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Valley News - COVID-19: Kendal resident with COVID-19 dies

COVID-19: Kendal resident with COVID-19 dies Modified: 2/5/2021 9:50:46 PM HANOVER A resident of Kendal at Hanover died this week after testing positive for COVID-19, according to a spokesman for the senior living community. The resident, who had tested positive last month, also had other health conditions, Kendal spokesman Jeff Roosevelt said in an email. An obituary in Friday’s Valley News said Betty Breunig, who had moved to Kendal in 1996, died of complications from COVID-19 on Tuesday at age 93. The community, which is located off of Lyme Road, had no active cases as of Friday, Roosevelt said. The outbreak at Kendal has included a total of four residents and seven workers, according to a Thursday update from the New Hampshire Department of Health and Human Services.

Valley News - Seven decades after a priest assaulted her, a Plainfield woman is still grappling with the trauma

Seven decades after a priest assaulted her, a Plainfield woman is still grappling with the trauma An avid reader, Patty Rondeau, 82, of Plainfield, N.H., watches birds outside her window at her home on Wednesday, Jan.27, 2021. Rondeau was organizing books for her local library s book sale. ( Valley News - Jennifer Hauck) Copyright Valley News. May not be reprinted or used online without permission. Send requests to permission@vnews.com. Patty Rondeau, 82, of Plainfield, N.H., holds a photograph taken of herself at her home on Wednesday, Jan. 27, 2021. She was 10 years old when she was assaulted by a priest. ( Valley News - Jennifer Hauck) Copyright Valley News. May not be reprinted or used online without permission. Send requests to permission@vnews.com.

2nd Circuit sides with Catholic students in Vermont tuition case

Students seen in a high school classroom. | Reuters/Stephane Mahe A federal appeals court has ruled in favor of Catholic high school students who sued Vermont over a policy barring students who attend religious high schools from accessing a high school tuition program. The U.S. 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals issued an emergency injunction pending resolution before a three-judge panel, barring the state from preventing students who attend religious high schools from accessing the state’s Town Tuitioning Program. The program provides students living in towns that don’t have access to public high schools with tuition funds to use at a private school of their choice.

Federal court rules on college case

Don t miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.   BURLINGTON — A federal appeals court ruled unanimously on Friday that a Vermont Catholic high school senior has the right to participate in the state-funded dual enrollment programs that allows students to take college classes for free. The ruling involves Amy Hester of South Hero, a senior at Rice Memorial High School in South Burlington, and has statewide implications for those high school students similarly situated. The program pays the tuition for high school juniors and seniors to take up to two courses at approved Vermont colleges. The ruling impacts students living in a town without a public high school and instead may be attending an approved independent high school, according to Burlington attorney Thomas E. McCormick, part of the legal team for the plaintiffs.

Court: Catholic school student entitled to state tuition benefit

Don t miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.   BURLINGTON — A federal appeals court ruled unanimously on Friday that a Vermont Catholic high school senior has the right to participate in the state-funded dual enrollment programs that allow students to take college classes for free. The ruling involves Amy Hester of South Hero, a senior at Rice Memorial High School in South Burlington, and has statewide implications for those high school students similarly situated. The program pays the tuition for high school juniors and seniors to take up to two courses at approved Vermont colleges. The ruling impacts students living in a town without a public high school and instead may be attending an approved independent high school, according to Burlington attorney Thomas E. McCormick, part of the legal team for the plaintiffs.

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