Brittany Patterson
Producer/ReporterBrittany Patterson worked for ¿ªÔÆÌåÓý from 2020 to 2025 in roles including editor, afternoon news producer, deputy managing editor and executive editor.
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A pause on some tariffs is expected to end on April 2, and Trump is not backing down on calls for Canada to join the U.S. Some Quebec residents are increasingly angry and worried tensions could escalate.
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"When spring comes, it just feels like a new year, almost like a new chapter, a new beginning," says flower farmer Sarah Demars, who co-owns Four Blooms Farm with her husband. The couple's indoor growing operation has been producing tulips for months � and their outdoor tulips are just on the cusp of blooming.
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Business leaders and industry representatives from Vermont and Quebec said they are feeling the impacts of the Trump administration's on-again-off-again tariff threats, including sales declines, high prices on essential parts, and products being pulled from store shelves.
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In 2024, the group StandWithUs Center for Legal Justice filed a complaint against Middlebury alleging illegal discrimination against Jewish students.
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Bestselling author Louise Penny cancels U.S. book tour over trade war, except for one border libraryPenny’s successful mystery series takes place in Three Pines, a small fictional village in Quebec’s Eastern Townships near the Vermont border. In recognition of the regions� close ties, Penny will hold an event at the border-straddling Haskell Free Library and Opera House.
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Hemond was elected sheriff in November 2022. Prior, he had been a member of the department for 17 years, and previously worked at both the St. Johnsbury and Lyndonville police departments. He was described as highly respected in the community.
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Businesses in the Northeast Kingdom and in northern Vermont are reporting that Canadians are cancelling planned trips to Vermont or saying they won't visit during the Trump administration.
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The most substantive changes are to the state’s deer hunting regulations and include allowing hunters to use rifles and shotguns to kill does. Currently, only bucks can be hunted with firearms during the regular fall season.
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GMT General Manager Clayton Clark on Tuesday told lawmakers that a series of service cuts are slated to go into effect in March and June, which will save GMT about $500,000.
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A new study out of Dartmouth College examines how current research practices can improve the governance of Indigenous data. Plus, the University of Vermont Health Network will continue to run three dialysis clinics around the state, a Shelburne cop who hit and killed a cyclist is now facing criminal charges related to the incident, a new poll finds the majority of Vermonters don’t approve of President Donald Trump’s job performance, why Abenaki leaders from Odanak First Nation were at the Statehouse last week and how you can help prevent avalanches.