The Covid-19 state of emergency gave the Scott administration the authority to maintain a vast social safety net during the pandemic. Landlords were barred from evicting renters, homeless Vermonters were housed free of charge in motels around the state, and a series of meal distribution programs ensured families access to food.
Now that the emergency declaration has ended, advocates are nervous that the boost in social services over the past 15 months will be coming to an end too.
Guests: Anore Horton (Hunger Free Vermont), Xander Landen (VTDigger)
From ‘Fan Club’ to ‘Roseanne’?
Upcoming elections will test Vermont’s voting laws
Scott's challengers take the stage
Longshot candidates go for governor
EB-5 cleanup leaves investors anxious
UVM nurses strike for staffing relief
Vermonters raise voices towards the southern border
How cannabis case law will shape legalization
Lessons learned from the ‘61 standoff
More mergers loom under school plan’s next phase
Marijuana offenders face clean slates
Lottery winners’ suspicious sums
“A lethal combination” in the Lumumba homicide
$5.8 billion in 15 minutes
Raising the wage divides Vermont Dems
Precedent and politics in the Jack Sawyer case
In the Zone: Voices from the F-35 debate
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Before Your Time