Vermont
Vermont library sources children’s books for Afghan arrivals
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BENNINGTON, Vt. (WCAX) – Over the previous 12 months, about 260 Afghan refugees have resettled in Vermont, with about 26 within the Bennington space. As they alter to life within the Inexperienced Mountain State, a few of the state’s libraries are working to verify they’ve books to learn.
The Bennington Free Library is likely one of the largest within the state of Vermont. The genres and titles accessible are expansive. And now they’ve books accessible within the Dari language as effectively.
Tucked within the nook of the kids’s room, a shelf of books seeks to supply a small consolation to Afghans resettling in Vermont.
“With the intention to meet the wants of younger kids, I knew one of many methods was via books,” stated Linda Donigan, the youth companies librarian in Bennington. When immigrants from Afghanistan started shifting a few 12 months in the past, she needed to verify households with younger kids had books accessible to them that they might perceive. With grant cash in hand — and the assistance of a good friend and a colleague — they launched Tales Throughout Borders. “We made connections with the lecturers and we additionally made some connections with tutors who have been working with a few of the adults.”
Tales Throughout Borders started with tote baggage filled with books and toys, distributed to households within the space. “However we needed to create a core assortment for the kids’s room in order that Afghan households would really feel welcome once they got here in to see their language represented,” Donigan stated. She says some books within the 25-title assortment have been accessible from publishers in bilingual codecs, however different youngsters’ classics that might assist younger learners with English weren’t. “Not solely will you see them in school rooms and houses, however additionally they taught core ideas — positional phrases, colour phrases, days of the week.”
Donigan enlisted the assistance of an Afghan school pupil at Williams School in Massachusetts to assist them translate. “Despatched me the translations and we printed them up and taped them into the books,” she stated.
Now, the books can be found to take a look at and they’re encouraging households to come back to make use of them. The Bennington Free Library is also working to construct up an grownup part of books in Dari. They solely have one e book now however say they’re hoping to increase sooner or later.
Copyright 2022 WCAX. All rights reserved.

Vermont
Vermont H.S. sports scores for Friday, April 11: See how your favorite team fared
The 2025 Vermont high school spring season has begun. See below for scores, schedules and game details (statistical leaders, game notes) from baseball, softball, lacrosse, tennis, track and field and Ultimate.
TO REPORT SCORES
Coaches or team representatives are asked to report results ASAP after games by emailing sports@burlingtonfreepress.com. Please submit with a name/contact number.
►Contact Alex Abrami at aabrami@freepressmedia.com. Follow him on X, formerly known as Twitter:@aabrami5.
►Contact Judith Altneu at jaltneu@gannett.com. Follow her on X, formerly known as Twitter: @Judith_Altneu.
FRIDAY’S H.S. GAMES
Girls lacrosse
Games at 4:30 p.m. unless noted
Harwood at Lamoille
Colchester at Mount Mansfield
Milton at St. Johnsbury
Spaulding at U-32
Boys lacrosse
Games at 4:30 p.m. unless noted
Otter Valley at BFA-Fairfax
Montpelier at Spaulding
Hartford at Colchester
St. Johnsbury at Milton
Stowe at Mount Abraham
South Burlington at Champlain Valley
Lyndon at Burlington, 5:30 p.m.
Softball
Paine Mountain at U-32, 4:30 p.m.
Baseball
Games at 4:30 p.m. unless noted
Champlain Valley at Hanover (N.H.)
BFA-Fairfax at Hazen
Girls tennis
Matches at 3:30 p.m. unless noted
Stowe at Burlington
Montpelier at Rice
South Burlington at Champlain Valley
Boys tennis
Matches at 3:30 p.m. unless noted
South Burlington at Essex
Colchester at Mount Mansfield
Girls Ultimate
Burr and Burton at Burlington
SATURDAY’S H.S. GAMES
Girls lacrosse
Games at 11 a.m. unless noted
Mount Abraham/Vergennes at Essex
Champlain Valley at South Burlington, 7 p.m.
Middlebury at BFA-St. Albans
Boys lacrosse
Games at 11 a.m. unless noted
Mount Mansfield at Rice
BFA-St. Albans at Middlebury
Burr and Burton at Essex, noon
Softball
Games at 11 a.m. unless noted
St. Johnsbury at South Burlington
Randolph at Spaulding
BFA-St. Albans at Burr and Burton
Baseball
Games at 11 a.m. unless noted
Randolph at Spaulding
Northeastern Clinton (N.Y.) at Richford
Springfield at Blue Mountain
Girls tennis
Harwood at Middlebury, 11 a.m.
Track and field
Meet at St. Johnsbury
Wolves/Bobwhite Relays at South Burlington
(Subject to change)
Vermont
Final Reading: Lawmakers consider whether to keep some intoxicated Vermonters out of prisons – VTDigger

House lawmakers spent much of this week mulling how the state should treat residents who are, as a matter of law, incapacitated.
Vermont statute describes incapacitated people as intoxicated or in withdrawal, and in need of medical care or posing a threat to themselves or others.
Under current statute, those individuals can be held up to 24 hours with the Department of Corrections, at a “lockup or community correctional facility,” even if they have been charged with no crime.
Six years ago, however, Vermont tucked language into the annual midyear budget update intended to keep those people out of prisons. That language, which would prohibit incapacitated Vermonters not charged with crimes from being housed in correctional facilities, is set to go into effect in July.
But now, Gov. Phil Scott’s administration is seeking to repeal that provision — a move that would allow correctional facilities to continue to temporarily hold incapacitated Vermonters indefinitely.
“The problem is that there are no secure facilities outside of the Department of Corrections,” Vermont Department of Health Deputy Commissioner Kelly Dougherty told the House Human Services Committee earlier this month.
Some local mental health agencies, such as Washington County Mental Health and Northeast Kingdom Human Services, offer beds through the so-called public inebriation program, also known as PIP beds.Those beds are intended as temporary places where intoxicated people can stay and avoid correctional facilities.
But many of those PIP beds across the state have shut down in recent years, leaving only eight still in operation.
State health officials are planning to merge PIP beds and mental health crisis beds under one umbrella program to allow for more flexibility. Still, the shortage has left the state reliant on the Corrections Department to hold incapacitated Vermonters. Without the ability to bring them to prisons, Dougherty told lawmakers this month, the state could be forced to send people to hospitals.
This week, health care workers and law enforcement officials came to the House Human Services Committee to ask its members to go ahead with repealing the provision.
“If the only option that you give police is to bring these individuals to the ED, you will be endangering our staff and other patients,” Alison Davis, the medical director of the emergency department at Rutland Regional Medical Center, told lawmakers Wednesday.
But lawmakers in the committee seemed undecided on whether to move ahead with the repeal. On Thursday, Rep. Theresa Wood, D-Waterbury, expressed uncertainty about the landscape of state services, given, on one hand, new state initiatives like the merger of PIP and mental health beds — and, on the other, potential federal funding cuts.
“I’m just wondering if it’s a tad early to be thinking about repealing the statute,” she said.
— Peter D’Auria
In the know
Advocates for migrant workers in the state continue to push for H.169, a bill that seeks to expand access to housing for immigrants without legal status living in Vermont. But the debate is shadowed by the specter of federal immigration policy.
As the administration of President Donald Trump ramps up deportation and detention of immigrants, proponents of the bill argue the state should do more to protect immigrants living in Vermont and increase their housing options. But the legislation faces headwinds from landlords and lenders.
The Vermont Landlord Association has objected to the addition of immigration status to the statute. “To make a landlord have to take somebody – even if they’re not here legally – I think is a challenge and a big ask,” Angela Zaikowski, the association’s director, told legislators in late March.
The association echoed these concerns in a “call to action” email last week, imploring its members to reach out to legislators and adding that the proposed change “has the potential to create federal issues for housing providers.”
Asked by lawmakers whether there were past examples of landlords getting into legal trouble after renting to people without legal status, Zaikowski said no.
“I think anything is possible at this point,” she added.
Will Lambek, from the group Migrant Justice, maintained that these fears of federal repercussions lacked legal basis. “Any fear of civil or criminal liability against landlords for renting to immigrant families is simply unfounded,” he said.
Read more about how federal immigration policy is looming over this debate here.
— Carly Berlin
A sudden reversal in federal funding for school districts has affected about 32 school districts and one mental health agency in Vermont, Jill Briggs Campbell, deputy secretary of the Vermont Agency of Education, told the Senate Education Committee on Wednesday.
The decision came in a March 28 letter from U.S. Secretary of Education Linda McMahon. It notified state education leaders that the federal department had reversed course on extending the deadline on a Covid-19 pandemic-era grant – the Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief funds, or ESSER – that has paid for learning support and summer programming.
While the money from ESSER originally had to be spent by Sept. 30, 2024, President Biden’s administration had approved an extension to allow schools to use the money through the 2025-26 school year. (Public schools in Vermont operate on a July 1 through June 30 fiscal calendar; the federal government’s fiscal year ends on September 30.)
McMahon’s letter noted that the federal department had “reconsidered” requests from state leaders to continue the extension after finding it “was not justified” and terminated the program at 5 p.m. on March 28 — three minutes before the statement was sent.
Vermont school districts have at least $10 million pending in that grant funding, Briggs Campbell estimated. The department has received about $800,000 worth of invoices but cannot request funds until it goes through the new process outlined in McMahon’s letter, which states the federal department will consider extensions “on an individual project-specific basis.”
“All of these were approved for extension by the previous administration,” she said in the hearing.
Read more about how the funding loss is affecting school districts here.
— Auditi Guha
On the move
After an extensive — and mysterious — delay, the Vermont House’s massive education bill, H.454, survived a voice vote on second reading Thursday. The bill is expected to face a vigorous challenge on the floor tomorrow.
—Ethan Weinstein
Visit our 2025 bill tracker for the latest updates on major legislation we are following.
Vermont
Vt. school protests state response to federal DEI policy

PLAINFIELD, Vt. (WCAX) – A Vermont school is protesting the state’s request to comply with federal rules on civil rights.
Twinfield School will stage a walk Thursday morning in an effort to defend DEI in Vermont.
Earlier this week, Education Secretary Zoie Saunders asked superintendents to sign on to an agreement reaffirming that schools follow existing laws that prohibit race-based discrimination.
Under the Trump administration, the definition of prohibiting race-based discrimination includes DEI policies.
That struck a chord with some school communities, like Twinfield, who want Vermont not to comply with the feds.
However, we now know that the education agency consulted with Vermont’s attorney general and says it will send a letter certifying the state is in compliance.
That’s in an effort to protect federal funding which officials say is a top priority.
The federal DEI policy is currently on hold for two weeks after facing a lawsuit from a New Hampshire organization, meaning no investigations or actions will be taken during that time.
Copyright 2025 WCAX. All rights reserved.
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