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June 10, 2025 In Vermont, working together to feed a region

When I reported a feature on Vermont’s national “firsts” and “onlys” 20 years ago, the state’s agriculture secretary had just flown to Cuba to promote a plan to sell Vermont apples and powdered milk. Some public utilities were already using methane from cow manure to make power. Vermont was the first state to require labels on genetically modified food and the last to let in Walmart. Its culture is not monolithic. But there’s a thick braid of independence and interdependence up in the Green Mountain State. Stephanie Hanes and Riley Robinson today explore how that’s showing up in a push to secure a truly local food system at a moment when the global supply chain for food merits extra attention.

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The Christian Science Monitor is an international news organization offering calm, thoughtful, award-winning coverage for independent thinkers. We tackle difficult conversations and divisive issues–we don’t shy away from hard problems. But you’ll find in each Monitor news story qualities that can lead to solutions and unite us–qualities such as respect, resilience, hope, and fairness.
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  1. CONTENT MAP
  2. June 1994
  3. June 27

Content map

Please see our Site Map for a guide to site content.

Monitor articles for June 27, 1994

  • Britain Signals Tough Stance On European Commission Goals
  • Renewing America's Service Mentality
  • CONCLUSIONS DRAWN
  • Inner-City Teens Abroad: Breaking Stereotypes
  • A Portrait of Laundry
  • Politics and Fair Play
  • New Electronic Products Offer Chance to Escape From Real World
  • Symphony
  • Populist Wins Big In Belarus Poll, Vows To Restore USSR
  • Moscow Makes an Offer The FBI Cannot Refuse
  • The Kids Were Crabby
  • French Troops Advance Through Rural Rwanda
  • Families Use Low-Tech Hints From Book To Trace Deadbeat Parents on the Lam
  • Iowa's GOP Vote Shows 1996 Race Is Wide Open
  • General Motors Expected to Shift Top Jobs Tonight
  • Wartime Coverage by Journalists Undergoes Filmmaker's Scrutiny
  • A Japanese Offense In the Heart of Seoul
  • Rambo Litigator Or Chivalrous Knight?
  • Bangladeshi writer seeks asylum in United States
  • Fledgling Native Investment Firm Focuses on Good Profit Picture
  • Another Government In Tokyo Heads For the Hangar
  • Third Parties Spawned By Ex-Perot Supporters
  • Oakland Hills Rebound After Fire
  • US Worries That Turmoil In Tokyo May Hurt Talks
  • `United We Stand' Finds New Nemesis
  • News, Paper, and the `Infobahn Still Room for Print
  • EVENTS
  • Nigeria's Military Rulers Try a Unifying Tactic
  • Let Bosnia Defend Itself
  • US Focuses on Trade With Latin America In Planning Summit
  • Agony of Indifference in Nagorno-Karabakh
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