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Kevin Trevellyan

News Editor
  • How seniors can avoid scammers. Plus, Vermont passes a big benchmark tied to flood recovery funding, late summer heat in early autumn, a debate on sentencing opioid dealers who also use drugs, public feedback on police traffic stops, and new rules on energy storage.
  • Documenting the declining health of New Hampshire’s Merrimack River. Plus, a whopping donation for Vermont housing, hope for hay crops, the continuing rise in opioid overdose deaths, and funding incentives to retain community mental health staff.
  • It sounds like Vermont’s wetlands are well protected from a recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling. Plus, Washington gridlock threatens paychecks for federal workers, Vermont’s poor climate ranking on per capita emission rates, Dartmouth inaugurates its first woman president, and federal student loan repayments resume.
  • Andrew Crust debuts as Vermont Symphony Orchestra’s new music director. Plus, a push for expanded FEMA mental health services, more grant money for flood-damaged businesses, a contract for support staff at Vermont’s biggest hospital, and a new interim president for Vermont State University
  • Combing the Lincoln Gap with a retired botanist. Plus, more wet weather threatening outdoor cannabis, Vermont’s State Colleges System chancellor steps down, congressional lawmakers support more Ukraine aid, and a final round of COVID relief grants for Vermont’s creative sector.
  • Incoming Frequency host Mitch Wertlieb reflects on his 20-year Morning Edition tenure with his successor on the show, Jenn Jarecki.
  • Vermont Attorney General Charity Clark weighs in on this week’s proposed settlement with hundreds of defrauded EB-5 program investors. Plus, a lawsuit against the U.S. EPA over pollution standards for wood burning stoves, introducing Vermont State University, a low-COVID summer, how trout are faring in this heat and the Vermont Summer Festival.
  • A beloved local donut shop celebrates 100 years. Plus, the state wants to renegotiate how much it pays motels that provide emergency housing, beefing up cybersecurity and the first truck of the season gets stuck in Smugglers Notch.
  • The Vermont Department of Health is seeing an increase in tick-related emergency room visits in the last couple weeks. Here's what Vermonters should look out for and how they can protect themselves.
  • When people with disabilities travel, they often have to do extra planning to make sure the places they're visiting are accessible.