Stories

Owen and his mom Jessica sit for a portrait after Owen, who is 7, received his first COVID-19 vaccine on Wednesday, Nov. 10 at the Main Street Middle School in Montpelier

Tag along with one 7-year-old Vermonter as he gets his first COVID shot

November 10, 2021

More than 30% of Vermont kids between the ages of 5 and 11 have signed up through the state portal to get their first COVID shot, and more will be able to choose pharmacies and pediatricians’ offices as the state gets additional doses. For many families, this is a momentous occasion. But even exciting things…

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Firefighter is at a controlled burn at the Wells Barren Preserve in Maine.

Fighting fire with fire: As Maine warms up, prescribed burns become more necessary

November 8, 2021

When it comes to raging wildfires, Maine is no California. As the most heavily forested state in the country, Maine’s climate is wetter. California is warmer and drier. There’s more lightning and more wind in the Golden State. But Maine’s changing climate is increasing the possibility of more and bigger fires — and now, like…

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A local trash hauler dumps a load of single-stream recycling into the Materials Innovation and Recycling Authority (MIRA) processing center in Hartford, Connecticut

Trash redevelopment in Hartford reignites debate over environmental justice

November 3, 2021

Nearly 50,000 people live within two miles of a major trash incinerator in Hartford. In a few months, that garbage plant is slated to close. And as officials decide what’s next for the key piece of riverfront land, debate is focusing on a decades-old issue: environmental justice. Think of environmental justice as environmentalism meets civil…

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The water level is low on the banks of the Cambridge Reservoir looking south from Trapelo Road in Lincoln, as seen on July 26

‘Forever chemicals’ widespread in Mass. surface and ground water, says new report

October 29, 2021

A new analysis of Massachusetts public water systems by the Sierra Club finds that 70% of communities have detectable levels of the six most dangerous PFAS chemicals in their ground and surface waters. When looking at a wider range of PFAS chemicals, 91% of communities have detectable amounts in at least one of their drinking…

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Jeannot Ndayishimiye, center, celebrates after scoring a goal for Burundi in the final minutes of the match.

Burundians and Rwandans find friends – and friendly competition – at community soccer match in Maine

October 27, 2021

Barely fifteen minutes into a recent soccer match between the Burundian and Rwandan communities in Portland, Evrard Ngabirano already had a lot of celebrate. “We got a second goal on our side, the Burundian team,” Ngabirano said with a big smile. While the event was billed as a friendly matchup, the game itself was competitive.…

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Cans of Birds of a Feather India Pale Ale travel through the Pack Tech Applicator placing plastic carriers onto each 4 pack.

Craft beer has a plastic problem. Some New England breweries are finding solutions

October 26, 2021

On a recent day, a steady stream of aluminum cans move down the assembly line at Lamplighter Brewery in Cambridge, Mass., being filled with a New England Style IPA. The cans move to their last stop: a device that presses plastic toppers onto four cans at a time. Standing next to the assembly line is…

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The secret lives of striped bass: scientists study a unique population of the ‘golden retrievers’ of the sea

October 26, 2021

How much anesthesia does it take to put a fish under before surgery? It’s not a question most veterinarians have to answer, but it’s what Lisa Abbo was trying to figure out at the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, Mass., as she looked down at a striped bass on a steel operating table. “We…

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A worker handles mattress foam in a warehouse in Connecticut.

Pandemic helps push up mattress recycling in Connecticut

October 26, 2021

A representative with Connecticut’s mattress recycling program believes the pandemic is part of the reason more people are choosing to recycle their old beds in the state. Daniel McGowan, with the Mattress Recycling Council, told a coalition of state recycling leaders Tuesday that the number of old mattresses recycled in Connecticut was up 12% from…

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Keith Ingalls uses solar panels, car batteries and an inverter to power his electronics at night instead of a generator. His dad was an electrician.

Vermont communities clear out campsites in the woods, but unhoused residents say they have nowhere else to go

October 26, 2021

Down a hill from an office park in White River Junction is a campsite tucked away in the woods. It’s beneath a highway corridor, on land owned by the Vermont Agency of Transportation. There’s a small green cabin next to a covered cooking area. Inside is a bed on a raised platform, neatly made. Battery-powered…

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Aerial photographs show a North Atlantic right whale entangled in rope off Daytona Beach in 2010. A 2012 study from the New England Aquarium revealed that more than 80 percent of right whales have been entangled at least once in their lives and 60 percent have been entangled more than twice. (NOAA News Archive 123110)

North Atlantic right whale population drops to 336, the lowest estimate in 20 years

October 25, 2021

The population of North Atlantic right whales fell to an estimated 336 in 2020, the latest indication that the critically endangered species is edging closer to extinction. That number represents an 8 percent decrease from the 2019 estimate, and the lowest population estimate for the species in nearly 20 years, according to the North Atlantic…

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