Vermont
Vermont passed a $71.8M housing bill and modernized Act 250 land use. Federal funding threats and housing costs drive the 2026 races.
Latest: June 15, 2026 Latest BriefVermont Childcare Housing BlockJune 15, 2026Democrats and Progressives control both chambers of the Legislature. Republican Governor Phil Scott, now in his fifth term, governs by veto. After Republicans gained seats in 2024, Democrats lost the guaranteed votes to override him on every bill.
The result is a state where the progressive majority passes laws and the governor blocks them — or forces compromises that water them down. In the last full session, lawmakers overrode six of eight vetoes. That math no longer holds.
Education property taxes are crushing Vermont families
Education property taxes have risen more than 40% in the past five years. A 38% spike hit in 2024 alone. Another 12% increase was projected for 2026.
40%+ increase in education property taxes over five years
Vermont funds schools through a statewide property tax pool. Every community’s budget decisions affect tax rates everywhere. Enrollment keeps dropping. Spending keeps rising. Small towns in Addison County are carrying more than $100,000 in unpaid education property taxes.
Governor Scott proposed $105 million in one-time money to buy down the 2026 rate increase by roughly half. He is threatening to veto the state budget unless lawmakers pass legislation forcing school district consolidation. The Legislature’s version — Act 73 — relies on voluntary mergers. Scott says voluntary is not enough.
If lawmakers pass spending caps
- Projected 10% tax increase drops to roughly 5%
- School districts face mandatory consolidation timelines
- Small districts lose local governance
If the current system continues
- Property taxes keep compounding at double-digit rates
- Rural homeowners fall further behind
- Towns carry growing unpaid tax balances
82% of school budgets were approved by voters in March 2026, even with the property tax outlook. Voters want their schools funded. They also cannot afford the bill.
Vermont does not have enough homes
Governor Scott issued Executive Order 06-25 to streamline housing development, accelerate permitting, and reduce regulatory barriers. The order also eases building energy efficiency standards — putting housing goals in direct tension with the state’s legally binding climate commitments.
The housing shortage drives up rents, pushes families out of the state, and makes post-flood recovery harder. When homes are destroyed in a flood and there is nowhere else to live, the shortage becomes a public safety problem.
Vermont keeps flooding and the state is making oil companies pay
Vermont flooded in 2019, twice in 2023, and again in 2024. Rivers that never used to overflow are overflowing regularly. Entire downtowns have been rebuilt and flooded again within twelve months.
In 2024, between two rounds of catastrophic flooding, Vermont became the first state to pass a Climate Superfund Act. The law requires oil companies to pay for climate-related damage based on their share of global emissions. Industry groups are challenging it in court. Initial briefing concluded in early 2026.
”Vermont passed this law between two devastating floods that hit the same communities in the same year. The question is simple: who pays to rebuild?”
Vermont Natural Resources Council, supporting the Climate Superfund ActThe Legislature also passed a modernized Renewable Energy Standard through the Senate, and S.138 would expand the C-PACE program to let commercial and industrial buildings finance efficiency and resilience upgrades through property assessments.
Who This Affects
Montpelier residents, State capital, population 8,000
Downtown Montpelier was devastated by flooding in July 2023. Businesses rebuilt through the fall. In January 2024, the Winooski River flooded again. Some owners who had just finished repairs lost everything a second time.
Based on documented cases and public data.
The governor’s veto pen got stronger
Phil Scott is one of the few Republican governors in a deep-blue state. He wins by running on fiscal moderation and affordability while the Legislature passes progressive policy. The tension between them is the defining feature of Vermont politics.
| Session outcome | Before 2024 | After 2024 |
|---|---|---|
| Veto override success rate | 6 of 8 vetoes overridden | Supermajority cracked — overrides no longer guaranteed |
| Republican seats | Fewer seats in both chambers | Gained enough to break the two-thirds threshold |
| Scott’s leverage | Limited — Legislature could override nearly everything | Significant — his veto now sticks on close votes |
”The Legislature’s veto overrides impose more costs on Vermonters and disproportionately harm rural Vermont.”
Governor Phil Scott, explaining his veto strategyThis is not a governor who signs whatever lands on his desk. Every progressive bill that passes with fewer than two-thirds support now lives or dies on whether Scott agrees. On education spending, housing regulation, and climate enforcement, his position is the ceiling.
2026 elections
The August 11 primary and November 3 general election will determine whether Vermont keeps a Republican governor or elects a Democrat for the first time since 2010.
If Democrats win the governor’s office, the veto dynamic flips entirely. Bills on climate enforcement, housing, education funding, and energy standards would reach a governor willing to sign them. If Scott wins a sixth term, the current standoff continues for two more years.
Protect yourself right now
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Check your voter registration. The August 11 primary is the first gate. Verify your status at mvp.vermont.gov. Vermont allows same-day registration, but checking early avoids lines and surprises.
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Know your property tax bill. Your town clerk can show you how your education property tax rate changed this year. If you are struggling to pay, ask about the state’s property tax credit and income sensitivity programs before the filing deadline.
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Attend your school board meeting. Consolidation decisions are coming whether the Legislature mandates them or not. Your board needs to hear from residents before any merger vote.
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Call the governor’s office. 802-828-3333. Ask where he stands on the Climate Superfund Act and whether he will sign or veto the Legislature’s education funding approach.
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Know your flood risk. Check your property at floodready.vermont.gov. If you are in a flood zone, confirm your insurance covers the actual cost of rebuilding. FEMA flood maps have not kept up with Vermont’s changing river behavior.
Show Up Locally
South Hero Independence Day Parade with Indivisible Champlain Islands
Visibility Event · Indivisible Champlain Islands
South Street & Landon Road, South Hero, VT, 05486
March with Indivisible Champlain Islands in the South Hero July 4th Parade to celebrate the 250th Birthday of the USA! Meet at South Street and Landon Road at 10:45 AM for an 11:00 AM start. See you.
We the People! Celebrate Independence on Shelburne Rd, South Burlington
Visibility Event · Champlain Valley Indivisible
1001 Shelburne Rd, South Burlington, VT, 05403
Join friends and neighbors on Shelburne Rd in South Burlington to celebrate 250 years of government of the people, for the people, and by the people. This roadside visibility event will celebrate the.
Milton-Westford-Georgia Weekly Honk & Wave for Democracy
Visibility Event · Indivisible
259 US-7, Milton, VT, 05468
This is how our community pushes back. By standing together, out in the open, for what’s right. We gather weekly in front of Hannaford's for a peaceful, visible show of resistance, neighbors standing.
Northern Vermont Stands Up for Democracy
Visibility Event · Indivisible
1210 Main St, Fairfax, VT, 05454
Authoritarianism is quickly creeping into our country and YOU are needed to stop it! Get off of the sidelines and join your friends and neighbors who are already standing up for the Constitution, the.
St. Albans Stands Up for Democracy
Visibility Event · Indivisible
Saint Albans, VT, 05478
Our country is waiting for you to take a stand!!! Join your friends and neighbors who are already standing up for the Constitution, the rule of law, and our DEMOCRACY! Each Saturday, rain or shine.
Fairfax July 4th Parade
Community Event · Indivisible
Fairfax, VT, 05454
We invite you to come out and join Green Mountain Alliance Indivisible community in the Fairfax July 4th Parade! The parade begins at 1:00PM at St. Luke's on Huntville Rd just off Main St. and.
Drinks for Democracy!
Community Event · Indivisible Hardwick
154 VT-15, Hardwick, VT, 05843
Democracy tastes better with good drinks and great people. Come out for an evening of games, prizes, and community. If you believe in the freedoms and inalienable rights protected by the U.S.
Stand Up for Democracy in Malletts Bay with Champlain Valley Indivisible
Visibility Event · Champlain Valley Indivisible
Colchester, VT, 05446
Join friends and neighbors on the sidewalks along W. Lakeshore Drive and Blakely Road, near Bayside Park. We'll be demonstrating our support for democracy, the Constitution, and the rule of law.
What Changed Recently
Vermont's Childcare Gap Shrank 19%. Housing Costs Are Blocking the Rest.
Vermont cut its childcare gap by 19% in two years under Act 76, but home-based providers can't expand when the state's homeowner vacancy rate sits at just 1.2%.
Vermont Banned Paraquat. It's the First U.S. State to Do So.
Governor Scott signed H.739 on May 26, banning the herbicide linked to Parkinson's disease. The full ban takes effect December 31, 2030. More than 32 countries have already banned it.
Vermont Let Residents Sue Federal Agents for Excessive Force
Vermont H.849 allows residents to sue federal officials for excessive force, illegal searches, and other constitutional violations. Republican Governor Scott let it pass without his signature.
Half of Maine's Rural Hospitals Are at Risk of Closing and Medicare Just Cut Telehealth Coverage
Half of Maine's 24 rural hospitals face closure. Medicare ended telehealth flexibilities in January 2026. The broadband gap makes it worse.
Forest Service Ends 120-Year Structure. 60 Research Stations May Close.
Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz is dissolving the regional office structure Gifford Pinchot created in 1905, replacing it with 15 state director offices
Unions Sue DoD After Hegseth Canceled All CBAs in 24 Hours.
AFGE and NFFE filed suit July 3, 2026, alleging the Defense Department violated the Administrative Procedure Act when it canceled collective bargaining
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