Vermont
NRA-ILA | Vermont: Legislature Adjourned For 2022
![NRA-ILA | Vermont: Legislature Adjourned For 2022](https://www.nraila.org/remote.axd?https://shared.nrapvf.org/sharedmedia/1507029/_0041_vt.jpg?preset=marquee)
It’s at all times a very good factor when the ultimate gavel drops in Montpelier and lawmakers head residence for the summer time. Late final week, the Vermont Legislature adjourned its 2022 session. It was a blended bag for certain. Anti-gun politicians did their greatest to try to cross much more restrictions in one of many most secure states within the nation, affirming what we have now at all times identified. Gun management is about politics, not sound public coverage.
A lot of this session was once more carried out on Zoom screens, out of the view of the general public. Late within the session, issues slowly began to transition again to in-person proceedings.
A lot of the early session was consumed with S.30, which began out as a location restriction. It was amended a number of instances, and the ultimate model utilized solely to hospitals (prohibiting weapons), but it surely did comprise red-flag language and a 30-day ready interval on NICS delayed transfers. The invoice was vetoed by Gov. Phil Scott who stated he wouldn’t comply with a ready interval of that size. Lawmakers knew they have been brief the votes essential to override a veto, so that they did a “strike all” on one other invoice (S.4) and handed a 7-day ready interval on NICS delayed transfers. The Governor finally signed that invoice regardless of our opposition.
There have been a pair vibrant spots. The Legislature handed S.184 by Sen. Joe Benning (R) to appropriate an issue created by a invoice final 12 months that amended the justifiable murder statute and ended protections for coming to assistance from somebody who’s underneath menace of dying or nice bodily hurt. S.184 reversed final 12 months’s actions and reestablished authorized protections for coming to assistance from others.
Lawmakers additionally amended S.281 which began out as an anti-hunting invoice. The invoice was amended to manage coyote searching the identical approach bear hound searching is regulated. Extra importantly, an modification was added that permits suppressor searching in Vermont. Regardless that the supply sunsets in two years, it was a significant victory secured by NRA A+ rated Rep. Pat Brennan who has fought tirelessly on this challenge for a number of years.
Vermont gun homeowners know that adjournment is merely a pause, and never an finish, to the onslaught of infringements which have change into all too widespread in Montpelier lately. Nonetheless, each freedom-loving Vermonter ought to keep in mind that someday each two years, we get to supply suggestions. It’s known as an election! They’re executed, and now it’s your flip to talk! Communicate loudly in November.
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Vermont
PHOTOS: Hamilton Falls
![PHOTOS: Hamilton Falls](https://bloximages.newyork1.vip.townnews.com/reformer.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/c/f8/cf823f6e-38bd-11ef-aa05-2f0fe04766a6/668477574ef81.image.jpg?crop=1766%2C927%2C0%2C122&resize=1200%2C630&order=crop%2Cresize)
Langdon, N.H. residents Alex Andrews, 12, Dria Andrews, 10, Raeleigh Walker, 9, and Kristen MacKinnon, 5, look at some of the tadpoles swimming around at the bottom of Hamilton Falls in Jamaica on Tuesday, July 2, 2024. The Vermont Department of Forests, Parks, and Recreation (FPR) has embarked on an initiative to sustainably manage the growing popularity of Hamilton Falls Natural Area and will have a public meeting on July 18 at the Windham Meeting House.
Vermont
Woman charged with trying to smuggle $40K worth of turtles across Vermont lake to Quebec | CBC News
![Woman charged with trying to smuggle $40K worth of turtles across Vermont lake to Quebec | CBC News](https://i.cbc.ca/1.7252019.1719936524!/cpImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/16x9_620/turtle-smuggling.jpg)
A woman from China has been arrested at a Vermont lake bordering Quebec for trying to smuggle 29 eastern box turtles, a protected species, into Canada by kayak, according to border patrol agents.
Wan Yee Ng was arrested on the morning of June 28 at an Airbnb in Canaan, Vt., as she was about to get into an inflatable kayak with a duffle bag on Lake Wallace, according to an agent’s affidavit filed in U.S. federal court. United States Customs and Border Protection agents had been notified by Royal Canadian Mounted Police that two other people, including a man who was believed to be her husband, had started to paddle an inflatable watercraft from the Canadian side of the lake toward the United States, according to an agent’s affidavit.
The agents searched her heavy duffle bag and found 29 live eastern box turtles individually wrapped in socks, the affidavit states. Eastern box turtles are known to be sold on the Chinese black market for about $1,400 each, according to the affidavit.
Ng is charged with attempting to export the turtles from the U.S., in violation of the Endangered Species Act. A federal judge on Friday ordered that she remain detained. The federal public defender’s office, which is representing her, declined to comment.
Border patrol agents first spotted Ng at the Airbnb rental in May when they noticed a vehicle with Ontario plates travelling on a Vermont road in Canaan in an area used by smugglers, they said. Lake Wallace has been used for human and narcotic smuggling, the affidavit states. The vehicle had entered the U.S. in Alburgh, Vt., agents said.
Ng was admitted to the United States in May on a visitor visa with an intended destination of Fort Lee, N.J., the affidavit states. Border patrol agents learned on June 18 that she had again entered the U.S. in Buffalo in a vehicle with a Quebec plate and was expected to arrive at the same Airbnb on Lake Wallace in Vermont on June 25, the affidavit states. They then started to surveil the property.
Vermont
The Magnificent 7: Must See, Must Do, July 3-9
![The Magnificent 7: Must See, Must Do, July 3-9](https://media1.sevendaysvt.com/sevendaysvt/imager/u/facebook/41281022/magseven1-1-f3783273d58c07fb.jpg)
Marching Orders
Thursday 4
The town of Warren steps lively at its singular 4th of July Parade and Festivities. The procession of quirky floats and merry musicians is followed by hot dogs, a street dance and a unique get-to-know-your-neighbors scheme: Pay $1 for a numbered “Buddy Badge,” then find the other person in the crowd with the same number and you’ll both win a prize.
Truth to Power
Friday 5
Rokeby Museum in Ferrisburgh marks Independence Day with its annual Reading Frederick Douglass event. Audience members take part by reading portions of the abolitionist, orator and statesman’s famous address “What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July?” Douglass first gave the powerful speech on July 5, 1852, as the keynote at an event commemorating the signing of the Declaration of Independence.
Come Together
Saturday 6
Bondeko bring a multicultural mélange to the Next Stage Arts Bandwagon Summer Series in Putney. The musicians in the Portland, Maine-based outfit span generations and originally hail from Albania, Guinea, Paris and Austin, Texas, creating a sound that’s an unlikely — and unforgettable — collaboration.
Into the Woods
Saturday 6
Vermont Humanities marks two anniversaries — its own 50th and the 100th of Vermont State Parks — with its Words in the Woods series. In the second of five gatherings, listeners soak in the natural beauty at Kill Kare State Park in St. Albans as spoken word poet Ellen “LN” Bethea (pictured) shares her work. Stay and enjoy the day at the park afterward: Entrance fees are covered for participants.
Swan Song
Sunday 7
The Rochester Chamber Music Society salutes one of its own at the Federated Church of Rochester when pianist Cynthia Huard plays her final concert, a coda to her 30 years as the group’s artistic director. She’s joined by cellist Ani Kalayjian and violinists Adda Kridler and Mary Rowell in a bittersweet program that includes works by Johann Sebastian Bach, Gabriel Fauré and native Vermonter Nico Muhly.
Fête the Farm
Wednesday 10
Northeast Organic Farming Association of Vermont hosts a Pizza Social at Miller Farm in Vernon, part of a summerlong series highlighting historic farms and hardworking farmers around the state. Foodies enjoy wood-fired pizza and soft-serve ice cream made from Miller Farm milk before a hayride and farm tour. Catch upcoming installments of the series in Middletown Springs, Shoreham, Johnson, East Hardwick and North Thetford.
Paint the Town
Ongoing
If you missed last summer’s attendance-record-breaking exhibitions of “For the Love of Vermont: The Lyman Orton Collection,” here’s another chance. The Vermont Historical Society presents a reprise showing at the Vermont History Museum in Montpelier. The selection of 20th-century works by Vermont artists is a love letter to the Green Mountain State.
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