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NVCC Students Benefit from Increase in Scholarships

Reply WATERBURY, CT - The fundraising efforts of Naugatuck Valley Community College s Associate Dean of Development, Angela Chapman, and the NVCC Foundation have resulted in an increase of scholarships and awards to students from 115 in 2019 to 203 in 2020. One of the outcomes of this increase is the creation of new endowment and scholarship funds. The generosity of our donors directly impacts the ability of students to reach their educational goals, Chapman commented, and she described a couple of the new NVCC scholarships that support students in various disciplines. Our students, NVCC CEO Lisa Dresdner, Ph.D., states, are at the heart of all we do at the college, and we are immensely grateful for the generosity of donors and the hard work of the Foundation that supports our students realizing their dreams.

South Burlington among municipalities sued

South Burlington among municipalities sued
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Lawsuit claims towns restricted public records

BURLINGTON, Vt. — Nine Vermont municipalities, including Northfield and Shrewsbury, are being sued because of a claim they have been prohibiting or restricting access to public government records, citing COVID-19 concerns, according to a lawsuit filed in Vermont Superior Court in Burlington. The lawsuit has major statewide implications because the final ruling could impact how taxpayers can get proper access to all kinds of public records stored in town halls across Vermont. It also could determine how more than 240 municipal clerks and their staffs will be required to provide service during the pandemic. The communities named in the lawsuit are Bolton, Georgia, Lincoln, Milton, Northfield, Plainfield, Shrewsbury, South Burlington and Whiting.

Judge puts public records case on fast track for court trial

Don t miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.   BURLINGTON — A Vermont Superior Court judge agreed Friday to conduct a trial in late January on whether municipal clerks must keep offices open to the public in need of access to government records during the COVID-19 pandemic. Nine Vermont municipalities — ranging from tiny Whiting in Addison County to bustling South Burlington in Chittenden County — are named in a lawsuit that maintains that they are among a large number of communities that have made it impossible or hard to get access to important land records required for real estate sales. The plaintiff, the Connecticut Attorneys Title Insurance Company in South Burlington, maintains that various lawyers need full access to the public records to complete research for real estate deals in communities throughout Vermont. The lack of access can block both buyers and sellers and those trying to refinance.

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