Commentary

Harrison: Veto session a safe bet

With the tulips in full bloom last week at the State House, it was a sure sign that Mother’s Day was approaching.
Happy Mother’s Day to all the moms out there!

by Rep. Jim Harrison

After a week of long days and late nights, the regular session of the 2024 Vermont Legislature adjourned early Saturday morning just after 2 am. My best guess in the annual adjournment pool was 6:30 pm Friday evening, which turned out to be way too optimistic.

When the legislature finishes its work for the session, they do so with an adjournment resolution. It states that if the Governor vetoes any bill after the legislature leaves, they will return to consider those vetoes. If he doesn’t, the full legislature is adjourned sine dine, which means the 2023-24 biennium is done until a new legislature is seated in January.

While I may have lost the adjournment pool, it is a very safe bet there will be gubernatorial vetoes over the next several weeks and the legislature will be back on June 17.

The closing days of the session are inevitably a roller coaster ride with some bills seemingly dead for the year, only to come to life again as a deal with the other Chamber materializes. The deadline of getting a bill passed today or it goes away can be a significant motivation for the House and Senate to settle their differences. Such was the case with a major data privacy bill, H.121, where a late Friday compromise was reached to allow both Chambers to agree and send the bill onto the Governor.

Different to this session (in a positive way in my view) was the willingness of House and Senate negotiators to work with the Governor to find a path forward to craft the final budget bill that will likely receive Scott’s approval. Last year the legislature overrode the Governor’s veto to enact it into law.

However, there is a list of bills being sent to Scott that could be veto candidates. Chief among them is the education finance legislation, H.887, which contains the yield number to set the statewide property tax rate. The bill includes an average 13.8% property tax increase (local rates will vary depending on individual school spending and a town’s CLA, common level of appraisal). It also includes a study about potential future changes to the education financing system and ways to reduce costs. While the overall tax increase was less than the 18% estimate at the beginning of the session, the legislation lowered that rate by adding the sales tax to online software, increasing the rooms tax on short term rentals by 3% and utilizing surplus funds.

The danger in using one-time surplus money to “buy down” rates is that it could exacerbate the increase next year when those funds are unavailable. The Governor has been critical of the lack of any cost containment measures in the bill. If vetoed, legislative leaders will need to either work with Scott to find a compromise or muster the votes to override the veto.

A few other bills that could face additional scrutiny from the Governor include:

H.72, safe injection sites

S.259, climate superfund cost recovery fund

S.213, river corridors

H.766, prior authorization for health care

H.289, renewable energy standard

With safe injection sites, Scott does not support enabling illegal drug use, while supporters believe it will save lives. On other bills, Scott’s focus has been on whether they increase costs to Vermonters. It is unknown whether the Act 250/Housing bill, H.687, will receive his approval. The administration has been critical of some of the Act 250 changes that make it more difficult to build in rural towns, but support changes easing some of the housing restrictions in downtown areas.

In closing, thank you for your interest in my legislative updates during this past session. This concludes my regular reports, but I will provide updates as pertinent information becomes available in the coming months.

I plan to seek re-election this fall as the State Representative for the Rutland-11 district (Chittenden, Mendon, Killington, and Pittsfield) and will be collecting petition signatures to get on the ballot in the coming weeks.

In the category of life after the legislative session is over, I had to laugh recently when we offered to help out with our three Atlanta grandsons so their Mom and Dad could enjoy a break for their June anniversary. It turned out that even before we could offer, Graham, who is 12, had already checked out the Red Sox schedule and pointed out that the Sox were playing the Atlanta Braves during that period…and yes, tickets were available. Just a little hint to his grandparents… Looking forward to the summer ahead!

Ben Partridge, son of former longtime Rep. Carolyn Partridge, opened the last day of the 2024 session performing on the bagpipes. It marked a special end to a long week.

Other News

Hericium Americanum, commonly known as the bear’s head tooth mushroom, is now the Vermont state mushroom. The measure was the advocacy project of students from two Windham County schools.

“Tap trees – not Vermonters” was the theme this past week at a press conference that brought about 100 people to the State House to criticize legislation, such as the renewable energy bill and increased property taxes, that could make Vermont less affordable.

Vermont Legislature adjourns after a contentious 2024 session
vtdigger

At the 11th hour, lawmakers strike compromise on Act 250 reform
Vermont Public

Lawmakers Reach Deals and Adjourn After a Marathon Late-Night Session
Seven Days

In compromise, budget panel agrees to new limits on motel housing program
Vermont Public

Senate’s education funding bill makes dent in tax increase but kicks the can on big change
vtdigger

Wild divide: A debate over wildlife management in Vermont runs deep
vtdigger

Advocates fear public safety bill could send more Vermont children to prison
Vermont Public

Killington is the East’s largest ski resort. A developer wants to expand on that in a big way.
vtdigger

Author serves as the state representative for the Rutland-11 district, which includes Chittenden, Killington, Mendon & Pittsfield.


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2 replies »

  1. I’d be interested in how much money is spent on spring, summer, and fall plantings in front of the State House . Wouldn’t perennials be cheaper ? One and done !

  2. It doesn’t matter what King Philip the 1st Eunuch King of Castrati vetos the Commiecrats supermajority overrides him. They put him there. “Look how diverse we are everybody we have “Republican” governor he’s the most popular governor in the nation”. What a joke.