Explore Stowe-area businesses and events with modified operations as a result of COVID-19. Information courtesy of the Stowe Area Association.
Coronavirus: Local Business Operations
"To our Lamoille County Neighbors: There will be plenty of information coming out over the next several weeks. We will specialize in providing information that pertains to our local businesses and services."
North Country Animal League has started NCAL Meals, a needs-based pet food assistance program that removes the logistical and financial burden of providing a nutritious meal for family pets.
Lamoille FiberNet Communications Union District has been awarded a $20,000 grant from the Vermont Community Foundation for general operating support.
Stephanie LaBarron is the new vice president of ambulatory and provider services at Copley Hospital.
After two and a half decades Boyden Valley Winery owners David and Linda Boyden are getting out of the wine business.
The Charlmont Restaurant helped ensure at least two dozen families would have some hearty meals for the holidays.
The Morrisville Alliance for Culture and Commerce is creating a strategic plan for the next five years and wants your input.
Vail Resorts, which owns Stowe Mountain Resort, has given out $3.3 million in COVID-19 emergency relief and behavioral health grants in nine of the communities where it operates.
The Lamoille Area Board of Realtors held its annual meeting and swore its 2021 executive board into office.
While many segments of the local economy have suffered from the COVID pandemic, the construction industry doesn’t appear to have been socially distanced from the dollar.
The last three months of the fiscal year that ended June 30 nearly coincided with the first three months of the pandemic. But, save for tourist-dependent Stowe, the pandemic isn’t reflected in cash register receipts around Lamoille County.
Morristown awarded just over $50,000 to a total of 21 businesses as they continue to deal with the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.
Lamoille County rooms, meals and alcohol sales took a steep dive in April and May, plummeting as much as 98 percent compared to the same months the previous year.
Francesca D’Elia of Jeffersonville started making jewelry in middle school as part of an after-school arts club and then more seriously in her sophomore year of high school.
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