On January 29, 2025
Opinions

Meeting the moment to build more housing

By  Lindsay Kurrie

Editor’s note: Lindsay Kurrie is the secretary of the Vermont Agency of Commerce and Community Development.

This is a pivotal moment in the history of Vermont that will determine our future. It’s imperative we all realize that housing is the foundation of how we will meet this moment to create the momentum that will reverse our demographic decline. Housing will bring more working-age people here and help fill our schools with kids. More housing will improve public safety outcomes. Housing will give the most vulnerable Vermonters a chance to access and achieve stable rental or homeownership options. Turning the tide on housing will grow municipal grand lists, increase the tax base, and ease the property tax obligation we share by spreading it out over more properties. As Governor Scott repeatedly says, we need more taxpayers, not more taxes. Housing can unlock so much of what will make Vermont a vibrant place, not only for us but for our children and their children. This is the moment we find ourselves in.

And here’s the thing— We can accomplish the goal of adding more housing without losing the Vermont we love.

Governor Scott recently said, “…we don’t want houses to litter our mountainsides or development that replaces our farmland.”  What we DO want is to improve the current system to make it easier and faster to build and rehab houses, condominiums, and apartments where we want them.

Adding more housing requires all of us to be engaged advocates for growth. For too long, we have allowed the voices of opposition to dominate our local discourse on housing. We need Vermonters to loudly and publicly advocate for progress. Preserving Vermont’s beauty does not mean placing our state in a time capsule, freezing potential progress with our nostalgia. We cannot create starter homes, residences designed for aging in place, and homes for our kids and grandkids unless we embrace building in our communities.

We need more places to rent and buy in every corner of Vermont at every price point. To learn more about the scale of the issue, I encourage you to look at the Statewide and Regional Housing Target report released on Jan. 14.  Look up what the recommendations mean for your community. Then, see the building that has been happening in your community over the last few years via the new Housing Development Dashboard. The picture is stark, and every region can do more.

We recently unveiled our proposal and will begin working with lawmakers on our Omnibus Housing Bill in the coming days, which contains policies intended to preserve Vermont’s beauty and natural resources while bringing more housing online. We can’t fix this problem overnight, and we can’t buy our way out of it by asking taxpayers to fund all new housing. The bill calls for, among other things, further appeals reform to expedite cases, shift the cost of permit appeals to the appellant, and raise the standard for petition appeals which are widely viewed as a mechanism for preventing the construction of new homes. We want to add tools to help small communities that don’t have the capacity to manage development projects so that they can expand their grand lists and welcome new people to town. We also want to remove barriers to adding homes to areas already served by public water and wastewater.

I am optimistic despite the immense housing challenge we face. Legislative leaders are now embracing the need for more housing and the integral role housing plays in affordability. I look forward to working with them to increase housing options for all Vermonters.

I am also hopeful that Vermonters will embrace this mission. Affordability cannot be achieved for all of us until we build more homes. The stakes are high, but so is the opportunity to shape Vermont’s future.

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Addressing affordability: Why fossil fuels are not the answer

January 29, 2025
Dear Editor, Nearly all Vermonters agree we want living in our state to be more affordable. When it comes to energy, continued dependence on high-cost and price-volatile fossil fuels like gasoline, fuel oil, and propane is not a path to affordability. In 2023, $2.2 billion was spent on fossil fuels for transportation and heating in…

Unaffordable Housing I:Rent-fixing

January 29, 2025
Dear Editor, Back in February 2024, Vermont Sen. Peter Welch (D-Vt.) and Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) introduced a bill, “Preventing Algorithmic Facilitation of Rental Housing Cartels.” What does the bill’s name translate to in plain English? Rent-fixing. In a press release dated Aug. 23, 2024, the U.S. Dept.  of Justice (DOJ) announced it, along with…

The great housing development divide

January 22, 2025
The State of Vermont is one of the biggest housing developers in the state. Seven state departments qualify as housing developers, and the University of Vermont is a housing developer. Seven public housing authorities also qualify as housing developers. Add to the list the seven homeownership organizations that are housing developers, and then there are…

The 3 Hs — housing, hunger and health care

January 22, 2025
By Bill Schubart Editor’s note: Bill Schubart is a retired businessman and active fiction writer, and was a former chair of the Vermont Journalism Trust, the parent organization for VTDigger.  The latest statewide count for unsheltered Vermonters is 3,458, a nearly 5% increase over 2023, the second highest rate in the country, and this is deemed…