On October 27, 2021

Plymouth to vote on $1 million renovation to town office and garage

By Ethan Weinstein

On Dec. 6 at 7 p.m., Plymouth will hold a special town meeting to discuss a proposed $950,000 renovation to the town office and garage. A vote to approve that renovation will be held by Australian ballot the following day.

Select Board member Rick Kaminsky said that if the Dec. 6 vote passes, the town will pay for the renovations without raising taxes. “The town has a fund of surplus monies that is unallocated,” he said. “We can move forward without any tax increases, any bonds.”

The Plymouth Select Board hired Maclay Architects of Waitsfield to perform an energy analysis of the current municipal office and garage. In August, Maclay provided four options for possible renovations, all of which would create net zero emissions. The energy analysis revealed that the current Plymouth town office and its 35 year old boiler and furnaces “use about twice as much heating fuel as similar buildings in the Northeast.”

Of the four building options proposed by Maclay, one would have kept the existing building but added solar; two would have created all electric, net zero ready buildings by installing either air source heat pumps or air to water heat pumps; and the fourth option, which the Select Board chose to vote on, proposes to heat the town garage with propane and the town office with air-to-source heat pumps, while also installing solar to offset electricity used.

The nearly $1 million price tag includes $400,000 in deferred maintenance projects.

In addition to the current building causing “a huge waste of energy,” Kaminski cited “extensive roof leaks in winter” as one of the primary reasons for the renovation.

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Two members, including chair, resign from the Commission on the Future of Public Education in Vermont

June 25, 2025
By Corey McDonald/VTDigger Two members of the Commission on the Future of Public Education in Vermont, including the commission’s chair, announced last week they would be resigning, saying they no longer believed their efforts would make any impact. Meagan Roy, the chair of the commission, and Nicole Mace, the former representative of the Vermont School Boards…

Vt plastic bag use dropped 91% following ban, researchers find

June 25, 2025
In the midst of 2020 Covid measures, another change took place in Vermont: A law went into effect banning businesses from offering plastic bags to customers, with paper bags only available for a fee. A 2023 analysis of a survey of hundreds of Vermonters found the law appeared to have worked. Plastic bag use in…

Pride in Rutland: Flags, resistance, and showing up

June 25, 2025
By Emily Pratt Slatin Pride returned to downtown Rutland this June with more color, noise, and purpose than ever before. What began as a joyful celebration quickly became something deeper—something that felt like resistance. And belonging. And a promise that no one in this community has to stand alone. The day kicked off with the…

Plan to manage 72,000 acres of the Telephone Gap project is finalized

June 25, 2025
Staff report The U.S. Forest Service issued its final plan for managing 72,000 acres of public and private land on June 16. The proposed Telephone Gap Integrated Resource Project area is located on the Green Mountain National Forest (GMNF) within the towns of Brandon, Chittenden, Goshen, Killington, Mendon, Pittsfield, Pittsford, and Stockbridge. “The Telephone Gap project is…