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Progressive Caucus releases statement on housing crisis | Vermont Business Magazine
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Wed, 06/30/2021 - 8:29pm tim
Vermont Business Magazine Following a suit filed by Vermont Legal Aid regarding the termination of the hotel housing program run and paid for by the Vermont Agency of Human Resources, the court has approved a plan presented by Legal Aid and HHS to extend to program for two more weeks for eligible people with certain disabilities. It extends the program for those people by two weeks. For all people who must leave the program, which accounts for more than 600 people, HHS is offering $2,500 plus another $8,000 in housing assistance.
The hotel program was greatly expanded at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic to ensure housing for homeless or others who fit the eligibility rules. The state is ending the expanded program July 1, though some people will continue to be accommodated. Legal Aid sued the state to continue the program.
Legal Aid, Vermont give 14 days to those facing hotel loss
June 30, 2021 GMT
MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP) The state and Vermont Legal Aid are giving people who are facing a loss of emergency hotel rooms 14 days to show they can remain eligible for emergency housing, officials said Wednesday.
The agreement, signed Wednesday by U.S. District Court Judge Christina Reiss, came a day after Legal Aid sued the state over the end of the emergency program set up to help the homeless during the pandemic.
The program was to have stricter eligibility requirements starting Thursday about who will be able to stay in state-supplied hotel rooms.
Ducklings rescued, Zion National Park flooding, Portuguese man-of-war alert: News from around our 50 states From USA TODAY Network and wire reports
Alabama
Montgomery: Summer school teachers in Montgomery Public Schools are getting a bump in pay. The district has increased teacher wages from $25 to $50 an hour to get more teachers in the classrooms to handle an increase of students this summer, WSFA-TV reported. Superintendent Ann Roy Moore and the school board also are looking ahead to the upcoming school year. They’re planning to go back to face-to-face learning full-time. “We found that children don’t do as well virtually in most cases as they do face-to-face with a nurturing teacher in that environment,” Moore said. She said that virtual learning will be used on an as-needed basis.
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