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Myra Flynn shares the inspiration behind Homegoings and where she hopes the show goes from here.
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As state legislatures across the United States enact new prohibitions against abortion and gender-affirming medical care, Republican Gov. Phil Scott Wednesday signed two bills that will protect health care providers and their patients from criminal charges filed by prosecutors outside the state of Vermont.
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A new state office will document discrimination from Vermont laws and policies and make recommendations for accountability.
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President Biden visits Selma for the 58th anniversary of "Bloody Sunday." Residents there are still recovering from tornadoes that ripped through the city in January.
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White farmers' suits blocked a USDA program and led to a race-neutral approach.
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The comic's creator, Scott Adams, said a recent opinion poll changed his mind about "helping Black Americans."
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For decades, a congregation in North Thetford had been dwindling. So they decided to donate their building to a group that could make more use of it. That’s how the church ended up in the hands of the Northeast Farmers of Color Land Trust.
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In a move that some Black Vermonters are calling a blow to the state’s racial equity movement, the Vermont Senate voted Tuesday to confirm a judge whose spouse was fired from the Vermont State Police for a pattern of unlawful searches that often targeted motorists or color.
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Vermont Edition shares a special presentation of the podcast Timeline from ¿ªÔÆÌåÓý Classical, where host James Stewart introduces listeners to Julius Eastman, an openly gay Black composer fro the 70s and 80s whose music is only now being rediscovered.
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Host Connor Cyrus talks to Black Vermonters on what the term Black excellence means to them, and about Black creativity and the importance of Black history.