-
The Greatwood Project, a group founded by former Goddard alumni and faculty, was unable to raise the $3.4 million needed to purchase the campus, the college’s board of trustees announced on Monday.
-
Superior Court Judge Robert Mello agreed with the lawmakers that their suit raised legitimate constitutional questions. But he still ruled in Gov. Phil Scott's favor. The case could be appealed to the Vermont Supreme Court.
-
Grace Miller parsed 15 years of school spending data to figure out if the school district consolidation law saved any money. And while her statistical analysis found that merged and unmerged districts ultimately spent about the same amount, she also found they spent money in very different ways.
-
Vermont’s highest ranking education official takes listener questions about funding, teacher shortages, and more.
-
A new review and testimony from investigators with the U.S. Government Accountability Office offer the clearest picture yet of the aid form’s troubled rollout.
-
More than 100 people eventually showed up for a meeting to voice anger and frustration about taxes � and seek answers.
-
Barre was the final school district in Vermont to pass a budget this year after a voting process that spanned six months.
-
Gov. Phil Scott warned that, absent intervention, property taxes could spike again next year. Scott’s letter � and reactions to it � have underlined how little agreement or trust exists between the parties involved in trying to solve the problem.
-
The school board has once again trimmed its spending plans for the year, and scheduled a fourth budget vote for Sept. 17. Early voting has begun.
-
The new school year is an exciting time, but for some kids, it can also be very stressful. All of those changes can trigger intense emotions that can occasionally lead to disruptive behavior or even bullying.