
Erica Heilman
CorrespondentErica Heilman produces a podcast called . Her shows have aired on NPR’s Day to Day, Hearing Voices, SOUNDPRINT, KCRW’s UnFictional, BBC Podcast Radio Hour, CBC Podcast Playlist and on public radio affiliates across the country. Rumble Strip airs monthly on ¿ªÔÆÌåÓý. She lives in East Calais, Vermont.
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I asked listeners from around the world to submit recordings of the sound of right now. Together they create something that is more than the sum of their parts.
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HomeShare Vermont matches people with extra housing space with people who need it. It's a system based on mutual benefit that offers a sensible and friendly solution to housing challenges.
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In this episode of "What class are you?" Tankhun Thongjunthoug talks about what it was like to grow up in an immigrant family, and how he experienced the undercurrents of the American class system.
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Mark LaRouche prefers life in 'the lower class', but says it's hard to make a life without resources"What class are you?" It's a question that ¿ªÔÆÌåÓý reporter Erica Heilman has been asking people in Vermont, and this is the fourth installment of a new five-part series. Mark LaRouche grew up in a middle class family in Rutland, but says he prefers "the lower class," and he believes that addiction is the hardest class of all.
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Reporter Erica Heilman talked with Katrin Tchana about her childhood in Lyme, New Hampshire, and how it has become increasingly difficult for people who grew up there to remain.
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Retired Vermont State Police trooper Ingrid Jonas talks about class assumptions in law enforcement � and expensive condiments.
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Damian Renzello and reporter Erica Heilman are the same age and both grew up in Vermont. But according to Damian, they will always be different fruits.
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A conversation about the variety of people who frequent our libraries, and their role in civic society.
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A recent episode of the podcast Rumble Strip focuses on the experiences of people in our region with active drug addiction.
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The Vermont gardening season is often too wet or too dry, and it is always too short. We love it anyway.