State Government

What’s in the $8.3 billion state budget?

Governor Phil Scott June 9 signed the $8.3 billion 2022-23 state budget into law.

H.740 appropriates $8.126 billion across all funds, and with $178 million allocated in related bills, state appropriations for Fiscal Year 2023, which begins on July 1, total $8.304 billion, according to a statement released by Scott’s office.

New spending, funded through H.740 and other bills, includes:

  • Workforce: $66 million to train, retain and recruit more workers.
  • Tax Relief: $40 million in tax relief for Vermonters.
  • Broadband: $96 million to continue the state’s work to make broadband available to all Vermonters.
  • Climate Change Mitigation: $225 million for initiatives that will help reduce carbon emissions, including investments in weatherization and to help transition to electric vehicles and more efficient home heating solutions, as well as fund to help make communities more resilient to the impacts of climate change.
  • Water, Sewer and Stormwater Infrastructure: $104 million to improve and expand water infrastructure that will support economic growth, ensure clean drinking water, help families replace failed systems and more.
  • Economic Development: $87 million for initiatives that will help retain jobs, support businesses and strengthen communities.
  • Housing: $90 million to increase and improve rental housing, build more homes for middle-income Vermonters, help families exit homelessness and more. 

Additionally, this budget includes more funding to support Vermonters and healthy and safe communities, including $8.1 million more to respond to the opioid and addiction epidemic, $3.9 million more for childcare subsidies, $2.4 million for mobile crisis response and suicide prevention, and $11 million to address public safety dispatch services.

“The investments we made this year will make a difference for Vermonters, building stronger communities, providing some tax relief, supporting kids and families and helping address long-term challenges like our workforce shortage and regional economic inequity,” said Governor Phil Scott. “I know far too many Vermonters are struggling with the high cost of living and employers are struggling to fill good jobs. Our work will not be easy, and these investments will not solve every problem, but this budget will do a lot of good, and we are committed to doing all we can to help our state recover and grow stronger.”

Full details on the bill can be found, here.

Categories: State Government

2 replies »

  1. Just so we all, as I understand it, know that all this Federal money /spending is what has resulted in the current horrific inflation and budget deficit! Not that anyone cares. Such short-sightedness.

  2. $225 million earmarked for unicorn flatulence and fairy dust. $96 million earmarked for broadband – yet, last year there was apparently all ready $350 million in the till for that project (not to mention this broadband “promise” started in 2007!) $104 Million for infrastructure – Congress passed $2.1 trillion infrastructure package last fall – Vermont earmarked $2.2 billion in federal money. A small State of roughly 645,000 people had a budget of over $7 billion last year and balloons to over $8 billion this year. Millions and billions of dollars supposedly in this State to improve all sorts of things for over a decade. Wind mills and solar panels that don’t meet power needs? Roads and bridges still not fixed. Water and sewer systems over 70 years old? Vermont is a cesspool of corruption.