Legislation

Former Lt. Gov. Brian Dubie pens protest song targeting Act 181

By Guy Page

Former Vermont lieutenant governor Brian Dubie has turned to music to voice criticism of Act 181 and the economic pressures facing working Vermonters, composing what he describes as a protest song highlighting rising property taxes and stagnant wages in key rural industries.

Vermont lieutenant governor Brian Dubie

Dubie wrote the words to ‘Act 181 Coming, Vermont Working Lands Squeeze’ himself, and used AI to compose and perform the music – something he and wife Penny often do for their children’s birthdays. Listen here:

Dubie, a Republican who served as the state’s 80th lieutenant governor from 2003 to 2011, shared lyrics this week while balancing work in his family’s maple sugaring operation and serving as vice-chair of the Fairfield Selectboard. In a brief message before today’s interview on Hot Off The Press, he noted he was “pulling taps in our sugar woods” and short-handed due to a family member recovering from surgery, underscoring the hands-on perspective reflected in the song.

The lyrics paint a picture of mounting financial strain across Vermont’s agricultural and resource-based sectors. Referencing a sharp increase in property taxes, the song opens: “Property taxes jumped forty-one percent in five years flat / While we’re bustin’ our backs just to keep the lights on, that’s a fact.”

Verses go on to describe dairy farmers, maple producers, and loggers struggling with stagnant pay and rising costs. “Milk check’s stuck in neutral while the costs put on a show,” Dubie writes, while another line highlights maple producers facing low wholesale prices despite strong production. Loggers, he adds, are seeing returns that “barely cover” fuel expenses.

The song also references Act 181, a recently debated land-use and development measure, suggesting it is contributing to what Dubie characterizes as a tightening squeeze on working lands and rural livelihoods.

Dubie has remained active in Vermont public life since his narrow loss in the 2010 gubernatorial race. In addition to his political career, he is a retired commercial airline pilot and served in the Vermont Air National Guard, retiring from the U.S. Air Force Reserve as a colonel.

The lyrics reflect a broader political and economic debate in Vermont over affordability, land use policy, and the future of traditional logging, sugaring, and farming industries.

State officials and supporters of Act 181 have argued the measure is intended to guide sustainable development and balance growth with environmental protections, while critics, including Dubie, contend it may add pressure to already struggling sectors as well as limit rural property rights.


Discover more from Vermont Daily Chronicle

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Categories: Legislation

4 replies »

  1. The road rule and tier 3 need to be repealed not delayed the democrats want to buy time hoping for super majority again or change in governor.
    Back in 2020 fmr senator Chris Bray had a PR0009 constitutional amendment sponsored by most of them introduced in the senate.
    It never went anywhere but think about Act181 tier3 when reading
    further.
    Here is excerpt of the bill PR0009 to show this communist inspired plan.
    “The State of Vermont’s natural resources are the common property
    of all the people. The State shall conserve and maintain the natural resources of Vermont for the benefit of all people”
    Land owners rights destroyed
    The democrats are persistent and sneaky so everyone push to REPEAL not delay

  2. I wanted to get my previous Comment out to the readers so fast I sent it without saying a BIG THANK YOU to Brian Dubie putting the problems
    with road rule and tier3 to music.
    GREAT JOB

  3. Great song. I’m glad you used words like , “stealin and robbin”. It’s the way I see it. Act 181 should be repealed. It is terrible the way The Vermont Legislators treat rural Vermonters. Property taxes keep going up but our incomes don’t.

  4. Looks like Brian Dubie is singing the same song that many retired persons in Vermont have been saying for a long time. With his two retirement checks he should be in good shape. Now, is the land he owns in the current use program????Everyone knows the crooks in the statehouse are in it for themselves. Still dealing with my five thousand gallon overcharge water problem with St. Albans City and their new crooked cash cow investment meters. Comment from Richard Day with no apology.

All topics and opinions welcome! No mocking or personal criticism of other commenters. No profanity, explicitly racist or sexist language allowed. Real, full names are now required. All comments without real full names will be unapproved or trashed.