainable for young and lower income Vermonters.
He was only the second African-American on the medical school faculty. With his wife Lydia, he bought, restored, and worked a farm in Charlotte – now the non-profit Clemmons Family Farm.
Two anti-hunting and trapping bills introduced by a former Colorado wildlife worker would leave Vermonters defenseless against problem bears, coyotes, and problem furbearers such as beavers which cause flooding and raccoons which carry rabies, the Sportsmen’s Alliance says.
Youth leaving foster care often struggle on their own. A Windsor County senator wants the State to provide them with a monthly stipend.
A well-known radio personality visits the State House to inform lawmakers, media and visitors about an alternative housing option.
The State House is populated by a climate claque whose only villain is carbon emissions. Nothing else matters to these true believers.
After hitting a woman staff member with a urinal, an ER patient taunted, “this is Vermont. What are they going to do?”
Two epihanies, actually. A senator admits the Senate doesn’t do things to help poor people, but must save the world instead. And, there just aren’t enough workers to weatherize, etc. enough to meet self-imposed carbon reduction mandates.
A bus full of basketball players escaped serious injury last night when icy roads caused a collision.
President Biden’s porous border policies are to blame for the alarming spike in illegal crossings of the northern border, the congresswoman for Plattsburgh and much of northern New York says.
“When we left the motel about 5 to 10 mins later, she gave birth to her baby on the sidewalk, cut the umbilical cord, and continued to walk in hopes of making money. She knew not making money meant her receiving bruises.”
The FDA will now allow retail pharmacies to dispense mifepristone to people who obtain a prescription for it. As a result, Walgreens and CVS are seeking FDA approval to dispense the drug.
Recent laws have improved telehealth, but improvements could be made, a recent study says.
A Senate bill would deliver what the holy grail to Vermont abortion providers: free abortions to all, required to be paid for by Medicaid and private health insurance.
Not until the close of the 20th century did a black woman sit in the Vermont Legislature.
An appeal to recent U.S. Supreme Court decisions has led to striking a controversial proposed Senate ban on under-21 possession of semi-auto firearms.
Supporters of a bill banning 16-17 year old marriage with parental consent raised the spectre of child abuse, excess child-bearing, coercion, and human trafficking.
Mr. Goldberg’s complex contraptions were easily understood by everyone who looked at them and could in fact be recreated proving that they actually worked.
the world’s mining can not and will not be able to supply us with the required quantities of the two dozen or so minerals needed to make the machines of our world’s “Energy Transition”.
It’s time to stick it to that redneck Republican who has been hauling the #2 fuel-oil hose up your posted, habitat-fragmenting driveway to ensure all 4,000 square feet (and three-car garage) stays at 70 degrees when the heat pump succumbs to the laws of physics.
An 18-year-old stabbed his victim several times at the Montpelier bus station last night, police say.
Administering mandated insurance would double size of Treasurer’s office The House Committee on General and Housing passed out H.66 Thursday February 16, which would create the most generous paid family and medical […]
The proponents of the bill themselves can’t or won’t tell Vermonters what it will cost and how much fuel will increase to pay for it, as no financial analysis has been requested or developed by the committee.
On behalf of my fellow Earthlings, we would like to offer the people at the World Government Summit as a lovely parting gift for taking so much of your time to come all this way. Seriously, feel free to take as many as you’d like.
A dog rescued from starvation and a heavy chain found his way to a loving couple in Addison County. They call him Buckshot Willy – and in this video, he tells you why.
For many seniors, their home is their last large asset. They can’t make expensive renovations on fixed incomes.
State police were busy this weekend enforcing traffic laws and investigating another highway fatality.
Often, Vermont’s elected leaders respond to conflict of interest concerns with four words: “we’re a small state.”
When two U.S. Army vets took their son/grandson out into the woods to prepare him for his upcoming military training, a nosy neighbor could have reported them as a ‘paramilitary training camp.’
The fascinating, unlikely story is told in “The Man of the House,” a 2022 memoir by Robert Wallace Bennett, a former Vermont journalist, public relations and marketing executive, Brooklyn Dodgers hero Johnny Podres biographer, internationally-recognized expert rabbit breeder – and diligent, committed husband and father.
The new boss at DCF is an old hand in state government. More moose calves are dying in the Northeast Kingdom, thanks to a tick infestation, and the proposed solution is a moose hunt. And mail delivery in Hinesburg (and elsewhere) is sllloowww.
Is it a coincidence that the CDC drastically reduced the official toxicity of vinyl chloride two weeks before the Ohio train wreck? And was there really a push for locals to sign up for biometric tracking in the event of a major disaster?
On some days, Vermont public schools don’t have enough school bus drivers and cafeteria workers to transport and feed students.
Vermonters already expect vaccine outcome data are being compiled and monitored – but incredibly they are not.
Xusana Davis: “It’s now my third or fourth session in the state and one of the things I often hear from legislators is, oh yeah, sorry, the equity piece isn’t quite there but we’ll fix it in January. We’ll fix it later. And what that says to me is there is something that motivates us to do this that is more important to us than justice. So the justice will have to wait.”
No technology can replace the quiet solitude and person-to-person educational learning experiences found in a library environment.
The unprecedented move of making the Northern Vermont University library almost all-digital has raised conflict of interest questions about Vermont State College Board Vice-Chair Megan Cluver, who is also a senior manager of Deloitte, a digital technology firm.
If Rice and others forfeit tuition vouchers for including religion in their curriculum, why can the public schools teach woke?
The tide has turned to what is now a social welfare state, implementing similar programs that have been a failure in California, and closer to home, in Burlington.
The 40 Days for Life prayer vigil begins this coming week in Barre, Rutland and Burlington.
Despite testimony about how the ‘Affordable Heating Act’ would actually raise energy prices for poor and middle income Vermonters, a Senate committee unanimously approved S.5.
A bill that could add up to $4 to the cost of heating fuel passed the Senate Natural Resources and Energy Committee this morning.
Lawmakers’ ears appear to be stuffed with cotton.
Longtime news reporter Mike Donoghue broke one of the biggest crime stories in Vermont history on Thursday when he reported that the rape, beating and strangulation death of a Milton teacher more than 51 years ago in Burlington has been solved.
The Queen City continues its new look: less parking, more biking.
Several days after two car thefts in which police say he was connected, Foy was apprehended walking down Rte. 302 shortly after 5 pm with a shopping cart that carried a computer stolen from WalMart.
A series of bills seeking a balance between public health policy goals and individual rights have been introduced into the Vermont Legislature.
More surgical capacity is needed because by 2030 Vermont’s 65-plus population will grow by 30 to 60 percent, UVMMC officials said.
Every February of municipal election years, Seattle voters receive four $25 “democracy vouchers” — blue slips of paper totaling $100 on which voters can write in candidates and direct public funds to those campaigns.
Elected to the Legislature in 1945, many Montpelier institutions like the Pavilion Hotel and the Montpelier Tavern were closed to him due to segregation.
The U.S. attorney for Vermont is giving out free gun locks as part of a new gun safety campaign.
Hundreds of Vermonters are seeking mental health support that just isn’t there.
Vermont lawmakers are seeking to outlaw efforts to counter the pro-abortion agenda.
Too late for voters considering Article 22, expert/lawmaker discussion of new legislation answers some then-unanswered questions about the controversial amendment to the Vermont Constitution.
A man who had recently left a drug treatment clinic trashed a rented cabin, cut himself jumping out of a window, and then told police an intruder had shot him.
2023 Vermont legislative leaders seem less about “choice” and more about making abortion the only known alternative to women in crisis pregnancy.
Following the death of three anglers off Grand Isle, and with 40-plus degree temps expected, the state game warden colonel advises staying off Lake Champlain until cooler weather returns later this month.
Lamoille County side judge Joel Page hung up his robe February 1,marking 41 years of working day in and day out at the county courthouse in Hyde Park village.
Every town has a Stephen Whitaker – the person who regularly stands up at local meetings and shares strong opinions and inconvenient facts. Few of them get handcuffed and led away – only to have their charges dropped, months later.
Here at the Vermont Daily Chronicle, we’re now trying to produce news videos. Today: Brady letters as another basis for the State permanently decertifying a police officer to work in Vermont.
Legal protections now enjoyed by police and crisis pregnancy centers are in the crosshairs of two House bills introduced Tuesday.
Born a slave on a Virginia plantation, Bates was first elected to the office of Sheriff in Vergennes in 1879, fourteen years after the end of the Civil War.
The pandemic and workforce shortages have led to an $87 million pricetag for completing the new UVM athletic complex.
A Democratic senator on the committee reviewing the ‘Affordable Heating Act’ compares the complex, inscrutable carbon-taxing bill to a Rube Goldberg contraption.
S66, a bill intended to cut religious schools out of public tuition, could lead to the closure of private Lyndon Institute, thus depriving NEK sudents of their long-standing tuition high school.
Ever since the Woodside facility in Essex closed, the State of Vermont has sought without success for somewhere, anywhere to safely and securely hold juvenile delinquents. Next stop, St. Albans.
H251 would add the issuance of a Brady or Giglio letter as a basis of law enforcement misconduct under the jurisdiction of the Vermont Criminal Justice Council, the state’s police disciplinary board.
A Killington man whose girlfriend died in September 2021 of what he told police was a self-inflicted gunshot has been sentenced to four years in prison for related drug and gun charges.
Failing dairy farms can be converted to a combination of forest land and housing.
Unemployment dropped a percentage point, and economic growth was slow compared to the national growth during the third quarter of 2022.
Train fire in Ohio….
The Vermont State Housing Authority launched the Landlord Relief Program last week with help from the state Department for Children and Families.
Unlawful militia conspiracy or lawful Second Amendment activity?
All it took was one raging 400 lb. voter to convince this town clerk that making complicated electoral changes must be accompanied with robust education of both voters and voting officials.
For decades public school teachers have been Bernie Sanders’ most loyal campaign volunteers and donors. Last night it was payback time.