
Sabine Poux
Producer/Reporter, Engagement JournalismSabine Poux is a reporter/producer with Brave Little State. She comes to Vermont by way of Kenai, Alaska, where she was a reporter, news director, and on-air host for almost three years. Her reporting on commercial fishing and energy has been syndicated across Alaska and on NPR.
Prior, she interned for Vermont's Seven Days and a community radio station in Buenos Aires, Argentina. She is a graduate of Middlebury College and hails from New York.
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The $3.8 million bond would have funded upgrades at White River Valley Supervisory Union schools in Bethel and Royalton. Instead, the district says it will dip into its capital fund to make some upgrades.
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A federal judge last week ordered Mohsen Mahdawi to be released from prison while his immigration case is pending. In his first interview with Vermont media since his release, Mahdawi spoke about his time in prison, what it’s been like since his release and his plans for the future.
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U.S. District Court Judge Geoffrey Crawford ordered Mohsen Mahdawi to be released from detention Wednesday morning, more than two weeks after he was arrested by ICE at his citizenship appointment in Vermont.
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Federal lawyers bring out new allegations against Mahdawi, which he and his attorneys refute.
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Before his ICE arrest, Mohsen Mahdawi built a broad network of friendships in Vermont's Upper ValleyMahdawi’s friends in the Upper Valley say he’s an extrovert who connected with people at Dirt Cowboy Cafe in Hanover and Dan & Whit’s in Norwich, at bonfires at his cabin, at seders and church services, and on hikes.
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Friends of White River Junction resident Mohsen Mahdawi say he was called in for a citizenship interview Monday and left in handcuffs.
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The tiny elementary school does not have enough kids to stay open next year. Instead, Ripton students will be sent to Salisbury in the fall.
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Brave Little StateSouth Royalton has something that no other Vermont town does: a law school.
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Brave Little StateStowe’s logo is everywhere, from gondolas to storefronts � even local police cars. It’s as if the entire town is part of one giant marketing campaign. One listener wants to know why.
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Ripton’s youngest students will be sent to neighboring Salisbury in the fall after a recruitment drive fell short of class minimums.