The home for all of Vermont Public's coverage of local news affecting the state of Vermont.
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Join Vermont’s top journalists as they delve into the most important news stories each week.
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The Environmental Protection Agency's decision to designate the "forever chemicals" will mean polluters are now required to pay to clean up their contamination.
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Every year, lawmakers must pass a bill that sets the property tax rates necessary to pay for school budgets. For this week’s edition of the Capitol Recap, we explore how lawmakers in the House want to use this legislation to respond to double-digit property tax hikes.
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The hard choices education officials will need to make as numerous school budgets continue to get voted down. Plus, Vermont’s new education secretary indicates she wants to explore school consolidation, why Gov. Scott isn’t satisfied with a new bill updating Act 250, a federal grand jury indicts a man for setting fire to the door of Sen. Bernie Sanders’ office, volunteers are asked to help clean up the Burlington waterfront ahead of Earth Day, and the tentative sale of an independent Vermont book publisher to a huge international counterpart.
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Roughly one in three school budgets failed in Vermont on Town Meeting Day this year. School districts across the state are now entering second and third voting rounds to get budgets approved by voters.
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Roxbury leaders believe that the circumstances of an informational meeting contributed to a failed budget vote on March 5 and set up the closure of their school.
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A federal grand jury on Thursday indicted a 35-year-old man on a charge that he set fire to the door of Sen. Bernie Sanders’ Burlington office. A judge also ordered the man to be held in prison while the case is pending