Dear Constituents -
The majority of time this week in Statehouse committees was spent continuing to hear testimony on bills: S.56 (creating an Office of New Americans); S.59 (amendments to Vermont’s Open Meeting law); H.233 (requirements for State-funded grants); H.23 (use of synthetic media in elections); H.364 (approval of the annexation of property by the Village of Swanton); and H.501 (deadline for public bodies to respond to alleged open meeting law violation). The Committee also heard an update on the operations of the Vermont Veterans Home, the only such residence and skilled nursing facility for veterans, their spouses, and Gold-star families in Vermont.
Action on the House Floor included passing the following bills: S.30 (updating and reorganizing the health insurance statutes in 8 VSA chapter 107); H.91 (Emergency Temporary Shelter Program); S.9 (after-hours access to orders against sexual assault); HR6 (amending House Rules to the House Ethics Panel); S.3 (transfer of property to a trust); H.293 (health equity data reporting and registry disclosure requirements); and H.454 (transforming Vermont’s education governance, quality, and finance systems). This latter bill, the “Education Transformation Bill”, took up much of our time on the Floor. The original language of the bill, recommended by the Governor, was stripped by the House Education Committee, which proceeded to insert their own language pertaining to an extended timeline and a study committee that would be a subset of the recently concluded Commission on the Future of Public Education to further kick this can down the road; it was voted out of committee on a 7-4 vote along party lines. The House Committee on Ways & Means subsequently added their own language to this bill, encompassing changes to the property valuation system and classification of properties for tax purposes; this was also voted out of Committee 7-4, on party lines. The House Appropriations Committee was the final stop on the way to the Floor for this bill, again being voted out 7-4 on party lines. On Thursday, the House held a Caucus of the Whole on the subject of this bill and the language contained therein. Suffice it to say that even after this presentation, there were many questions remaining. There were five proposed amendments to the bill and extended debate on the final day on the Floor alone. The bill that passed to the Senate is one that needs much more work; its current form was only released one week ago, and there were many questions left unanswered. The vote was 87-55, with several members voting yes merely to advance the bill to the Senate. Additionally, an amendment was proposed to align the effective dates with the intent sections, and that was voted down on the House Floor, which seems counter-intuitive to me. Typically, when a large bill like this passes to the Senate, it marks the mid-point of the session; the Ed bill was granted a reprieve from that crossover deadline, but that doesn’t bode well for the adjournment date this session. If this truly is the mid-point for Education Transformation, we will remain in session longer than necessary or be called back for further work later in the year.
On Tuesday, the VT National Guard & Veterans Affairs Caucus met to discuss various bills that are moving or on the walls in Committees, including the perennial military pension and survivors’ benefits state income tax exemption. Readers may recall that a few weeks ago, a favorable tax credit bill was passed from the House Ways & Means Committee to the House Floor, but as an amendment containing the military tax exemption language was offered, the bill was pulled back into Committee, and there it languishes. This was an affront to all military retirees and their survivors, as Vermont remains the State in the nation that has the most unfriendly tax policy for military members and their families. The reason for that move by the majority party was that other public servants deserve the same tax credits; in a perfect world, all of these folks whose careers are dedicated to keeping us safe are deserving of everything their State can do to honor them. What they fail to recognize is that when someone signs up for the military, “they lose their freedom to serve to protect our freedom” (unknown author); they cannot merely walk away from their jobs and must serve their country for the duration of their contracts. Their service is truly unique.
On Wednesday at the Rural Caucus meeting, the Vermont Council on Rural Development presented on the work that they have done to assist a number of communities around the State with their next steps when their local schools have closed. They plan to continue to engage with members of this Caucus with case studies and offering services.
It is an honor to serve. Please reach out to me at [email protected]
Stay well,
Rep Lisa Hango, Franklin-5
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