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Monday, January 10, 2022

Posted By on Mon, Jan 10, 2022 at 7:59 PM

click to enlarge Rental Housing Bill to Return as Part of New, Larger Measure
Anne Wallace Allen ©️ Seven Days
The Vermont Statehouse
Faced with an impasse over some disputed issues in the rental housing bill that Gov. Phil Scott vetoed in July, housing advocates plan to take a different approach this winter, creating a larger, more comprehensive housing bill that includes permitting and other matters.

The rental housing bill, S.79, would have established a statewide registry of rentals and created paid inspector positions through the state Division of Fire Safety, replacing the volunteer health officer positions now used in most Vermont towns.
Advocates for the bill said it would help ensure that Vermont’s rental housing is safer and would make it easier for tenants to find a place to live. The bill — which included short-term rentals in its registry proposal — won legislative approval last spring. But Gov. Phil Scott vetoed the measure on July 2, saying its added bureaucracy would discourage apartment owners from offering their units for rent.

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Posted By on Mon, Jan 10, 2022 at 5:12 PM

click to enlarge Political Newcomer Patricia Preston Announces Run for Lieutenant Governor
Screenshot ©️ Seven Days
Patricia Preston
Another candidate stepped forward Monday to join what could become a crowded field for lieutenant governor.

Patricia Preston, the executive director of Vermont Council on World Affairs, announced her intention to seek the post being vacated by Lieutenant Governor Molly Gray, who was elected in 2020 and is running for Congress.

“As Vermont's next Lieutenant Governor I will work tirelessly to build the trust and cooperation we need to solve our most pressing issues to make Vermont the state we know it can be,” Preston said in a video announcement.

Preston, who is running as a Democrat, joins Rep. Charlie Kimbell (D-Woodstock), who announced his candidacy last week. Others who’ve expressed interest in the position include Sen. Joe Benning (R-Caledonia), former Democratic representative Kitty Toll of Danville, and former Democratic/Progressive lieutenant governor David Zuckerman, who served two terms before making an unsuccessful bid for governor in 2020.

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Wednesday, January 5, 2022

Posted By on Wed, Jan 5, 2022 at 8:11 PM

click to enlarge Scott Makes Vermont's Workforce His Priority for 2022
Pool photo by Glenn Russell
Gov. Phil Scott delivering the State of the State
Gov. Phil Scott painted a bright picture of Vermont’s future Wednesday as he called on lawmakers to look past the dark days of the pandemic and to aid recovery by boosting the state’s shrinking workforce.

In his State of the State address on the second day of the new legislative session, Scott urged lawmakers to spend billions in federal aid wisely to ensure the state has the nurses to care for patients, the childcare workers and teachers to educate the young, and the tradespeople to build and weatherize homes.

“I am more optimistic than I have ever been that this future is within our grasp,” Scott said in a speech delivered virtually to lawmakers. “But we have got to work together so we do not squander this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to truly transform our state.”

In tones both earnest and uplifting, Scott described Vermont as strong and “growing stronger every day” thanks to hundreds of millions of dollars in ongoing investments in housing, broadband, infrastructure projects and economic programs.

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Tuesday, January 4, 2022

Posted By on Tue, Jan 4, 2022 at 9:16 PM

click to enlarge Senate Committee Backs Changes for Another Pandemic Town Meeting Day
Anne Wallace Allen ©️ Seven Days
Vermont Statehouse
Just hours after the 2022 legislative session got under way Tuesday, the Senate Government Operations Committee speedily approved its first bill: a measure that clarifies the rules for another pandemic-era Town Meeting Day.

The preliminary approval didn’t happen a moment too soon for town officials, many of whom have procedural deadlines this month for the town elections held annually in March.

With a daily COVID-19 case count that hit 1,727 on Tuesday, many of those officials are relying on guidance from lawmakers and from the Secretary of State on how to hold proceedings safely this year while adhering to the rules.

“Nobody would have predicted cases would be where they are now,” said Gwenn Zakov, the municipal policy advocate for the Vermont League of Cities and Towns. Zakov said the organization is on board with the rules for remote and delayed town meetings for another year. “It makes health sense, it makes logistical sense, and it’s not a huge strain on communities to make these adjustments,” she said.

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Wednesday, December 15, 2021

Posted By on Wed, Dec 15, 2021 at 9:50 PM

click to enlarge Statehouse Panel Drafts Safety Rules for Another Pandemic Session
Anne Wallace Allen ©️ Seven Days
The Vermont Statehouse
Masks will likely continue to be the order of the day when Vermont lawmakers return to Montpelier January 4 for the legislative session. Everyone, including members of the public, must wear one inside the Statehouse and some nearby buildings in the capitol complex under a draft plan approved Wednesday by the Joint Legislative Rules committee.

The panel also agreed to a policy that would give employees the choice of showing a vaccination card or getting regular COVID-19 tests.

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Monday, December 13, 2021

Posted By on Mon, Dec 13, 2021 at 2:05 PM

click to enlarge Gov. Scott to Appoint Three House Members After Resignations
File: Jeb Wallace-Brodeur
Gov. Phil Scott
On the eve of the legislative session, Gov. Phil Scott is now tasked with appointing three people to serve in the Vermont House after resignations by members in Chittenden, Franklin and Orleans counties.

One year into their current terms, Reps. Brian Savage (R-Swanton), Lynn Batchelor (R-Derby Line) and Marybeth Redmond (D-Essex) have all called it quits in recent weeks. Local party officials will forward candidates for Scott to choose from as successors.

Batchelor took office in 2011 as the representative for Orleans-1, a district that includes Derby, Holland, Morgan, Charleston and Brownington. She "abruptly retired" in October and moved to Florida, the Newport Daily Express reported on Monday.

click to enlarge Gov. Scott to Appoint Three House Members After Resignations (2)
Courtest
Lynn Batchelor
First elected in 2008, Savage represented his hometown and neighboring Sheldon in the Franklin 4-1 district. He announced last month that he'd leave office to take a job as Swanton town administrator beginning December 1.

And last Thursday, Redmond said in a letter to House Speaker Jill Krowinski (D-Burlington) that she was resigning effective immediately to deal with "some health concerns that require my prompt and focused attention."

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Monday, December 6, 2021

Posted By on Mon, Dec 6, 2021 at 4:40 PM

click to enlarge Mike Smith, a Key Leader in Vermont's Pandemic Fight, Is to Retire (2)
File: MATTHEW THORSEN ©️ Seven Days
Mike Smith
Human Services Secretary Mike Smith, who has been a key leader in Vermont’s response to the pandemic, will retire at the end of the year.

Governor Phil Scott announced Smith’s plans Monday afternoon in a statement praising his hard work, sage counsel and sense of humor.

“Mike helped lead our world-renowned vaccination rollout, worked tirelessly with our health care providers to keep the system working, helped build our testing capacity and so much more,” Scott said. “This is all on top of his day job, leading the largest agency of state government.”

Smith will be the third prominent official to leave the administration in short order, after departures by Fish & Wildlife commissioner Louis Porter in October and administration secretary Susanne Young last month.

Smith, 68, is a former Navy Seal who represented the Woodstock area as a Republican in the House of Representatives from 1977-78. This was his second stint leading the largest state agency, whose 3,500 employees manage corrections, mental health, child protection, public health and publicly funded health insurance programs. He previously served in the role under Republican governor Jim Douglas after serving years as Douglas' secretary of administration.

In late 2019 Scott asked Smith to take his old job back after Al Gobeille resigned and later took a position at the University of Vermont Health Network.

In the statement, Smith said the pandemic had caused him to stay in the $154,000 position longer than he had planned, and that he’d hoped the state’s vaccinations and other measures would by now have resulted in far lower transmission rates.

“The Delta variant has made our jobs a bit more difficult, but nonetheless, we have testing and vaccination programs that are the envy of the rest of the country and we have protected many Vermonters from the more serious outcomes of this virus,” he wrote.

Smith has been an unflappable, often blunt presence at Scott’s weekly press conferences, occasionally allowing himself a wry quip to lighten the mood.

Smith joined the Navy's elite special ops team at 19 following a rough upbringing in Woodstock, he told Seven Days in 2015.  Smith credited the four years he spent parachuting, scuba diving and detonating explosives underwater for turning his life around.

In his varied career in state government and business, Smith earned a reputation as the state’s "interim fixer-in-chief" for willingness to try to right troubled organizations.

In 2010, he came to the rescue of FairPoint Communications and spent four years helping one of the state's largest providers of phone and internet service claw its way back from bankruptcy.

He was hired by the board that oversees the state’s 911 call centers to help it improve a system plagued by outages. And in 2015 he agreed to serve as interim president of the cash-strapped Burlington College after students of the small liberal arts school convinced the president to resign. The school closed in 2016.

Deputy Human Services Secretary Jenney Samuelson will serve as interim secretary after Smith’s departure.

Correction, December 6, 2021: An earlier version of this story misspelled Jenney Samuelson's name.

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Wednesday, December 1, 2021

Posted By on Wed, Dec 1, 2021 at 6:57 PM

click to enlarge Vermont Climate Panel Passes New Emission Reduction Plan
File: Robert Nickelsberg
Developer Joe Larkin at a South Burlington solar farm
The Vermont Climate Council on Wednesday adopted a sweeping plan heralded by some as a milestone in the drive to reduce emissions but assailed by Gov. Phil Scott as born of an "overzealous process."

After a year of effort, the 23-member council, charged with ensuring the state meets its ambitious climate goals, voted 19-4 to adopt the plan.

The sweeping document outlines dozens of strategies the state should employ to more aggressively cut climate pollution, prepare residents for more extreme weather events, educate the public about ways to reduce emissions and ensure the costs of the transition are shared equitably.

The plan leaves significant issues unresolved, however, such as how to wean Vermonters off gas-powered vehicles and limit burning wood to make electricity.

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Sunday, November 28, 2021

Posted By on Sun, Nov 28, 2021 at 9:07 PM

click to enlarge Vermont Officials Keeping Tabs on Omicron COVID-19 Variant
Anne Wallace Allen ©️ Seven Days
Vermont Statehouse
Updated on November 29, 2021.

Gov. Phil Scott and his administration are closely following the news about the Omicron variant of COVID-19, which has been detected in several countries — including Canada — but not yet in the United States.

"We’re all independently monitoring this and watching the moves other countries are making," said Michael Pieciak, who handles COVID-19 modeling for the state and serves as commissioner of the Department of Financial Regulation. "We’re all kind of waiting for more information."

Reports about Omicron, the newly identified variant of the virus, started circulating widely on Friday after it was detected in Britain and several countries in southern Africa. Among the concerns are the potential high transmissibility of the new strain and the possibility it can evade the vaccines now in use. Much is unknown, including the severity of disease it causes, and researchers are rushing to investigate the threat. The World Health Organization has called Omicron a "variant of concern," its most serious classification.

The U.S. will close its borders on Monday to travelers from eight countries in southern Africa, and New York State Gov. Kathy Hochul declared a state of emergency on Friday.

"We continue to see warning signs of spikes this upcoming winter, and while the new Omicron variant has yet to be detected in New York State, it's coming," Hochul said in a statement.

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Monday, November 22, 2021

Posted By on Mon, Nov 22, 2021 at 10:11 PM

click to enlarge Vermont Lawmakers Approve Bill That Allows Towns to Require Masks
Kevin McCallum ©️ Seven Days
Andy Loughney outside the Statehouse on Monday
Vermont lawmakers on Monday grudgingly approved a bill to let individual cities and towns pass temporary mask mandates, but only after blasting Gov. Phil Scott for giving them the choice to do little else.

The bill passed the special legislative session by wide margins — 17-10 in the Senate and 90-41 in the House — but many lawmakers who voted for it said they did so only because Scott continued to oppose the broader mask mandate they preferred.

“What we need is a statewide response,” said Senate President Pro Tempore Becca Balint (D-Windham). “We need our executive branch, our governor and our Department of Health to step up and protect the people of Vermont when we are facing the most challenging and difficult time of the pandemic in Vermont.”

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