
Patti Daniels
Executive Producer, Vermont EditionPatti is an integral part of VPR's news effort and part of the team that created Vermont Edition. As executive producer, Patti supervises the team that puts Vermont Edition on the air every day, working with producers to select and research show ideas, select guests and develop the sound and tone of the program.
Patti has produced public affairs programs like VPR's symposia and election night coverage, and special projects like the documentaries, Phish: The Final Curtain and States of Marriage. A graduate of Bates College, Patti worked for several years on civil society projects in the former Soviet Union and the Balkans. Patti is a marathoner and native San Diegan.
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Lawmakers could have overridden two vetoes when they returned to Montpelier on Wednesday. The governor's veto of a pot legalization bill stands, but�
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A few recent highly publicized racial incidents at schools have left some Vermonters unsettled, but minority communities say racial bias in schools is an�
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Disagreement over health care contracts for employees at public schools prompted next week's veto session, but it's not clear if the Republican governor�
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Morally fraught historical events can lead to compulsion to wonder, "What would I have done in those circumstances?" Vermont writer Stephen Kiernan's new�
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When you're driving, how closely do you pay attention to the shoulders of the road? Cyclists and pedestrians are generally aware of how vulnerable they�
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In the late 19th century, Dr. William Seward Webb and his wife, Lila Vanderbilt Webb, built an estate on the shores of Lake Champlain. A new book dives�
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The state's nearly $6 billion budget faces a veto and a lot of uncertainty after that � all because a $26 million question over teachers' health insurance�
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This weekend a seminar is being held in Stowe that critics say will spread misinformation about the risks of vaccines. It's topic in which science and�
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"The alternatives are to dig, die or get out � and we certainly don't want to die." That assessment in 1954 by a Midwestern governor encapsulates the�
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The highest ranking military officer in the United States says the risk in letting Afghanistan destabilize further is the possibility of more terrorist�