How Vermont is celebrating Pride Month โ without the Pride Center
The center paused its operations in 2025 due to a critical funding shortfall. As it works toward a comeback, other organizations have stepped in to fill some of the gaps.
Vergennes battery project on hold
The pause comes after pushback from residents during a tense informational meeting
Is this the summer of the e-moto?
In Milton, a police officer says electric motorcycle riders are tearing up parks and clashing with pedestrians on sidewalks. Such incidents are being reported across the Burlington area and urban and suburban zones nationwide.
Randolph hospital offers extended-release opioid treatment in emergency department
Gifford Medical Center officials hope the change will make treatment more accessible for patients and ensure they can start treatment more quickly.
More than $8 million in grants heading to Vermont, including funding for Newport projects
The money will allow Newport to address priorities such as improving the appearance of its streets, enabling planned housing and boosting commercial growth, Mayor Rick Ufford-Chase said.
Editors’ Picks
Our best stories, investigations, podcasts and more, as recommended to you by VTDigger editors.
Pleading for routine purchases: Inside the chaos at the Forest Service in Vermont
โItโs all slowed down right now and there is tons of confusion in the system,โ a senior Forest Service official wrote to staff in a May 2025 email that was among internal documents obtained by VTDigger.
โLike Christmasโ: For Vermontโs Congolese community, a historic World Cup bid is cause for celebration
This yearโs tournament, along with all its controversy, also comes at a moment when soccer has perhaps never had as many fans in Vermont as it does today.
Burlington-area rental market cools off, bringing some relief for tenants
A dramatic jump in new apartments in Chittenden County and a dip in demand have contributed to the rising vacancy rate.
Vermont Conversation: Are smartphones birth control? Economist Caitlin Myers on sex, abortion access and talking across divides
Smartphones have led to โreducing in-person interactions, increasing pornography use, and reducing sexual frequency,โ say Myers and co-author Ezekiel Hooper in a recent study.
Lawsuit against Vermont nursing home for allegedly allowing racial harassment of staff headed to trial
The case brought by the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission alleges operators of Elderwood at Burlington failed to protect black employees from persistent racial harassment from residents.
Vermontโs low-income housing voucher programs begin to stabilize after more than a year of anxiety
Federal funding decisions have helped Vermontโs housing authorities out of an emergency posture. One is granting new vouchers to help people pay for apartments.
Opinion
Commentaries and letters to the editor written by community members and regular contributors.
Forest workers deserve a voice in decisions about public lands
Managing Vermont’s state forests isn’t just about recreation โ it’s about the thousands of workers who depend on them.
Scott’s data center veto was a mistake
H.727 would have protected Vermont ratepayers from large-scale artificial intelligence data centers. The governor vetoed it anyway.
Thereโs no such thing as โother peopleโs moneyโ
Taxes come from everyone and belong to everyone โ including the poorest Vermonters who pay them too.
Vermont’s net metering decision just made solar harder
The Public Utility Commission’s latest rate cut undermines solar investment at the worst possible time.
Burlington pays $150,000 settlement over police treatment of Black teen with disabilities
The settlement stems from a 2021 incident in which Burlington police restrained and sedated the teenager while recovering stolen vape pens.
Vermont’s flash flood season opens with washed-out roads โ and a heat advisory right behind it
With heat index values forecast to approach 100 and more thunderstorms possible through the weekend, state officials say they’re watching both threats at once after storms washed out roads in Hardwick and Wolcott.
Vermont student activist Mohsen Mahdawi faces new deportation order
The Columbia University student, who has a green card and lives in the Upper Valley, is protected from being deported while he appeals his 2025 arrest, his lawyers said.
Vermontโs largest health insurer wants to offer a cheaper plan. Can it actually help Vermonters?
BlueCross BlueShield of Vermont is mired in a back-and-forth awaiting regulatory approval for its low-premium, high-deductible โBasicโ plans.
Obituaries
Death notices and celebrations of life.
Feds approve $31.7 million in disaster aid for flood-hit Vermont farmers
The grant money tied to the 2023 and 2024 floods “should be moving out,” Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins told Sen. Peter Welch at a Senate hearing today.
