Vermont
‘A historic moment’: Vermont delegates endorse Kamala Harris for president

Vermont’s 16 pledged delegates to the Democratic National Convention voted unanimously to endorse Vice President Kamala Harris for president, according to a statement released by the Vermont Democratic Party.
The delegation’s announcement on Monday came just a day after President Joe Biden, who had been the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, dropped out of the race and backed Harris as his replacement. Since then, Harris has secured enough delegates − including Vermont’s own − to clinch the Democratic nomination.
The official nomination is scheduled to take place at the Democratic National Convention starting Aug. 19 in Chicago.
“Our phones have been ringing off the hook with a record number of people signing up to volunteer to elect Democrats up and down the ticket in November,” said Vermont Democrat Party Chair David Glidden in the party’s press release. “I’m proud to be part of such a historic moment.”
Vermont’s pledged delegates − who were picked in May and June by prominent state Democrats − made their endorsement decision during an unofficial online meeting. Despite throwing their support behind Harris, the delegates are not bound to a specific candidate now that Biden, who won the March primary, is out of the race.
Ten other delegates from Vermont will also attend the August convention, including eight automatic delegates − also known as superdelegates or unpledged delegates − and two alternate delegates. Automatic delegates, which consist of influential Democrats like members of Congress or party leaders, serve as tiebreakers should voting continue past the first round.
Welch, Pieciak, Balint endorse Harris, while Sanders holds off
In addition to the DNC’s 16 pledged delegates this year, several other big names in Vermont politics have also endorsed Harris for president since Biden dropped out on Sunday, July 21.
Sen. Peter Welch, D-Vt. − one of the few major politicians in the Green Mountain State to call for Biden to step down − is among the most recent Vermonters to lend support to Harris. Welch initially neglected to endorse Harris, instead advocating for the party to consider all potential options for a new nominee, but changed his position on Tuesday morning after Harris earned the favor of most of the country’s Democratic delegates.
“There is no candidate better equipped to take on Donald Trump and MAGA Republicans and protect our democracy, to advance the Biden agenda, and help strengthen our communities in Vermont − and across America,” Welch said in his endorsement statement, lauding Harris’s background as a prosecutor and her support for reproductive freedom and “hardworking families.”
“She has reinvigorated this campaign,” Welch added.
Vermont State Treasurer Mike Pieciak, D-Vt., endorsed Harris late Monday afternoon, describing her in a statement as having been “an invaluable partner to the President.”
“Her leadership has helped create millions of good-paying jobs, lowered healthcare costs for seniors, and delivered the most robust climate agenda in U.S history,” Pieciak said. “I trust Kamala Harris to finish the job.”
Rep. Becca Balint, D-Vt., was the first major Vermont politician to throw her support behind the U.S vice president. Following Biden’s announcement on Sunday, Balint wrote on X that “it’s time for all of us to get to work and secure @KamalaHarris in the White House.”
Of Vermont’s three members of Congress, only Sen. Bernie Sanders has yet to officially endorse Harris for president, though he told CNN on Monday evening that “I will do everything I can to make sure that Trump is defeated and that she is elected.” Sanders, an independent, has twice sought the Democratic presidential nomination.
Although Sanders told CNN he expects to lend his official support to Harris eventually, he said he is holding off his endorsement until he knows for certain that Harris “will stand up strongly with an agenda that speaks to the long neglected needs of working families.”
Balint, Welch and Sanders are all automatic delegates.
Megan Stewart is a government accountability reporter for the Burlington Free Press. Contact her at mstewartyounger@gannett.com.

Vermont
Air Quality Alert for northern parts of Vermont today, due to smoke from Canada.

BURLINGTON, Vt. (WCAX) – An Air Quality Alert is now in effect for roughly the northern third of Vermont until 11 PM this evening. The alert covers Franklin, Chittenden, Grand Isle, Lamoille, Orleans, Washington, Caledonia, and Essex counties. If you have respiratory conditions, try to limit outdoor activities in this area.
Unlike recent Saturdays, this one will be relatively quiet. The exception will be Bennington and Windham counties, which will have rain and perhaps an isolated thunderstorm during the morning and early afternoon. Flash flooding isn’t out of the question, especially with recent rain, but the expected rainfall is less than what was expected yesterday. Up to an inch of rain is possible before it moves out early this afternoon. Elsewhere, only a few showers are expected with possibly an isolated thunderstorm. Highs will be in the 70s north, and 60s south.
High pressure will begin to build in overnight, with skies becoming mainly clear. Sunday will be a nice end to the weekend with mostly sunny skies and highs in the mid-70s. Enjoy!
Monday will have some morning sun, then showers are expected later in the afternoon. A few thunderstorms can’t be ruled out. Tuesday looks rather wet with rain likely. Though flooding isn’t expected at this point, it’s shaping up to be a soggy day with solid rain, so our First Alert Weather Team will keep you posted. Wednesday will have some sunshine, but also scattered showers. Thursday and Friday will be dry and pleasant. Highs will be in the 70s with lows in the 50s.
Copyright 2025 WCAX. All rights reserved.
Vermont
Wildfire smoke brings air quality alert to northwest Vermont – VTDigger

Smoke from Canadian wildfires continued to obscure Vermont skies on Friday as the Department of Environmental Conservation issued another air quality alert for the northwest portion of the state. The alert, which includes the counties of Chittenden, Franklin and Grand Isle, is set to end at midnight.
An expanded alert will be issued by the agency Saturday, according to the National Weather Service office in Burlington. The air quality alert will last from 8 a.m. to 11 p.m. and cover the counties of Caledonia, Chitteden, Essex, Franklin, Grand Isle, Lamoille, Orleans and Washington.
“It’s a moderate level of pollutants, so it’s not going to affect everybody, but it’s mainly for sensitive groups like people with heart or lung disease, older adults, and children,” said Peter Banacos, science and operations officer at the National Weather Service’s office in Burlington. While rain is helping to drown out the particulates, smoke that’s hovering over the St. Lawrence Valley could move into northern Vermont over the weekend, according to Banacos.
Those tiny particles within the smoke, known as fine particulate matter or PM 2.5, can get trapped in people’s lungs before entering their bloodstream, causing possible health problems. The wildfire smoke brings elevated concentrations of those particles that can be unhealthy for sensitive groups like older adults and children, pregnant people, outdoor workers and people living outside.
People with asthma should keep their relief medicine nearby, and if residents experience scratchy eyes or throat, a headache or coughing, they’re encouraged to move indoors, according to a media release from the Department of Environmental Conservation on Friday.
READ MORE
On Friday afternoon, the air quality for much of the state was good, and residents could enjoy outdoor activities. But in Burlington and St. Albans, the Environmental Protection Agency’s fire and smoke map indicated that the levels of PM 2.5 were above 100 on the air quality index, meaning the air was unhealthy for those sensitive groups.
The smoke has migrated from more than 200 wildfires churning through Canada, with six new fires starting Friday. Canada faces an especially severe and early start to its fire season, as more severe wildfires become more common under climate change, which is primarily driven by the burning of fossil fuels. While 69 fires are burning in British Columbia, more than 100 have consumed the country’s less fire-prone prairie provinces of Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba.
“With these wildfires so far removed from Vermont, we’re not expecting real significant issues,” Banacos said. He recalled worse conditions in 2022, when wildfires raging in Quebec brought thick, low-level smoke to Vermont that reduced visibility and increased air quality issues. “If we get fires that are closer, that could change,” Banacos said.
The worst effects are across the Great Lakes, where smoke has settled over major cities like Detroit and Toronto, but unhealthy air has traveled as far south as Florida this week.
Vermont
Vermont Attorney General settles with private parking company after they ‘trick consumers’ into paying fines – VTDigger

A parking company with more than two dozen private lots in the Burlington area has agreed to pay a hefty fine after the Vermont attorney general found it was using deceptive ticketing practices.
Unified Parking Partners — a New England parking company acquired by hospitality and parking giant Towne Park in 2024 — is set to pay the state $150,000, according to a June 5 press release from Vermont Attorney General Charity Clark’s office.
The attorney general’s investigation found that the company violated the Vermont Consumer Protection Act by using government-style language like “citations” and “fines” on notices sent to drivers for violations made in its private lots.
The company’s notices also mischaracterized the penalties for not paying fees, suggesting that it could impact someone’s credit rating, vehicle registration, license renewal and ability to rent a car.
In the settlement, Clark wrote that Unified Parking Partners is a “private commercial entity with no governmental authority.”
“Companies have a right to charge for services rendered, but not to trick consumers into paying out of fear that disputing a charge could come with consequences the company has no power to impose,” Clark said.
Clark mandated that the parking company stop “making any representation that may cause a reasonable consumer to believe that a notice of violation is issued by a municipality or governmental authority.”

The settlement between the attorney general and Unified Parking Partners is enforced through an Assurance of Discontinuance, a common way for attorney generals to resolve conflicts. The company plans to pay the $150,000 fine by June 20.
Clark is not the first attorney general to go after the company. Last summer, Rhode Island Attorney General Peter F. Neronha filed a complaint against UPP Global LLC — Unified Parking Partners’ parent company — accusing it of “a pattern of unfair and deceptive conduct including charging customers fees disguised as a ‘tax,’ charging junk ‘service fees,’ failing to disclose parking rates until customers have already parked, and issuing ‘citations’ that mimic government-issued parking tickets and falsely threaten consequences from the Division of Motor Vehicles.”
United Parking Partners has faced criticism from Vermonters for years. In 2017, Seven Days wrote a column about the company’s potentially deceptive ticketing practices.
When reached for comment, United Parking Partners spokesperson Bev Drivin said, “UPP is committed to complying with all applicable local laws and regulations. All practices, policies, signage, and enforcement notices are fully compliant with applicable laws.”
-
News1 week ago
Video: Faizan Zaki Wins Spelling Bee
-
Politics7 days ago
Michelle Obama facing backlash over claim about women's reproductive health
-
News1 week ago
Video: Harvard Commencement Speaker Congratulates and Thanks Graduates
-
Politics1 week ago
Musk officially steps down from DOGE after wrapping work streamlining government
-
Technology1 week ago
AI could consume more power than Bitcoin by the end of 2025
-
News1 week ago
President Trump pardons rapper NBA YoungBoy in flurry of clemency actions
-
Technology1 week ago
SEC drops Binance lawsuit in yet another gift to crypto
-
Technology1 week ago
OpenAI wants ChatGPT to be a ‘super assistant’ for every part of your life