On April 6, 2022

Legislative Update: Crossover bills reviewed, many priorities accomplished

By Sen. Alison Clarkson

After many long Floor sessions debating and passing bills to the other body, the Legislature has pretty much completed cross over. This is the point in the session where all bills which have any chance of making it into law have to be passed from the House to the Senate or vice versa. It takes about two weeks at the end of March to finish this work. We passed bills dealing with issues from firearm safety to environmental justice, from birthing centers to end-of-life choices, from redistricting to town charter changes, from education finance to workforce development, from forest fragmentation to our mental health crisis, and from affordable housing to cannabis farming. 

So, now, as we begin April, the House and the Senate are busy reviewing each other’s work, making our additions and finishing up the work of this 2022 session. 

We’ve taken action on many of our top priorities this year, including housing, workforce development, climate change mitigation, Vermont’s continued response to Covid’s impact on our economy and our citizens, and fixing the unfunded liability challenges in our public pension system. 

Vermont’s housing crisis has occupied a good deal of our Senate Economic Development (SED) Committee time. A healthy housing market is critically important to our economy and our communities. And that health is challenged at the moment with rental vacancy rates of less than 1% in the Upper Valley, increased costs of building materials, and the median sales price of purchasing a home being up about 20%. Businesses can’t find places for new recruits to live, and Vermonters can’t afford to buy homes, or rent apartments, in the communities of their choice. People are really feeling the housing crunch.

Our omnibus housing bill, S.226, is designed to reduce barriers to building more housing, and provide incentives to stimulate housing development. It has a number of components: grants to encourage increased housing density in our downtowns and village centers by building more accessory dwelling units (ADU), which can only be used for long term rentals, permit reforms which get rid of duplicative waste water permitting and extend permit expiration times, and, tax incentives to attract downtown housing development and for use in purchasing or replacing mobile homes. It increases the number of units a priority housing project (exempt from Act 250) can build, creates grants which make housing more affordable for our middle income families and which keep these homes perpetually affordable, relaxes land use regulation provisions to support housing density and smart growth, and prioritizes first-generation homebuyers for the Down Payment Assistance Program run by the Vermont Housing Finance Agency. It creates grants for mobile home owners and parks to make small scale capital improvements, home repair and incentives to relocate from flood hazard areas, and it authorizes the Vermont Housing and Conservation Board to partner with large employers (hospitals, resorts, regional businesses) on housing projects and with commercial property owners to convert properties to housing. 

In addition, this bill adds funding to the municipal planning grant program and extends the popular by-law modernization program, it increases our downtown and village tax credits program and expands it to include neighborhood development areas (areas immediately adjacent to our designated downtowns), and it creates a Flood Mitigation Tax Credit which will enable qualified flood mitigation projects. 

Finally, S.226 includes a compromise on the home contractor’s registration and certification framework for residential contractors within the office of professional regulation. This is an important piece of consumer protection designed to reduce home improvement fraud.

Senator Alison Clarkson represents Windsor County. She can be reached by email: [email protected] or at 802-457-4627.

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Vermont’s adult loon population is at an all-time high, but fewer chicks are surviving

July 2, 2025
By Izzy Wagner/VTDigger Vermont’s adult loon population is at an all-time high, but scientists have noticed a recent decrease in the number of chicks surviving. In 2024, Vermont saw a record-breaking 123 nesting pairs, 11 of which landed at first-time nesting sites. Out of the 125 loon chicks that hatched in 2024, 65% survived through the…

Vermont State University graduates 414 nurses, boosting local health care workforce

July 2, 2025
Vermont State University (VTSU) has graduated 414 new nurses this year, marking a significant step forward in addressing the state’s ongoing health care workforce shortage. With approximately 92% of these graduates testing for licensure in Vermont and strong NCLEX pass rates, the university continues to deliver on its promise to educate and prepare nurses who…

VT Agency of Education announces summer food service program

July 2, 2025
The Agency of Education announced the availability of summer meal sites providing meals to all children, 18 and under, through the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP). This program ensures that children across the state have access to nutritious meals throughout the summer. Families are encouraged to access these meals to help support children’s growth, health,…

Sanders restores $17m for Vt schools canceled by Trump

July 2, 2025
Senator Bernie Sanders (I-Vermont), ranking member of the Senate health, education, labor, and pensions (HELP) committee, June 27 announced that the U.S. Dept. of Education reversed its decision to cancel nearly $17 million in federal K-12 Covid-19 funding for Vermont school districts and some $2.5 billion for schools across the country. The administration’s announcement follows…