Out & About: Recent Vermont transplants, speak up >Modified: 7/13/2021 9:36:45 PM
Have you moved to Vermont since March 2020?
If so, University of Vermont geographer Cheryl Morse wants to hear your story. This month, Morse launched a research project aiming to find out why people moved to the Green Mountain State, what their experience has been like so far and what their hopes are for their future in the state.
“We’re just using this as a time capsule for recent migration,” Morse said, noting that their move does not have to be related to the COVID-19 pandemic. “Maybe people had the idea already in the works, but then it was accelerated by COVID or maybe they came here for different reasons during the COVID era and that might have impacted how they experience Vermont.”
How trauma-informed teaching helps kids succeed in school greatschools.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from greatschools.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
8 Anshan, China, the city where Spc. Mike Liu with Bravo Company, 186th Brigade Support Battalion was born, is about a seven-hour drive east of Beijing. It’s a modern city of 3.5 million people with towering skyscrapers that sort of make it look like Chicago. Unlike the wind city though, Qianshan Mountain is just off to the horizon offering spectacular views of jagged peaks that earned it the nickname of the mountain of a thousand lotus flowers.
With all of its beauty and amenities, Anshan is a far cry from the mid-region of China where Mike’s father used to live. Mike remembers visiting his father’s countryside town. It had no running water and limited electricity. Perhaps it was this modest lifestyle that motivated Mike’s father to work hard, get a good education, and become a lawyer. Turning life around was certainly no easy feat, especially since his father was the first ever to earn a college degree, much less a law degree.
Forum, April 21: New Hampshire bill cuts gun regulations
Published: 4/20/2021 10:00:04 PM
Modified: 4/20/2021 10:00:03 PM
New Hampshire bill cuts gun regulations
Are you following the activities of the New Hampshire Legislature? If gun violence concerns you, you should know that there have been several bills this session to expand the Second Amendment right to bear arms. House Bill 307 especially, passed the House and is being considered by the state Senate.
HB 307 should give parents and other citizens pause. The bill, under the name of “the New Hampshire Second Amendment state preemption act,” would “declare all ordinances and regulations null and void which have been enacted by any jurisdictions other than state and federal jurisdictions, which regulate firearms; ammunition; ammunition components; knives; firearms components; firearms accessories; and firearms supplies. .” This means that any firearm regulation by a county, city, town, municipality, school district o
Valley News - Forum, April 9: NH bill HB 625 protects no one vnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from vnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.