Vermonters’ ballots have been mailed-in by the hundreds of thousands — but not everyone received a ballot to mail in the first place.
A project of the University of Vermont’s Reporting & Documentary Storytelling program.
A project of the University of Vermont’s Reporting & Documentary Storytelling program.
All in Local Government
Vermonters’ ballots have been mailed-in by the hundreds of thousands — but not everyone received a ballot to mail in the first place.
MILTON — Due to new state guidelines and a lack of interested volunteers, Milton Rescue has recently been unable to adequately staff ambulances 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
More than 60 percent of the Vermont prisoners registered to vote in a private prison in Mississippi have voted, according to new research from the Center for Research on Vermont.
After a public hearing earlier this month, the Shelburne selectboard lowered the speed limit on a stretch of Mount Philo Road from 35-30 miles per hour.
Candidates for the two Vermont house seats in the Washington-Chittenden district shared their differing and at times provocative views on campaign issues in a forum Monday hosted by the Waterbury Roundabout and WDEV AM-FM.
Wednesday night, Lucy Rogers and Ferron Wambold met over Zoom to debate budgets, COVID-19 and a new police brutality bill. The two are running for the Lamoille-3 house seat where Rogers is the incumbent.
Four candidates running for two seats in the Vermont House of Representatives met for a debate over Zoom last Wednesday, where they discussed COVID-19, the opioid epidemic, the Black Lives Matter movement and the upcoming presidential election.
Four candidates for the two Lamoille-Washington seats in the Vermont House recently debated via Zoom, tackling topics like economic trouble, dependence on federal aid, cost of living, recreational cannabis, systemic racism and education.
Two candidates for the Lamoille-1 House seat faced off via Zoom, tackling topics including reproductive rights, housing equality, land use reform and COVID-19 response.
As the election in November nears, Hinesburg poll workers — veterans and relative newcomers alike — reflect on their years working at the polls, and discuss what the upcoming election will look like.