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.
Guy Page is the editor and publisher of the Vermont Daily Chronicle.
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?
A former deputy attorney general and senior aide to Gov. Phil Scott will be Vermont’s first woman attorney general.
Becca Balint, Christina Nolan, and Ericka Redic came out ‘winners’ in an online poll conducted this month by the Vermont Public Interest Research Group.
A South Burlington cow given to President Dwight Eisenhower during his June 1955 visit to Rutland was sent to his working dairy farm in Gettysburg, PA.
Someone who volunteered at the Hoofbeats and Dreams horse rescue barn in Tunbridge made a complaint to the local humane society, who then notified state police.
Out of nowhere appeared a towering and tattooed figure wearing what looked like a yarmulke fashioned from a water buffalo.
Rep. Anne Donahue of Northfield is joining the effort to help Vermonters for Good Government educate voters about Prop 5/Article 22 issues across Vermont through various mediums over the coming months.
“Loons were removed from Vermont’s endangered species list in 2005, but they face continued threats from human disturbance during the breeding season and ingestion of fishing gear,” said Doug Morin, wildlife biologist with Vermont Fish and Wildlife.
As ICE ratchets up pressure on the American press, Vermont illegal immigrants and their supporters are demanding the federal agency drop their deportation cases.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has issued new policy guidelines on how, when and why it will subpoena, execute search warrants, and arrest members of the U.S. news media.
“We have what, 330 million people in the country, and I believe we only had 19 million watching,” Gov. Phil Scott said of live coverage of the House investigation into the events of Jan. 6.
Advocates might claim some progress in producing neurotic reactions in teenage Swedish girls and 60-something New York architects.
Biden on Monday, June 6, issued a two-year pause on tariffs against solar products from Southeast Asia and invoked the federal Defense Production Act, which allows the White House to direct production from manufacturers to jumpstart alternative energy sectors.
With beaucoup bucks from a national journalism not-for-profit, UVM is expanding its training for news reporters of all ages.
Assaults of Burlington’s already understaffed, overworked nurses are up, the union claims – a complaint echoed by Burlington first responders.
Protecting children is expensive, but worth the cost.
Headlines from Vermont media today.
As we say at Bananas Academy, you don’t have that highly evolved monkey brain for nothing, it’s made for Bananas!
Our America – Of Thee I Sing!
Two Orleans County men and a Springfield, Massachusetts man are in custody following a drug bust last week.
To vote early in the August primaries, voters must request a ballot.
A man believed to be the homeowner was trapped inside the home as it burned.
Google’s sentient AI is not only talking, it’s hired a lawyer, a former employee says.
State transportation revenues will get a big shot in the arm, thanks to a tax hike at the gas pump.
Never mind the campaign promises – how did Vermont’s legislators actually vote?
Candidate for Congress Sen. Becca Balint will be politicking from home after testing positive for Covid, just days after her visit to the White House.
June 19th is a day for promises made and promises kept.
Fish & Wildlife explains new laws on coyote hunting, recovering game, and trapping.
Ericka Redic, GOP candidate for Congress, said existing laws must be enforced to protect U.S. Supreme Court justices and their families from potential violence.
A Newport woman has been arrested for attempting murder-by-car and other blunt objects.
The two state troopers involved in the bean-bag shooting of a Newfane man who wouldn’t come down from a roof early Friday morning are now on paid leave, pending investigation.
but costs for the three F’s of fuel, feed, and fertilizer sky high, too Vermont dairy farmers are getting a record-high price for milk, according to the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture. Farmers […]
A former assistant Vermont Attorney General running for the top job said today climate change and reproductive freedom are the main issues facing the office.
The youngest member of the Locke family of Waterville was born last month beneath one of the Lamoille County town’s many covered bridges.
A Rutland native, UVM grad, and recipient of the Congressional Medal of Honor at Guadalcanal was the founder of the Vermont State Police in 1947.
It was another violent Saturday night across Vermont, and therefore a busy night in hospital emergency rooms.
Farming and support for agriculture was well represented under the Golden Dome this year, Vermont’s chief executive for agriculture says.
U.S. regulators on Friday authorized the first COVID-19 shots for infants and preschoolers, paving the way for vaccinations to begin next week.
Headlines from Vermont media today.
The day before she endorsed Becca Balint for Congress, a leading House progressive voted against a Supreme Court security bill – one of only 27 House members to do so.
In addition to publishing 10 news and commentaries Mon-Fri, on Wednesday your editor found the time to drive to the Waterbury studios of WDEV to guest-host Common Sense Radio. That was a lot of fun!
The United States’ first known polio epidemic broke out in Rutland, killing 10 people, including children.
Drawn by the state’s anti-lockdown and pro-freedom policies, nearly 1000 people move to Florida every day – and a new state law has new single family home construction in overdrive, Hayden Dublois reports.
Christina Nolan’s campaign manager has worked for South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem and for a candidate who was the defense lawyer for Kyle Rittenhouse.
Two people died in separate accidents in eastern Vermont, and trucker from Dallas drove the wrong way on I-91 in Coventry.
Life insurance companies claims were way up in 2021, according to national news reported by CLG.
Soon after being struck by a bean-bag round fired by a state trooper, a crazy-acting man fell from a roof 15 feet to the ground.
Because of his government power, Lysenko had power over both Russia’s agricultural practices and the scientists who might speak out against him. This would prove to be disastrous for both.
Chinese government Covid apps are being to prevent citizens from withdrawing money from banks.
A longtime school board member, businessman, and law enforcement professional will seek the House seat for several Bennington and Rutland county communities.
With such a massive change in leadership and members about to occur, maybe it is time to rethink how the Legislature is elected, operates, and is compensated.
With the Supreme Court discouraging the exclusive flying of the BLM flag, Vermont schools are reaching for compromises. This headline and others from today’s Vermont media.
Chittenden County State’s Attorney Sarah George is unhappy about statements made by Ted Kenney, a Williston lawyer running against her on a platform of “criminal justice reform and safe streets.”
President Biden and Congress have turned a blind eye to fast-emerging trust fund deficits.
“You asked about ballot harvesting, which is not a legal term. I’m guessing you’re asking whether VPIRG collected completed ballots from voters and submitted them for processing in the 2020 election. The answer to that question is no,” Executive Director Paul Burns said.
Jay Wilson fatally shot Dieter Seier during a family dispute involving Wilson and his mother that related to property and money, police say.
A Bennington man died after a two-car crash outside a hospital.
“Within a week after Gobeil was trespassed from Canaan, VT school property, for harrassing/intimidating students, other parents, and staff regarding mask recommendations, Gobeil communicated to people inside Solomon’s Store a threat to kill a lot of people at Canaan school, and he expressed concern about a potential ‘drag queen show,’” court records say.
Recent headlines from Vermont news media.
Keith Longmore is – or rather, was – a black member of the St. Albans advisory committee formed to help citizens “understand the experience of historically marginalized groups.”
Jay Wilson, the suspect in a fatal shooting Tuesday afternoon at 13 Slayton Terrace in the town of Woodstock, shot himself to death and was located late Tuesday night inside the house, state police say.
A 36-year-old Canaan man has been arrested in New Hampshire for making threats against the local high school.
New England has seen an unusual uptick in births during the coronavirus pandemic as more highly educated residents, especially those in their 30s, seized working from home as an opportunity to start a family.
Rents rose 11.3% last year nationwide, and in Burlington – South Burlington, the median monthly rent is $1,248.
Two years after the Vermont Legislature passed the Global Warming Solutions Act, the “how” of reaching the stringent carbon emissions goals remains unclear, the Joint Fiscal Office says.
Newly hired employees joining the Ben & Jerry’s ice-cream company are required to watch four video lectures, each an hour in length, featuring activists discussing the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as part of their job orientation, a news source says.
A Marshfield man has been cited to appear in court for dealing cocaine to a Waitsfield man who overdosed in October.
The tiny town of Canaan in the northeasternmost corner of the state is the latest to suffer a school safety threat.
Campaigns aren’t supposed to reach out to PACS for support. But a ‘red box’ on Congressional candidate Becca Balint’s campaign website may be doing just that – this headline and others from VT media today.
Chittenden County State’s Attorney Sarah George has strong ties to a George Soros-funded organization promoting progressive prosecutors nationwide.
Gregory FitzGerald admits he strangled his wife to death in 1993. He was sentenced to life without parole. But due to some apparent courtroom errors, he may soon go free.
Zero-interest lending to BIPOC groups, with sensitivity to Sharia law, is a key feature in a new Champlain Housing Trust initiative.
Someone threw a box at a Burlington fire truck windshield as it hurried to an emergency scene last week, the local firefighters’ union reports.
A Google engineer told the Washington Post an artificial intelligence he has talked with is advocating for its rights as a person, and has discussed religion, consciousness, and robotics.
A Colchester man involved in a shooting outside a Burlington bar has been sentenced for dealing cocaine and trading cocaine for a semi-automatic pistol.
Even if you drive a Tesla and aren’t feeling the pain at your own pump, you can be sure that those costs are still making its way to you through every Amazon delivery truck that still runs in diesel.
Today, Vermont is home to a stable bear population estimated at 4,600 to 5,780, almost four times the state’s estimated population of 1,200 to 1,500 bears in 1975.
Headlines from Vermont media include: a new suicide hotline number, Burlington’s growing graffiti problem, and this weekend’s gun control march at State House.
All Vermont vote tabulating machines are being replaced with new Dominion machines that scan and create an image of each ballot.
TJ Donovan has gone to work for a Big Tech giant whose stock is in the dumpster.
A Winooski man arrested repeatedly for car theft – and then failing to appear in court – was jailed last week after police say he stole a car off of a Burlington dealership parking lot.
Feeling squeezed by inflation? Bernie’s pushing handouts.
2022 Vermont maple syrup production totaled a record high 2.55 million gallons, most ever and (as usual) first in the nation.
For years Vermont’s climate change warriors have urged driving up oil and natural gas prices to force consumers to weatherize, and switch to alternatives such as “cold climate heat pumps” and advanced wood pellet furnaces.
Forced to dispense pandemic payment checks, the IRS got behind on its tax returning processing responsibilities.
More than half — 53% — of voters say they believe the Biden administration is intentionally letting gas prices increase to make Americans use less fossil fuels.
A $5000 reward is being offered for information about a car set on fire with a flammmable liquid at 5 AM May 20.
Police believe they have found the body of a missing 38-year-old woman whose empty car was found on a back road in Mt. Holly.