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Scott signs biggest transportation budget bill ever

The Vermont Agency of Transportation recently finished rebuilding the Rte. 2 drawbridge in Grand Isle County. (AOT photo)

By Guy Page

Gov. Phil Scott Monday, June 12 signed into law H.479, Vermont’s biggest transportation budget ever. 

Annual transportation budget spending in the coming fiscal year totals $851 million. A ledger of all proposed transportation spending appears in H.494, the 2023-24 state budget approved by the Legislature, vetoed by the governor, and the subject of a possible override next week. It surpasses last year’s record transportation spending of $829 million.

“This year’s T-Bill is the largest ever, making significant investments in Vermont’s infrastructure,” Scott said. Much of the revenue is federally funded. However, DMV fees are scheduled to increase by 19.8%. Spending includes:

Other bills signed into law June 12:

H.31 (sponsored by Rep. Seth Bongartz, D-Manchester) creating an aquatic nuisance control committee to study use of pesticides in Vermont waters.

H.67 bans sale of hazardous household products (including those sold in pressurized cans) not covered by a government-approved, industry operated recycling program (Lead sponsor Kari Dolan, D-Waitsfield). 

H.227 clarifies power of attorney with the Vermont Uniform Power of Attorney Act (Martin LaLonde, D-S. Burlington). H.414 establishes an unused legal drug repository for Vermont. Drugs donated by pharmaceutical companies, etc., would be distributed to low-income Vermonters.

H.414 establishes an unused legal drug repository for Vermont. Drugs donated by pharmaceutical companies, etc., would be distributed to low-income Vermonters.

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