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)
Outrage and grief as Vermonters rally for George Floyd
How Fletcher escaped the 1918 flu
The hunger problem ahead
Inequality during the downturn
Why we tattle
One inmate's story of Covid-19 behind bars
Containing the coronavirus as reopening begins
How Vermont hospitals are preparing for a Covid-19 peak
Decoding Vermont's COVID-19 projections
Vermont's spike in unemployment claims, explained
Sen. Leahy on the coronavirus stimulus controversy
Preparing — not panicking — before the outbreak expands
Burlington Progressives take power — and plan their next steps
Competing climate bills in the Statehouse
Vermont's deadliest decade for killings by police
Sanders' skeptics and supporters in New Hampshire
When Bernie Sanders learned to lead
What's next for Woodside
Is paid leave in peril?
A Statehouse agenda, disrupted on day one
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Before Your Time