BURLINGTON A not guilty plea was entered Wednesday on behalf of a Claremont man, who is charged with production of child pornography in Windsor County in 2020.The plea came on behalf of Wayne Miller, 34, who waived his right to appear either in.
WHITE RIVER JUNCTION A 54-year old Lebanon auto mechanic pleaded guilty on Friday to two counts of lewd and lascivious behavior during a teen sleepover at a home in Hartland more than two years ago.Jon (Jonney) Richard Reisinger, of 2 Pine St. in.
BURLINGTON A 34-year-old Claremont man known for his child mentoring efforts in the Twin States has been arrested on a felony charge of production of child sexual abuse material, aka child pornography, in Windsor County, according to federal.
On the last day of seventh grade, at the end-of-the-school-year party, I had my first kiss. We were in Hanover, in the Nathan’s Garden gazebo. The boy I was with, Sean McManamy, was not my first boyfriend, but he was my first love, in the sense that.
Officials: Vermont ruling on religious school tuition raises questions
Modified: 4/28/2021 9:00:25 PM
When the Vermont Supreme Court ruled in 1999 that public funding couldn’t be used for religious worship or education but could be used for secular classes at religious schools, it left school districts in a bind.
Local school boards and administrators in districts that pay tuition to schools had no yardstick with which to gauge whether payments to a religious school would be funding religion or education. Districts made decisions on their own, with some paying tuition to religious schools and others drawing a bright line.
Last week’s decision by the Vermont State Board of Education requiring three school districts to pay tuition to religious schools, a matter that’s also the subject of litigation in federal court, doesn’t make things any clearer, according to school officials in two of the districts, both of them in the Upper Valley.