-
Between 35% and 45% of the mature brown bullhead in the lake have melanoma, a skin cancer. This rate of cancer has never been documented in fish anywhere else.
-
Jada and James Anair talk about losing their home to the July floods, in a time when homes are hard to come by.
-
Flood survivors in Orleans County have finally been added to the list of people that are eligible for individual assistance from FEMA, but the long wait for federal help is just one of the hurdles to disaster recovery in the rural Northeast Kingdom.
-
Residents near Seymour Lake and Lake Salem woke up Monday morning to muddy yards, high shorelines and at least one destroyed basement.
-
A proposed global settlement would resolve more than 30 pending lawsuits against the state of Vermont, and bar any future litigation related to the EB-5 scandal. A federal court still needs to sign off on the deal.
-
Vermont lawmakers will allow roughly 2,000 people to remain sheltered in motel rooms until they find alternative housing, but some people currently in the program say they’re still facing tough choices.
-
The Old Stone House Museum celebrates Juneteenth this year by opening the new exhibit, “A Call to Serve: Vermont and Unexpected Voices from the Civil War.� Juneteenth is the anniversary of the day the last enslaved people in the U.S. learned of the Emancipation Proclamation.
-
An unnamed buyer has submitted a bid for a Northeast Kingdom ski resort caught up in the EB-5 scandal, according to recent court filings.
-
Ashton Bajeun, Wyatt Solls and Macaulay Bernier have been hanging cable in hard-to-get-to places all winter and spring. Mountains and bogs and deep woods.
-
"What class are you?" It's a question that ¿ªÔÆÌåÓý reporter Erica Heilman has been asking people in Vermont. In this story, Kathleen Patrick of Derby talks about how elusive financial stability is.