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by Guy Page
Today is 2A Tuesday on Hot Off The Press on WDEV, we will talk about what Vermont gun rights advocates are doing to protect your Second Amendment rights from the, as they are colloquially known, the Gun Grabbers. Chris Bradley of the Vermont Federation of Sportsmen’s Clubs will join us in the second of today’s show. I’m sure Sen. Peter Welch’s reflexive call for more gun control, which you can read about in today’s Vermont Daily Chronicle, will come up as will a challenge now in the courts.
Listen at 11:05 AM today on WDEV AM 550, FM 96.1, and on wdevradio.com. Call in at 802-244-1777. You can also email your comment or question to news@vermontdailychronicle.com.
We’ll also talk with Burlington Daily News editor Kolby LaMarche about something happening in Burlington that the rest of the state may find interesting – plans to renovate the venerable Memorial Auditorium. I’m sure our audience has memories of seeing concerts, shows, sporting events there, please feel free to call in and share and comment.
But before then I invite you to read today’s Compass Vermont story titled, Ben & Jerry’s #1 in industrial wastewater violations.
My monologue today is based directly on that excellent piece of reporting by Compass Vermont.
Here’s a question worth asking out loud: when does “partnership” become a substitute for enforcement?
Because this week, the Vermont Department of Environmental Conservation quietly released a federally required report that tells a very different story than the upbeat language in its press release.
Seventeen industrial facilities in Vermont were in what the EPA calls “significant non-compliance” with wastewater permits during 2024. Not paperwork hiccups. Not one-off mistakes. Significant non-compliance means chronic or serious violations, measured by hard numbers.
And topping the list was Ben & Jerry’s.
The Waterbury ice cream plant racked up 130 violations of its wastewater permit last year, along with seven missing monthly monitoring reports. That’s followed by New England Precision in Randolph with 68 violations, St. Albans Creamery with 23, and Agri-Mark — the company behind Cabot cheese — with 14 violations in Middlebury.
These aren’t obscure operators. These are some of Vermont’s best-known brands.
Now, to be clear, these facilities don’t pipe waste directly into rivers or Lake Champlain. They send it to municipal wastewater plants — the same plants handling your household sewage. That’s why pretreatment permits exist: to keep industrial waste from overwhelming those systems or passing pollutants straight through into our waterways.
When a company ends up in “significant non-compliance,” it means they crossed federal thresholds — exceeding limits most of the time, missing required reports, or discharging pollutants that pose real environmental risk.
Ice cream and dairy processing are especially tough on wastewater systems. The organic load in ice cream waste can be ten to twenty-five times stronger than household sewage. Raw milk is worse — hundreds of times stronger. Ben & Jerry’s has its own biodigester to handle that waste, but 130 violations suggest that system struggled for most of the year.
St. Albans Creamery’s violations matter even more. This is a facility with a history of dumping raw milk into the sewer system, in the St. Albans Bay watershed — one of the most phosphorus-polluted areas of Lake Champlain, already plagued by toxic algae blooms.
Tune in and call in at 11:05!
Listen to every Hot Off the Press podcast on the WDEV podcast page or right here on the Vermont Daily Chronicle podcast page.
Click to hear the latest episodes:
Hot Off The Press – December 15th, 2025
Dave Soulia of FYIVT.com talks about legacy media and jingoist Jingle Bells.
Hot Off The Press – December 12th, 2025
Feedback Friday- we talk about AI and U.S. war on drugs in Venezuela.
Hot Off The Press -December 11th, 2025
Hank Poytras of Planet Hank discusses a multiple sex offender arrested naked in his mother’s car in a public parking lot – and then released on citation.
Hot Off The Press – December 10th, 2025
Bail reform options – and the lack of them – with guest Vince Illuzzi, Essex County state’s attorney and former state senator.
Hot Off The Press – December 9th, 2025
– Burlington Daily News Editor Kolbyl LaMarche on Burlington’s downtown woes, and FYIVT.com editor Dave Soulia on the housing shortage and the push in Montpelier to take away wood stoves.
Hot Off The Press – December 8th, 2025
Callers and host catch up on the hot news from the weekend – particularly the portent of a small school district voting overwhelmingly to keep their high school open.
Hot Off The Press – December 1st, 2025 – December 1 is Return to Work Day for state employees, and due date for Property Tax Letter. Callers and host Guy Page discuss.
HOT OFF THE PRESS – NOVEMBER 28TH, 2025. Feedback Friday!
Hot Off The Press – November 26th, 2025
Hot Off The Press – November 25th, 2025
Hot Off The Press – November 24th, 2025
Hot Off The Press – November 21st, 2025
Hot Off The Press – November 20th, 2025
Hot Off The Press – November 19th, 2025
Hot Off The Press – November 18th, 2025
Hot Off The Press – November 17th, 2025
Hot Off The Press – November 14th, 2025
Hot Off The Press – November 13th, 2025
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Wow not only is Ben & Jerry’s on prime “stolen” Abenaki land but they are poor stewards polluting the area as well. Give that land back!
Notice who they are NOT talking about?
Vtdigger has and article about no -profits, ganging up on one farm in their lawsuit. Only one farm is being tested and sued in the state.
Burlington and neighboring towns are and have been dumping seriously contaminated sewage into Champlain for decades, it is normal business to rebuild close the beaches because they are so contaminated, but nobody speaks of this? Where are the “ non profits” ???????
When you test water, you have to know what you are testing for, otherwise, you would never know the contaminants in the water. The amount of prescription drugs, round up from lawns, cleaning chemicals along with raw sewage is epic. See they’ll test for Covid, but not cocaine, test for Covid, but not Prozac.
Not only this but Burlington has expanded in large numbers, but any new treatment plants? Whom they of course will ask for the entire state to pay for, all while in the country, people are having to spend their own $50k for replacement system if they want to add a bedroom.
Something is not right in Montpelier.
Montpelier is not run by those people we elected into office.