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Mayor of Vermont capital urges protesters to stay home

NEXT Episode 232: How Schools Are Taking On Pandemic Challenges

Published January 12, 2021 at 9:57 AM EST Public school enrollment in New England is down during the pandemic. But even when kids are enrolled, it can be a struggle to get some to show up. This week on NEXT, how one district is tackling absenteeism and why doctors are increasingly concerned about youth mental health. Plus, Massachusetts school districts try to cope with a teacher shortage. And when a Vermonter’s business plummeted after COVID hit, she donned an inflatable T-Rex costume and started dancing.  Guests: Jennie Weiner, associate professor of educational leadership at the University of Connecticut’s Neag School of Education. 

Stamford, Vt board votes to terminate state COVID restrictions

STAMFORD, Vt. — The Select Board on Tuesday doubled down on its recent defiance of Gov. Phil Scott’s health emergency orders, voting to “terminate” the governor’s restrictions relating to COVID-19 and impose local regulations. Three of the five board members supported the motion, saying they would likely follow most of Scott’s emergency orders but not any they believe trample on rights guaranteed in the U.S. and Vermont constitutions. Daniel Potvin and Michael Denault, who led the advocacy for the action during a more than 90-minute debate, and Carol Fachini voted in favor. Chairwoman Nancy Bushika and Christopher Warren voted against.

COVID-19 takes center stage in a busy year for Montpelier

1 of 7 This file photo combo shows Vermont incumbent Republican Gov. Phil Scott, left, and Democrat Lt. Gov. David Zuckerman, candidates for Vermont governor in the Nov. 3, 2020, general election. AP file photo VERMONT JOINT FISCAL OFFICE Molly Gray, a Democratic candidate for Lieutenant Governor, holds a rally at the Common in Brattleboro on Friday, July 24. Gray was elected to the post and will become the fourth woman in state history to hold the office.  KRISTOPHER RADDER — BRATTLEBORO REFORMER Balint KRISTOPHER RADDER — BRATTLEBORO REFORMER Gov. Phil Scott was reelected to a third two-year term in 2020 after guiding Vermont through the COVID-19 pandemic.

How two nontraditional newsrooms in Vermont are winning readers

How two nontraditional newsrooms in Vermont are winning readers Could their examples hold the key to fixing ‘The Expanding News Desert’? By Mark Shanahan Globe Staff,Updated December 28, 2020, 12:44 p.m. Email to a Friend Anne Galloway wondered if her journalism career might be over. It was January 2009 and the Sunday editor of the Barre-Montpelier Times Argus was among 16 employees abruptly laid off when the newspaper’s owner slashed positions in a round of budget cuts. “I knew I wanted to stay in journalism,” says Galloway. “But there weren’t many jobs in the offing.” Or any. All over Vermont, the story was the same: Newspapers were downsizing as readers in ever greater numbers were getting their news for free on the Internet, and advertising revenue — which sustained print journalism for two centuries — had dwindled to a trickle during the recession between 2007 and 2009.

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