Legislative Update - 30 JAN 2026

Dear Constituents –

Everyone has heard that Education Transformation is the biggest issue of the 2025-26 biennium, but how is that related to many of the other issues facing Vermonters? Educating our kids (salaries, facilities, supplies) is expensive; healthcare for middle-income Vermonters is expensive, and our insurance options are limited; lack of affordable (not subsidized) housing is at crisis proportions; lack of employees cause jobs to go unfilled, and employers close their doors because they can’t afford the costs (monetary and regulatory) to stay in business. If we had transparent, competitive, and affordable healthcare options, our farmers, clerks, construction workers, and small business owners would spend less of their income on healthcare premiums, they would have more disposable income, and school budget increases (which include healthcare premiums for education employees) would be less of a burden on taxpayers. If we didn’t have the most stringent land use and development regulations in the country, home ownership would no longer just be the American dream but the Vermont reality. If it weren’t so expensive for a business to set up shop in our state, we would have a greater array of well-paying jobs that would attract employees from out of state to put down roots in Vermont and contribute to the economy by shopping, recreating, and paying taxes here.  It’s a vicious cycle: decades of restrictive regulations led to a lack of new housing being built, which makes it difficult if not impossible for businesses to find employees, employers leave the state, and the ones that are left are expected to fill the gap by contributing more; schools are under-enrolled in many parts of the state, creating a perfect storm for those penny-pinching districts to have to cover the costs of the bigger, higher-spending districts across the state, thanks to our outdated funding formula.  Vermont is the only state in the nation that uses this particular, convoluted method of funding education. Not enough students, high costs of living, no new homes, and few new employment opportunities in our County brings us to where we are:  unaffordable.

Thousands of our County’s residents commute daily 30-90 minutes each way to access a wider variety of employment. That’s a lot of wear and tear on our roads and bridges.  Did you know that the Transportation Fund is in serious trouble? In this budget cycle, we are facing a $33M hole. Per state policy, we must make our state match (10-20%) to draw down federal funds that directly help our towns maintain their transportation infrastructure. We must fund the T fund to address the effects of long-deferred paving and bridge maintenance. The Governor has proposed taking back $10M of (vehicle) purchase and use taxes from the Education fund and re-directing it to the T Fund .

Once again this week, there was little action of substance on the House floor, as committees continue to work hard taking testimony and marking up bills.

In House Government Operations & Military Affairs, we heard our annual update from the VT Veterans Home, learned more about two proposed veteran-related and four alcohol-related bills, animal welfare, retirement pensions, and continued our work on our omnibus bill for the Office of Professional Regulation and another for emergency management.

Please reach out to me at [email protected]

Stay well,

Rep Lisa Hango, Franklin-5


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