
Rep. Stevens: Bills in flux are keeping adjournment at bay
Several bills still being considered in both the House and Senate likely will have to go to conference which will delay adjournment. It’s looking like the end of May at the earliest.
Rep. Wood: Constitutional amendment goes to the voters in Nov. 2026
In November 2026, voters will decide whether to amend the Vermont Constitution. An amendment that establishes employees’ right to collectively bargain will be on the ballot. Amending

LETTER: Duxbury Green up gratitude
This year, Green Up volunteers went above and beyond, hauling nearly 200 bags of trash to the town office.

LETTER: Skatepark project aims to wrap-up fundraising with auction, brick sales, donations
The Waterbury Skatepark Coalition is making a big push to raise the final $15,000 so that the full design of the concrete skatepark can be built this summer at Hope Davey Park in Waterbury Center.
Op-Ed: Vermont can hold polluters accountable
When floodwaters tore through Vermont in July 2023 and then again exactly a year later, they left more than physical destruction in their wake. They also revealed to Vermonters the mounting price tag of climate change.
LETTER: What does a healthy community look like?
Every three years, Central Vermont Medical Center conducts a survey to better understand the health care needs and priorities of our community.
Op-Ed: Love letter to the Worcester Range and all Vermont wildlands
I moved to Vermont 10 years ago — right at the foot of the Worcester Range — and I still find deep woods, clear water, and quiet places to be the essence of our state.
LETTER: Thoughts on the May 5 Waterbury Select Board meeting
I attended the Select Board meeting Monday night (May 5) to hear updates on the town’s proposal to buy the land at the corner of Park Row and Randall Street from the state for housing development.
Op-Ed: Vermont’s economy demands climate action
Severe storms and flooding all too easily kill the small businesses that give our state and our main streets so much character.
Op-Ed: Vermont can have tax relief without sacrificing public education
Restoring income-sensitivity thresholds would lower tax bills for 50,000 Vermont households this year while making the funding of education fairer and more progressive, as originally intended.
Op-Ed: Vt.’s leaders, activists are stepping up to protect the environment & democracy
It has become clear that the Trump administration will be unrelenting in its assault on our right to breathe clean air, drink clean water, and leave a livable planet for our children and grandchildren.
LETTER: Paul and Etienne Morris and family thank the community
Reilly, Jana, Jack, and our whole family want to thank all the people and businesses in our community who contributed prizes, money, talent, and time to the various fundraising efforts that have been held on our behalf in recent months, helping us through Paul’s heart transplant.
From cult recovery to political clarity: A Vermont writer speaks out
Granted, the sudden switch to a totalitarian-led government after 250 years of (imperfect) democracy is not easy to get used to. But here we are.

Lt. Gov. Rodgers: Building opportunities for our youth and businesses
Vermont’s infrastructure – our roads, bridges, water systems, and stormwater control – is the backbone of our communities and economy. As our state struggles with aging public infrastructure, the need for timely repair, replacement, and innovation has never been more urgent.
OPINION: Where are our once vibrant towns?
As Vermont, like other states, feels the accelerating pressures of so-called progress, we must work to protect the families and communities that nurture our very humanity.

Kerrigan: Time to think outside the box
Former HUUSD teacher and coach John Kerrigan suggests ways for the school district to increase enrollment and add revenue in order to keep all schools open.

Op-Ed: Due process, free speech, legal presence are in peril
Recent detentions of legally present individuals – including a Turkish doctoral student and a Palestinian resident of Vermont – raise urgent questions about whether our institutions are upholding core American principles like due process, free speech, and equal protection under the law.
LETTER: Does ‘local control’ serve students or adults?
To the Community - the Harwood School Board has taken a strong stance against the governor’s school district consolidation proposal. I completely disagree.
LETTER: Next federal budget could eliminate Vermont Head Start programs
Though the next federal budget has not yet been released, the potential proposed elimination of Head Start programs would be catastrophic for working families, vulnerable young children, and Head Start employees.
Op-Ed: Medical debt relief will help survivors gain economic security
At the Vermont Network, we support survivors of domestic and sexual violence, amplify their voices and build safer communities.