Proposed initiatives to produce a healthy, diverse, and resilient agricultural ecosystem will require $90 million over five years.
Guy Page is the editor and publisher of the Vermont Daily Chronicle.
Proposed initiatives to produce a healthy, diverse, and resilient agricultural ecosystem will require $90 million over five years.
VT Digger covers the trial of an Addison County sheriff accused of sex assault.
A young man is dead after being shot in the head at close range last night in Burlington’s Old North End.
A “disrespected” drug dealer from Massachusetts shot a former customer in St. Johnsbury July 5, court records say.
A Democratic candidate for Congress says he’s been ignored by the Vermont media because he’s a man.
One of Vermont’s foremost photographers captured the Northern Lights over Malletts Bay last night.
“I intend to work cooperatively with Governor Scott on his stated agenda,” Lamoille House candidate Richard Bailey said.
The Democratic gubernatorial candidate wants to make Vermont a taxpayer-funded haven for abortion refugees from illegal abortion states.
In response to recent mass shootings, legislators in New York and in several other states have turned their attention to a new target: civilian body armor.
If you’re dumb enough to think Jeffrey Epstein killed himself but smart enough to keep your mouth shut lest you get Arkancided, you have a serious future as a useful idiot.
The possibility of two former Montpelier mayors representing Washington County as state senators while Barre has none strikes me as fundamentally unfair and wrong.
“I believe in peace and prosperity through law and order,” House candidate Brian Judd of Barre City said.
Parents are being kicked out of the village regarding their children’s reproductive values and experiences.
The Strategic Petroleum Reserve meant to protect U.S. citizens from a catastrophic fuel shortage is being sent overseas.
With a national shortage of truck drivers, why is a Vermont trucking company reportedly laying off drivers? WCAX reports
A parking lot encounter between people who knew each other turned into a shooting Tuesday, July 5 in St. Johnsbury.
A Montpelier resident lets his imagination run free on solutions for the ongoing problem of semi drivers getting their rigs stuck in scenic, tortuous Smugglers’ Notch.
I would like to set a few things straight about John’s little letter writing temper tantrum,” former senate colleague David Deen says.
In 2022, it’s hard to remember when Republicans actually had the political ascendancy, however fleeting.
A hammer-like device, and not concrete as referenced by a shadowy group of violent pro-abortion protesters, was used to break seven windows at the Vermont State House June 25.
A “foolish” action by a “radical court.” Gov. and Democratic candidate for Congress Molly Gray last week called the SCOTUS decision preventing the EPA from making climate-change policy.
Becca Balint will challenge the status quo and combat the existential threat of climate change, Bernie Sanders said.
The food scrap ban and the growth of backyard poultry raising has delighted Vermont’s hungry black bear population.
Another T/T hung up in the Notch. Another shooting. Two burglaries.
The Montpelier community newspaper describes accounts of bullying in the local public schools.
“Gather your friends and collect heavy rocks,” Jane’s Revenge urges opponents of the SCOTUS decision overturning Roe V. Wade. “Learn the skill of accelerant bartending. Decentralize your actions – go into the night and be feral with joy!”
It’s not that parents don’t want to give their toddlers a possibly harmful shot that doesn’t work very well for a disease that poses little harm – no, it’s just tired parents suffering from “Covid fatigue,” a Vermont newspaper explains.
Many of us notice license plates as we drive around town and throughout the state, and these two additional license plates for our decorated veterans will enable them to be further recognized by their neighbors, community members, and others.
Decisions made about mandatory masking and vaccination at the NEA annual meeting this week in Chicago matter to Vermont because during the pandemic, it became clear that what teachers wanted, they often got.
Children who are different are often bullied, ignored, or punished in government schools.
As it turns out, we’re not as free as we thought we were.
The Power Camp provides young athletes ages 8-12, boys and girls, the opportunity to reach their God-given potential by offering comprehensive athletic and spiritual training in a fun camp environment.
A Vermont Supreme Court ruling enshrouds health care spending decisions and cost increases in government-protected secrecy, the state auditor says.
A member of Vermont’s military band royal family performed Monday night, July 4 in Jeffersonville.
The state employees’ union has called for a Day of Action to protest brutal 12 hours a day, five days a week shifts at a state prison.
A rare Beaudon du Poiteau donkey named Hamilton who lives in the Northeast Kingdom town of Brownington is about to celebrate his first birthday, and the public is invited to stop in to say hello.
A meth user swinging a baseball bat invaded two Bristol homes after 2 AM Saturday, police say.
The SCOTUS decision to overturn a New York gun control law is encouraging for Vermont gun rights supporters – but the devil is in the details.
The alleged shooter in Burlington’s 15th gunfire incident has a lengthy drug distribution and shooting history, police say.
A Derby man became the sixth motorcylist to die on Vermont highways this year.
The number of semi-auto rifles (like the AR-15 and others acquired since 1994 has increased from 400,000 to 20 million.
We as neighbors can finally work together to address the tragedy of unwanted pregnancies in a humane, and more effective, way.
A Springfield resident asked the lawmakers who represent him what they think of the vandalism at the Vermont State House following the SCOTUS decision overturning Roe V. Wade.
Sen. Patrick Leahy has fallen at home and requires hip surgery.
If reading this book won’t cure insomnia, nothing will.
A righty New Hampshire observer says the lefties are vandalizing the Vermont State House because of years of Democrat rule, Democrat control of media, and Democrat control of education and culture.”
An underage Rutland man asked an older man to buy a gun for him, police say. Both appeared in court for the illegal “straw purchase.”
States (like Vermont) where buying marijuana is legal are seeing higher concentrations of THC and more teens suffering from THC-induced mental illness, a new study shows.
Come and enjoy a suitably understated celebration of the July 4 birthday of the United States and its 30th president, Calvin Coolidge of Plymouth Notch, Vermont.
A new historic marker in Burlington’s City Hall Park commemorates Vermont’s first gay pride parade in 1983.
Germany shouldn’t have shut down its nukes, but it did – and became even more dependent on Russian natural gas for generating electricity.
Just to make the fight fair.
Biden is committed to putting oil refineries out of business.
Happy Fourth to all of the Nation Makers of today! The Vermont Daily Chronicle office will be closed Thursday, June 30 – Monday, July 4. Comment moderation will be slight and the editor won’t be returning emails. An edition will be published Friday, July 1, but not Monday, July 4.
Threaten to assassinate a black Supreme Court justice? Free speech, says Twitter. Tweeting about a study linking the Covid vax to infertility, not so much.
Columbia, the personification of the U.S.A., will appear on candidate for Congress Ericka Redic’s parade float.
Grow Georgia peaches in Georgia, Vermont? Sure thing
It’s not often Vermont gets mentioned in “Armed Citizen”, a regular feature in the NRA mag America’s First Freedom.
A resolution co-sponsored by Rep. Peter Welch calls for “eliminating unnecessary governmental restrictions on the provision of, and access to, gender-affirming medical care and counseling for transgender and nonbinary adults, adolescents, and children.”
Three days later, former state senator and now Gov. Phil Scott addressed Saturday’s vandalism of the Vermont State House, when asked directly on camera by a reporter. Sen. Becca Balint hasn’t said a word about it on her social media.
Over the July Fourth weekend, boaters will notice an increase in officer patrols on the water.
Price increases “are not due to any state policy,” but the State of Vermont does offer a some programs for people hit hard by inflation.
Republicans stand an excellent chance of winning this coming November, because for years the Democratic party has been hemorrhaging support from the white working class and is now losing support from Latino, Black and Asian workers as well.
A picture emerges of certain types of people at the control of the communist engine, starting with its authors and culminating with its executors.
At one point during the kidnapping, the informant had a knife held to his throat while he was tied up, cut on his cheek by a razor blade, hit over the head by a bottle, and burned by a heated-up fork.
The Global Commitment demonstration increases Vermonters’ access to health care services, strengthens the health care system, and supports health care providers recovering from disruptions brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic, state officials say.
Antlerless deer permit applications are available online now.
Addison County’s elected sheriff has been arrested for sexual assault on a 35-year-old woman with whom he was living in March.
At a July 6 candidate forum, the Chittenden County state’s attorney supported by George Soros will face questions about the increase of violent crime and shoplifting.
A carpenter and Republican candidate for a Lamoille County House seat wants a Vermont where people can flourish economically with a strong infrastructure and the least amount of government intrusion into people’s lives.
Now that the U.S. Supreme Court has seems to be taking a dim view of non-citizen voting, the City of Winooski wants a judge to throw out a GOP lawsuit against its non-citizen voting charter change.
Current and former state senators have been silent about the Night of Shattered Glass at the Vermont State House.
Three-and-a-half hours and a $3544 fine later, a Florida tractor-trailer had been cleared from a hairpin turn on Smugglers Notch.
The Burlington City Council last night approved a 2022-23 budget that expands the police department by offering incentives and continues spending and programs on climate and racial diversity.
Biden’s plea for peacefulness was lost on the Big Blue Rage Machine the Democrats have been operating.
For most people abortions are last choice options, and I would argue that the reason we see most abortions happening among disadvantaged communities is because these are our neighbors with the least amount of choice.
Even the late, pro-choice Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg said Roe V. Wade was not just and should not have been issued.
The Republican National Committee is taking credit for the court defeat of non-citizen voting in New York City.
Court decisions based not on constitutional principle but on the perceived needs and wants of contemporary society deserve to come a ‘tumbling down.
80 workers are out of work after a North Springfield manufacturer closed.
Seven Vermont State House windows were broken and porous, original 1859 granite was defaced with graffiti on the same night as the ‘Night of Rage’ promised by opponents of the overturning of Roe V. Wade.
Last week’s decision moves much closer to a Vermont state requirement that all parents – not just tuition town parents – must be given their choice of approved public schools, non-sectarian independent schools, and sectarian independent schools.
The knee-jerk reaction that we need Prop 5/Article 22 in response to the Dobbs decision is based on very misleading information about a radical position.
Guns and drugs in Billtown.
The nation’s Red and Blue states are both consolidating their positions on abortion following Friday’s SCOTUS overturning of Roe V. Wade.
Ethan Allen fought for Vermont to become the 14th State believing the Union would better protect individual liberty, but that noise you hear is a dog-headed saber rattling in its scabbard.
Only our neighbor across the Connecticut River is less affected by inflation than Vermont.
Today’s 6-3 decision overturning a half-century of legalized abortion nationwide won’t affect states like Vermont where state law makes the practice of abortion legal.
Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia said Americans grateful for SCOTUS protection of freedom of religious speech have those door-knocking Jehovah’s Witnesses to thank.
As the 2022 primary balloting begins today, a longtime moderate Vermont Republican asks his local community newspaper to cover the campaign fully and fairly.
This week the Supreme Court set a major and exciting precedent by striking down over 100 years of New York law when they found that New York’s pattern of restricting gun rights to its innocent and law-abiding citizens was unconstitutional.
Two Springfield, MA men arrested for dealing fentanyl and cocaine in Chittenden County were released with a citation to appear in court in September.
The June 25-26 celebration of Ethan Allen Weekend is as good an occasion as any to retell two of the many scandalous, scatalogical stories about the legendary leader of the Green Mountain Boys.
Facebook brings together Colchester, Vermont and its English ancestor.
A 20-year-old Bolton man allegedly stabbed a man almost twice his age following a road rage incident. He was cited to appear in court, and released.
A healthy coyote has attacked a human being in Panton, Vermont game wardens say.
Vermonters bemoaning the lack of new blood in the Vermont Legislature may be encouraged by the decision of three newcomers from Lamoille County.
These experimental injections do not prevent Covid or transmission of Covid, so vaccinating a child will not save an at-risk family member.
Headlines from Vermont news media.
The U.S. Supreme Court today struck down New York’s “may issue” firearms carry permit law as too restrictive. What will this decision mean for Vermont?