State funding provides free classes for Vermonters impacted by the pandemic vermontbiz.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from vermontbiz.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Dorset Theatre Festival Announces 2021 Season of Live Performances and Audio Plays
The outdoor season will begin with the hilarious blast-from-the-1980s comedy Laughing Wild by Christopher Durang.by BWW News Desk
Dorset Theatre Festival has announced its 44th Season, including the inaugural StageFree Audio Plays series, featuring new commissions by playwrights Theresa Rebeck and Chisa Hutchinson, and live main stage performances at the Southern Vermont Arts Center in Manchester, VT of Christopher Durang s Laughing Wild (July 9 - July 31); Queen of the Night, a world premiere by travis tate (August 10 - September 4); and a workshop of Scarecrow by Heidi Armbruster, as part of the Festival s annual Pipeline Series of new work.
Dorset Theatre Festival announces outdoor performances, new audio play series berkshireeagle.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from berkshireeagle.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
by David Snedeker, Northeastern Vermont Development Association
As you have likely heard there will be funding for local governments in the American Rescue Plan Act passed by Congress and signed into law. Your can find the bill here: American Rescue Plan Act . Title IX, Part 8, Subtitle M, Section 9901, Sections 602 and 603 are the most relevant Here, but there are a number of community services that are supported throughout the bill that may not be municipal in nature, but which will support community needs.
The exact amounts that will be available, the eligible uses, and the means of distribution of funds are not clear at this point, but it does appear that the funding will have a 3-year lifespan (i.e., expiration in 2024.) As guidelines are developed at the federal and state levels, and as we learn more, we ll pass along information to you as quickly as possible.
Sam Donahue didnât feel the needle prick as the nurse perched next to him, rubbed something cold on his skin and injected the first half of a COVID-19 vaccine into his arm.
For Donahue, a South Burlington firefighter and EMT, the vaccine wonât change how he helps people, but it adds a sense of security, like an internal shield underneath his PPE.
âIt feels like any other flu shot,â said Fire Chief Terry Francis, who also proudly submitted his arm for the shot.
As of Monday, 87 percent of South Burlington firefighters received part one of their COVID-19 vaccine.