Bookmark this page for the latest Vermont coronavirus news, data and special programming from Vermont Public and NPR.
- Think you might have COVID? Here's what to do if you've been exposed or feel sick.
- Vermont's COVID-19 data can be found here.
- Check the level of community spread in your county.
Note: The Vermont Health Department stopped updating its COVID-19 dashboard after May 18, 2022.
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The latest coronavirus coverage from Vermont Public and NPR:
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The Vermont Agency of Education now says that schools may need to institute mask mandates in order protect students who are at high risk of getting seriously sick from COVID-19.
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Vermont municipalities are getting $200 million from the American Rescue Plan Act, which Congress passed last year to help the country recover from the pandemic. Though the money comes with certain strings, local elected officials and voters have broad power to decide how to spend it.
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The new shots from Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech target both the original strain of the coronavirus and the omicron BA.4/BA.5 subvariants that most people are catching now.
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Nineteen months after his bout with COVID, Hartford resident Chris Flockton is still experiencing symptoms resulting from the virus. Reporter Erica Heilman visited with him and spoke about living with long COVID.
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This hour, host Connor Cyrus checks in with a schools nurse and superintendents across the state about the staffing shortages schools face in the fall.
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More than 400 Vermonters died from COVID in the past year. These are some of their obituaries.
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After years of waiting, Vermont’s youngest residents are finally eligible for a COVID vaccine. Beginning in late June, the state began offering the shots to kids 6 months to 5 years old. But this rollout is different from previous ones.
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Several day camps have had to reduce capacity or eliminate programs because of staff shortages.
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A forthcoming project from Dartmouth College’s Black Sound Lab catalogs stories of Black people caring for their communities during the pandemic — and long before.
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This hour, host Connor Cyrus talks with state Health Commissioner Dr. Mark Levine about the COVID-19 vaccine for the youngest Vermonters and other virus news.