
The audit recommends that the Vermont Legislature set stricter guidelines for how the Department of Disabilities, Aging and Independent Living performs residential facility inspections.
The audit recommends that the Vermont Legislature set stricter guidelines for how the Department of Disabilities, Aging and Independent Living performs residential facility inspections.
Tucked in the 2024 budget bill is the chamber’s answer to retired state employees’ alarm about the administration’s proposed switch to commercial Medicare.
The roundtable discussion accompanied the announcement that the St. Johnsbury and Morrisville hospitals are in line for new low-interest federal loans, described by the hospitals’ leaders as bright spots in an environment even more challenging than the pandemic.
Vermonters living with opioid addiction told legislators Thursday that there had not been enough time allowed for consideration of more innovative — and potentially more impactful — uses for opioid lawsuits settlement funds.
A multi-hour debate on a bill focused on suicide prevention ended with a vote that fell mostly along party lines.
The Green Mountain Care Board decision gives the Department of Mental Health the lead in setting spending priorities.
A finance committee vote Wednesday afternoon stands between the bill and the Senate floor.
The House Judiciary Committee approved three proposed changes to Vermont’s gun laws after a two-week effort to accommodate Vermont’s youth hunting traditions and likely federal constitutional challenges to come.
The agreement allows a Vermont doctor to provide care to the Connecticut woman who brought the federal suit, and commits the state health department to supporting repeal of the state’s current residency requirement.
The service agency, based in Morristown, provides direct support and coordinates shared living arrangements for Vermonters with developmental disabilities and brain injuries.