On September 27, 2023

Can we afford Scott’s vision for Vermont? 

 

By James Lyall

Editor’s note: James Lyall is the executive director at the ACLU of Vermont.

We all want to live in healthy, safe, vibrant communities, where everyone is treated fairly, and their rights are respected. We need leaders whose vision for Vermont is consistent with those goals and with these shared values.  

 Looking back to the past legislative session—and looking ahead to the next—one of the defining themes has been Governor Scott’s opposition to a wide range of investments needed to build safer and more resilient communities.   

That, combined with Scott’s regressive approach to police and prisons—steeped in the same ideology that brought us mass incarceration, over policing, and racial profiling—leaves us with a governor who is drifting further from the views, values, and needs of our communities. 

 This year, the Scott administration has advanced proposals for a multi-million dollar expansion of Vermont’s prison system—even though our prison population has fallen dramatically and could be reduced further with smarter justice reforms.  

 The ACLU has urged legislators to reject that misguided vision and the enormous, ongoing costs it would entail. Instead, we must build on policy reforms that have already reduced Vermont’s prison population by 40%, and which are supported by an overwhelming, cross-partisan majority of Vermonters.    

Likewise, while more than 90% of Vermont voters support police accountability, Governor Scott opposes popular and commonsense measures to ensure police are accountable to—and earn the trust of—the communities they serve.  

 This year Scott vetoed S.6, which would have barred police from using coercive interrogation tactics on Vermont youth—a practice rejected by a growing number of states because it leads to false confessions and wrongful imprisonment. Since the Vermont Senate could not muster enough votes for an override, Vermont police can still threaten and lie to Vermonters of all ages, with impunity.  

 Scott also quietly signed legislation to subject Vermont schoolchildren to monitoring and investigations by “behavioral threat assessment teams,” including law enforcement—a policy with clear potential to violate students’ due process and privacy rights, and likely to perpetuate discrimination and stigmatization of marginalized youth. 

 Meanwhile, in the midst of a worsening overdose epidemic, Scott has opposed harm reduction strategies that would save lives, while advocating enhanced criminal penalties for street drugs—the exact opposite of the evidence-based, public health-centered strategies Vermont desperately needs.  

 Vermonters who are heartbroken by the state’s response to the opioid epidemic should urge their legislators to reject Scott’s old-school approach to drug policy, which is costing lives, and instead prioritize harm reduction. 

 Scott also opposes—and last year vetoed—legislation that would have rescinded a racist policy of disparate sentencing for powder vs. crack cocaine, long recognized as a major driver of racial disparities.  

 As the governor knows, Vermont prosecutors overcharge and over-sentence Black defendants for drug crimes, and Black drivers in Vermont are disproportionately stopped, searched, and cited, year after year. The governor’s silence on these issues is telling. Just three years after Vermont committed to fighting systemic racism, it is profoundly disappointing to see that the governor has moved on.   

While spending on Vermont’s criminal legal system has increased by more than 200% over the past four decades, to more than $500 million per year, the governor opposes the kinds of investments that would more effectively improve public safety and build more resilient and equitable communities. These include investments that could deliver affordable housing and prevent homelessness; strengthen our public schools; or provide adequate healthcare. 

 When it comes to investing in our communities, Scott says we can’t afford it. When it comes to more policing and bigger prisons? Apparently, money is no object.  

 Those priorities do not align with the needs of Vermont communities, or the values Vermonters hold dear. Neither are they fiscally responsible, because the failure to invest in effective solutions will cost us more, in both the short- and long-term. 

 For all the governor’s talk of affordability, it’s time to ask: how much longer can we afford  Scott’s vision for Vermont? 

 

 

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Homeless legislation encounters Sturm and Drang

May 7, 2025
A cohort of Vermont’s social service providers has embarked on an editorial campaign challenging the House’s recent legislation that would disrupt the status quo of homeless services funding administration. Angus Chaney, executive director of Rutland’s Homeless Prevention Center (HPC), appears to be the author of the editorial and is joined by about a dozen fellow…

From incarceration to community care: Reinvest in health, justice, common good

May 7, 2025
By Brian Cina Editor’s note: Brian Cina is a VermontState Representative for Chittenden-15. Cina is a clinical social worker with a full-time therapy practice and is a part-time crisis clinician. State-sanctioned punishment and violence perpetuate harm under the guise of accountability, justice, and public safety. Since 2017, Governor Phil Scott has pushed for new prisons…

Tech, nature are out of synch

May 7, 2025
Dear Editor, I have been thinking since Earth Day about modern technology and our environment and how much they are out of touch with each other.  Last summer, my wife and I traveled to Fairbanks, Alaska, for a wedding. While there, we went to the Museum of the North at the University of Alaska-Fairbanks. It…

Under one roof: Vermont or bust!

May 7, 2025
Dear Editor, We’re heading north and so excited. We’re moving full time to Vermont! For decades we’ve been snow birds, like my parents, spending half the year in Bradenton, Florida. But now our Florida house is up for sale — a 1929 Spanish Mediterranean brimming with beauty and charm. A young family we hope will…