Vermont
Here are 5 places you can ski for under $100 in Vermont
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While winter in New England is always sure to be long, frigid and full of snow, for skiers, there is no better time of year.
Vermont is full of ski resorts. However, between lift tickets, outerwear and equipment rentals, the cost of the sport adds up quickly over the winter season. Looking for a place to ski that won’t break the bank?
Here are five places in Vermont where you can ski for under $100 this winter.
Burke Mountain Resort
Tucked away in the Northeast Kingdom of Vermont, Burke Mountain Resort offers three lifts and 53 trails across 178 acres of skiable land. The resort also offers rentals, lessons, children’s programs and lodging at the Burke Mountain Hotel, where every room has a mountain view.
Burke Mountain day tickets cost between $89-99 per person, depending on the day. Discounted tickets are offered for half-days, college students and local residents. The resort is located at 2559 Mountain Road in East Burke.
Saskadena Six
Saskadena Six, the oldest ski resort in all of Vermont, has a total of 28 trails and two lifts, operating with a commitment to human connection and sustainability.
Lift tickets start at $75 for adults and $60 for children and seniors on weekdays, or $89-109 for adults and $70-95 for children and seniors on weekends. Tickets during holidays and peak periods are more expensive. Those who want to spend multiple days at Saskadena can stay overnight at Woodstock Inn & Resort, the owner and operator of the ski area. Bookings for the luxury Green Mountains hotel can be made online.
The slopes at Saskadena Six are open for the winter from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday through Sunday. Saskadena is located at 247 Stage Road in South Pomfret.
Cochran’s Ski Area
This family-friendly ski area in Richmond offers skiing, snowboarding, lessons and race training for as low as $5. Weekday tickets cost $10 for adults and $8 for children, while weekend tickets cost $19 for adults and $14 for children. Those above age 72 and under age 5 always enter for free, and discounted admission is offered on Friday nights for just $5 a person.
Cochran Ski Area is open from 3-7:15 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday, 3-8 p.m. Friday, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday and 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday. Located at 910 Cochran Road in Richmond.
Pico Mountain Ski Resort
Up in the Green Mountains in Killington, Pico Mountain Ski Resort has 58 trails over more than 19 miles of land, as well as lessons, rentals, a fitness center, a sports shop and three onsite dining options.
Depending on the specific day, Pico Mountain lift tickets cost between $49-62 for children or $61-84 for adults on weekdays, rising to $64-89 for children or $83-116 for adults on weekends. The slopes are typically open from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday or 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday, Thursday and Friday, with additional hours on select Tuesdays and Wednesdays throughout the winter.
Pico Mountain Ski Resort is located at 73 Alpine Dr. in Mendon.
Middlebury Snowbowl
Middlebury Snowbowl, the official training ground for Middlebury College’s ski teams, opens 28 trails and four lifts to the general public.
Non-peak tickets cost $63 for adults, $53 for seniors over 53 and juniors ages 6-18, $30 for Middlebury College students or $35 for military members. On peak days, tickets rise to $73 for adults or $63 for seniors and juniors. Half-day and night tickets are also available at a discounted price, and all tickets are $5 cheaper when purchased online.
The Snowbowl is open at 6886 Rte. 125 in Hancock from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Wednesday through Friday or 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday.
Vermont
Facing ‘precarious’ future, Vermont State Ethics Commission seeks financial lifeline from lawmakers
For the past eight months, municipal officials seeking advice from the Vermont State Ethics Commission have been greeted by an apology on the organization’s website.
“With regret, due to lack of staffing,” the top of the webpage reads, “the State Ethics Commission can no longer provide advisory and complaint services to municipalities.”
In 2024, the Vermont Legislature established a uniform code of ethics for town and city governments, and directed the State Ethics Commission to provide training, advice and guidance on how to uphold it. Lawmakers, however, failed to provide the commission with additional resources to fulfill those duties.
With one part-time executive director and one part-time administrative assistant, commission officials say, providing advice to municipalities has become “an impossibility.” Paul Erlbaum, one of five volunteer state ethics commissioners, told lawmakers this week that the body may disband altogether if lawmakers don’t approve at least $300,000 in additional funding next year for two new staff positions. The commission’s budget this fiscal year is about $250,000.
“The commission staff is just treading water. And frankly we’re going to go down unless we get staff.”
Paul Erlbaum, commissioner, Vermont State Ethics Commission
“The continued existence of the commission is precarious, I’ll put it that way,” Erlbaum told members of the Senate Government Operations Committee. “We know this is a really, really tight budget year — we’re not doubting that. But the commission staff is just treading water. And frankly we’re going to go down unless we get staff.”
The ethics commission came into being in 2018 after government watchdogs routinely panned the state for its lack of any independent oversight apparatus. Lawmakers expanded the commission’s duties dramatically in 2024 by reforming the ethics regulatory landscape for municipalities, and directing the commission to vet complaints and issue advisory opinions.
Will Stevens, another commissioner, said the panel exists not only “to ensure good governance,” but to signal to Vermonters that “our representative form of government is acting in their broad interests.”
With public trust in government at historic lows, Stevens said, the role of the ethics commission is especially important now.
Alex Driehaus
/
Associated Press
“The Legislature, while acting with good intent, created what amounts to an unfunded mandate,” Stevens said. “It’s a time-honored practice to ensure an entity’s failure to give it more to do while limiting their resources.”
Republican Gov. Phil Scott allowed the 2024 legislation that expanded the commission’s duties to go into law without his signature. While he welcomed the increased oversight, Scott said at the time, he objected to creating new administrative burdens without additional funding.
Though Scott’s concerns proved prescient, the budget he presented to lawmakers earlier this month does not include additional funding for the commission.
“We had to make difficult choices in this budgetary cycle, knowing the limited amount of resources that we have,” Scott said Wednesday.
That leaves lawmakers to decide, once again, whether to fund the good-governance instrument they created.
“The question has to be raised — is the point just so we can feel good and pat ourselves on the back and say we’re doing something without actually doing anything?”
Chittenden County Sen. Tanya Vyhovsky
Sen. Tanya Vyhovsky, a member of the Senate Government Operations Committee, has advocated for increased funding for the commission for years. The Chittenden County Progressive said it’s been tough to make any headway with members of the Senate Appropriations Committee.
“I think there is often a sense that things are sort of fine. And sure, we should do something, but it can wait,” Vyhovsky said.
Vyhovsky said the commission’s request is small relative to the $9.4 billion state budget. Given the financial strain on the commission now, she said, failure to fund additional staff will raise questions about the Legislature’s commitment to its mission.
“At that point,” Vyhovsky said, “the question has to be raised — is the point just so we can feel good and pat ourselves on the back and say we’re doing something without actually doing anything?”
Vermont
Two Vermont teens named to National Brotherhood of Snowsports team
Two Vermont youth athletes were named to the National Brotherhood of Snowsports 2026 team roster, according to a community announcement from the organization.
Bronson Culver, a ski racer from South Londonderry who attends Burke Mountain Academy, and Chelsea Charles, a ski racer from Winhall who attends Stratton Mountain School, were selected for the roster.
Youth athletes on the team will be recognized at the organization’s 53rd summit Feb. 28 to March 8 at Keystone Resort in Colorado, according to the announcement.
The National Brotherhood of Snowsports is a national nonprofit representing the largest network of Black and Brown snowsports athletes in the U.S. across more than 60 ski and snowboard clubs.
The team serves as the organization’s national development team, providing athletes with financial support, coaching access, structured competitive tiers and a long-term pathway designed to help underrepresented competitors advance through regional, national and international levels of the sport, according to the announcement.
The team is primarily backed by a scholarship fund started in the late 1970s, which provides need-based assistance for training, travel, competition and equipment.
The fund remains one of the nation’s longest-running support systems for underrepresented athletes pursuing elite competition, according to the group. The org has supported more than 45 athletes who have gone on to compete across regional, collegiate, national, Paralympic and Olympic levels, according to the
“The 2026 roster underscores the depth of emerging talent in our community and the strength of a development pathway that is guiding athletes toward the sport’s highest levels,” said Henri Rivers, president of the National Brotherhood of Snowsports.
Athletes selected to the team represent nine ski and snowboard disciplines, including alpine, freestyle, nordic and moguls.
Selections were based on national and regional results, progression benchmarks, training commitment and discipline-specific potential, according to the announcement.
The summit is the largest annual gathering of skiers and snowboarders of color in the United States and serves as the primary fundraising event for the scholarship fund, according to the org.
This story was created by reporter Beth McDermott, bmcdermott1@usatodayco.com, with the assistance of Artificial Intelligence (AI). Journalists were involved in every step of the information gathering, review, editing and publishing process. Learn more at cm.usatoday.com/ethical-conduct.
Vermont
New poll on healthcare: Vermonters want to extend ACA subsidies
Health care premiums set to rise as ACA subsidy deal collapses
Obamacare subsidies are set to expire after Congress failed to reach a deal, leaving millions facing higher health care costs.
Most Vermont residents support extending the recently expired Obamacare subsidies, which were at the center of the government shutdown fight last year and continue to cause tension on Capitol Hill, according to a new poll from the University of New Hampshire Survey Center.
Democrats in Congress had refused to support a government funding bill that didn’t extend COVID-era subsidies for lower income Americans under the Affordable Care Act, leading to longest-ever government shutdown in October and November as GOP lawmakers would not extend the subsidies, citing reports of fraud and criticisms of Obamacare more broadly. The two sides ultimately came to a deal to reopen the government, and the subsidies expired at the end of 2025.
While the House voted to extend the subsidies in early January, the legislation is less likely to pass the Senate, which has previously voted against it. Sen. Peter Welch, D-Vt., said that resurrecting the Affordable Care Act subsidies could depend on President Donald Trump in an interview with NPR Jan. 1.
In Vermont, 74% of residents support the extension of the subsidies, while 19% oppose. This is divided along party lines, with 99% of Democrats in support and 62% of Republicans in opposition.
When asked about Obamacare in general, 55% of Vermont residents said they wanted to expand the law, including 79% of Democrats. 21% want to repeal the law entirely, including 72% of Republicans.
73% disapprove of how President Donald Trump has handled healthcare, but more disapprove of how Congress has handled the issue. 92%, including majorities of all parties, disapprove of Congress’s handling of healthcare.
The Green Mountain State Poll, a States of Opinion Project conducted by UNH Survey Center and released Jan. 26, surveyed 765 Vermont residents online from Jan. 15 – 19. It has a margin of error of +/- 3.5%.
Do Vermonters support a “single-payer” health care plan?
A plurality (70%) of Vermont residents would support a national single-payer health care plan, the poll revealed.
A single-payer system is where all Americans would get insurance from a single government plan. It’s often championed by Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., who calls his plan “Medicare for all.”
Support for the plan is divided by party: 92% of Democrats support, while 61% of Republicans oppose. Those with a higher household income are also more likely to support the idea.
How healthy are Vermonters?
In the poll, most Vermonters said they were in either good (50%) or very good (34%) health.
However, nearly half (47%) of Vermont residents say that it is difficult to pay for their overall medical care expenses, and 67% said that overall medical costs have gone up in the past 12 months. Just 1% said they have declined.
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