Corey Dockser
Data JournalistCorey Dockser is Vermont Public’s first data journalist, a role combining programming and journalism to produce stories that would otherwise go unheard. His work ranges from complex interactive visualizations to simple web scraping and data cleaning. Corey graduated from Northeastern University in 2022 with a BS in data science and journalism. He previously worked at The Buffalo News in Buffalo, New York as a Dow Jones News Fund Data Journalism intern, and at The Boston Globe.
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Many Vermont towns and schools will be distributing the glasses, which are important for safely viewing the April 8, 2024 eclipse.
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As the glaciers retreated after the last glacial age and water from the Atlantic Ocean flooded into the sunken land, three plant species made a home in Vermont. And they never left.
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In Duxbury, road crews are hoping snow might fill in some of the ruts.
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Jeremy Bicking of Pennsylvania set a new state record for the largest longnose gar caught by bow, measuring about four-and-a-half feet long, state officials announced.
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Northern Vermont will experience a total solar eclipse on April 8, 2024. We created a map to show exactly what the path of totality covers.
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In order to survive the winter, deer in Vermont seek refuge in areas forested with dense, mature softwood trees like hemlock, balsam fir, red spruce, and white pine.
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More people died of gunshots last year than any year since 2011. But experts are hopeful new policies could reduce future deaths.
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As temperatures rose and rain fell Sunday night and into Monday, snow melted from Vermont's mountains, and rivers swelled.
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Residential care facilities in Vermont — struggling with staffing shortages and historically low Medicaid reimbursement rates — are closing at an alarming rate.
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Vermont Public recently did its own analysis of what residential and assistant living facilities are available in Vermont, how many beds they have, what they cost and how much Medicaid-funded care — if any — they provide.