News

This commentary is by Jack Hoffman. He is senior analyst at Public Assets Institute, a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization based in Montpelier.
Vermont’s leaders are continuing to work toward a deal on education reform, postponing its scheduled adjournment.
The rift between the White River Valley Supervisory Union and the association reflects opposing views among school districts statewide about the role of supervisory unions and private schools in the ...
Vermont Governor Phil Scott focused on legislative deliberations over an expansive education reform bill during his weekly ...
Hopes for a deal late Friday failed to materialize, but a new deadline has been set for the Veto Session, which is slated for ...
The road to education reform in Vermont has been long and winding, and we are at another crossroads. Driven by increasingly ...
However, the outcome leaves the session’s highest-profile work unfinished. Following an election where property tax rates ...
Rep. Laura Sibilia, I-Windham-2, said in a newsletter that legislators left the State House just after midnight Saturday and ...
A long day Friday for Vermont lawmakers as their regular legislative session is about to come to a close. What kept them from ...
The Vermont Senate gaveled in for a "token session" on Friday, a procedural way to extend the legislative session so ...
Unsustainable finances are impacting hospitals, clinics and doctors’ offices alike, despite Vermont’s high health care costs ...
Following two successive legislative sessions and an interim task force study, lawmakers at the State House in Montpelier are punting comprehensive educatio ...