Vermont
Vermont vs. New Hampshire odds, score prediction: 2024 America East Tournament picks, bets by proven model
The New Hampshire Wildcats and the Vermont Catamounts are set to clash in an America East Tournament semifinal matchup on Tuesday in Burlington, VT. Vermont finished the regular season 25-6, earning the No. 1 seed in the conference tournament, while New Hampshire finished the regular season 15-14, which resulted in the No. 4 seed. Vermont defeated Albany 75-72 in the quarterfinals, extending its winning streak to eight games. New Hampshire knocked off Binghamton 77-64 in its quarterfinal matchup, snapping a four-game losing streak.
Tip-off at at Roy L. Patrick Gymnasium in Burlington is scheduled for 5 p.m ET. Vermont is favored by 13 points in the latest Vermont vs. New Hampshire odds, and the over/under is 137 points. Before making any Vermont vs. New Hampshire picks, you’ll want to see the college basketball predictions and betting advice from the proven computer simulation model at SportsLine.
The model simulates every Division I college basketball game 10,000 times. It enters 2024 conference championship week on a 145-104 roll on all top-rated college basketball picks dating back to last season, returning more than $1,700 for $100 players. It also has a strong 28-18 (+820) record on top-rated spread picks this season. Anyone following has seen huge returns.
The model has set its sights on New Hampshire vs. Vermont and just locked in its picks and CBB predictions. You can head to SportsLine now to see the model’s picks. Here are several college basketball odds and betting lines for the game:
- Vermont vs. New Hampshire spread: Vermont -13
- Vermont vs. New Hampshire over/under: 137 points
- Vermont vs. New Hampshire money line: Vermont: -1143, New Hampshire: +708
- Vermont vs. New Hampshire picks: See picks here
What you need to know about New Hampshire
New Hampshire came into Saturday’s game having lost four straight, but that streak is now in the rearview mirror. They came out on top against the Binghamton Bearcats by a score of 77-64 on Saturday. Clarence Daniels dropped a double-double on 20 points and 14 rebounds. Trey Woodyard was another key contributor, scoring 17 points.
Daniels has been outstanding for the Wildcats this season. The 6-foot-6 senior is averaging 19.6 points and 9.5 rebounds per game this season. His supporting cast is paced by junior guard Ahmad Robinson, who averages 15.4 points, 4.6 rebounds, and 4.6 assists per game. See which team to pick here.
What you need to know about Vermont
Meanwhile, Vermont came tearing into Saturday’s contest with seven straight wins (a stretch where they outscored their opponents by an average of 10.9 points per game) and they left with even more momentum. They narrowly escaped with a victory defeating the Albany Great Danes 75-72. Shamir Bogues scored 16 points along with five assists and five steals. The team also got some help courtesy of TJ Long, who scored 20 points along with six rebounds.
Vermont posted a 15-1 record in conference play during the regular season. The Catamounts are deep, with nine players averaging 15.8 minutes or more per game. Vermont is one of the top defensive teams in the America East, allowing only 63.2 points per game. Long leads the team in scoring, averaging 12.3 points per game. See which team to pick here.
How to make Vermont vs. New Hampshire picks
The model has simulated Vermont vs. New Hampshire 10,000 times and the results are in. We can tell you that the model is leaning Over on the point total, and it’s also generated a point-spread pick that hits in well over 50% of computer simulations. You can only see the model’s pick at SportsLine.
So who wins New Hampshire vs. Vermont, and which side of the spread hits in well over 50% of computer simulations? Visit SportsLine now to see which side of the spread to jump on, all from the advanced model that has returned more than $1,700 on its college basketball picks this season, and find out.
Vermont
Aly Richards announces run for Vt. governor
NEWBURY, Vt. (WCAX) – A new face joins the race for Vermont governor.
Aly Richards, the former CEO of Lets Grow Kids, will hold her campaign announcement on Monday morning.
Richards has spent the last decade advocating for affordable child care in Vermont, including pushing for the state’s landmark child care law.
Richards’ campaign announcement will take place in her hometown of Newbury at 11 a.m.
Copyright 2026 WCAX. All rights reserved.
Vermont
Vermont ends cold weather hotel assistance for 160 households
MONTPELIER, Vt. (WCAX) – About 160 households will no longer receive hotel rooms following the end of cold weather rules for the state’s General Assistance program this week.
Anti-homeless advocates said last year the federal government authorized Vermont to use state Medicaid funds for a program that could supplement rent for people at risk of homelessness.
State leaders this week said that is not an option as Vermont is still building the program.
Vermont Human Services Secretary Jenney Samuelson said at a press conference this week the waiver gives the authority, not the funding or infrastructure to build the program.
“The state would need to put up significant investments including enrolling housing providers, landlords, developing and building IT systems,” Samuelson said. “These steps require significant time and resources.”
The state legislature and Governor Scott’s administration have been trying to wind down the use of hotels and instead ramp up shelters to get people back on their feet.
Copyright 2026 WCAX. All rights reserved.
Vermont
Cock-a-doodle-don’t? Vermont towns can’t agree on roosters. – VTDigger
Amanda Rancourt was facing a predicament.
She had started raising chickens in response to rising egg prices. But last May, a clutch of baby chicks she was raising in her backyard had grown up. Unexpectedly, one of the supposedly all-female chickens had a surprise for Rancourt.
The chicken turned out to be a rooster.
Rancourt knew what that meant. She could keep the chickens. But she lives in Barre City.
The rooster would have to go.
“It’s unfortunate. I literally live on the Barre City, Barre Town line,” she said. “It just kind of stinks we weren’t able to keep him, legally.”
Over the past few years, complaints across Vermont municipalities regarding roosters and their chatter have spurred many towns to ban them within their borders. Ordinances banning roosters have been in place in Burlington, South Burlington, Williston and Essex Junction for years. Yet regulations are not consistent, even between neighboring communities. The town of Barre, where Rancourt lives, has rooster regulations, while just up the road, the city of Montpelier does not.
As winter finally lets up and backyard flocks begin stirring from their coops, Vermont municipalities are increasingly saying “no” to roosters, creating a patchwork of local regulations that routinely pit the state’s agricultural heritage against suburban quality of life.
More communities have begun considering new bans. Last fall, the St. Albans City Council unanimously voted to ban roosters, with the threat of daily fines and possible court-ordered removal if a rooster is not moved, according to officials. A series of noise complaints regarding roosters crowing around the city had pushed the government to look at restrictions, St. Albans Mayor Tim Smith said.
Urban density fueled the complaints, with most residents living just 30 feet apart. And perhaps a blind spot in the city’s animal control laws helped the backyard chickens proliferate, said Chip Sawyer, St. Albans’ planning director and author of the proposed ordinance.
“A barking dog, you can deal with,” Sawyer said. “You can order someone with a barking dog to keep their dog inside. You can’t really order a rooster to be kept inside the home.”
The new rule drew little resistance. Only one family with a pet rooster complained, Smith said.
“To have some one person feel that his activities, his hobbies, whatever you want to call it, take priority over his neighbors is, in my opinion, very selfish,” Smith said.
Meanwhile, a similar dispute between neighbors in Shelburne prompted the town to debate adopting its own restrictions on roosters.
“They start yodeling at dawn and go on until dark,” wrote Ruth Hagerman, a Shelburne resident, in an email to town government representatives that was shared with VTDigger.
“They are disturbing the peace of those around them and are providing a textbook example of how neighborly policing doesn’t work.”
Yet after debating a drafted law, which was based on ordinances in neighboring municipalities, the Shelburne selectboard decided during a meeting last year to keep things as they were.
Shelburne Town Manager Matt Lawless was wary of overregulating how residents raise animals and produce their own food.
“We need to be cautious, I think, in when we deal with nuisance or when we’re concerned about health and safety, that we also look at the positive value provided, and we not make it hard for people to do things that are good,” Lawless said.
A ban on roosters felt too controlling, according to Shelburne board member Andrew Everett. He felt that for Shelburne, a community that is a mix of suburban and rural, changing traditional Vermont ways should be resisted until absolutely necessary.
Meanwhile, Williston’s war over backyard chickens has now spanned nearly a decade, with residents on smaller properties twice rebuffed in their efforts to keep hens. The city still classifies chickens as livestock, prohibited on any lot under an acre. The most recent attempt to lift the ban died in September 2023. Selectboard members who had previously supported the ban again voted to peel the chicken provisions off a broader housing package, shelving them indefinitely.
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The trend of banning roosters from Vermont municipalities has caused a somewhat unintended wrinkle: what happens to the roosters?
The growing number of roosters that need to be re-housed has become an issue, said Pattrice Jones, cofounder of VINE Sanctuary in Springfield, an animal sanctuary that assists in rescuing roosters.
Sanctuaries around the state have been overwhelmed with requests to take roosters, Jones said. Chicks from hatcheries and farm stores that unexpectedly turn out to be roosters — and misconceptions about roosters being inherently violent — add to the problem.
But the growing list of local ordinances banning roosters has resulted in even more requests to take them in, adding to VINE’s “perpetual” waiting list, Jones said.
For many, emotional attachment to their roosters complicates the decision of what to do with the feathered pets.
“We hand raised them from when they were chicks and my kids were attached to them,” said Rancourt, the Barre chickens owner.
After a few months of looking, she was able to find a more rural home for her rooster, away from the suburban neighborhoods and the rooster ban in Barre.
“We understand that if they ended up becoming a problem with people, that they may end up having to cull them and eat them,”.
“Personally I couldn’t do that.”
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