Data Privacy Bill Advances with Significant Changes Following Intense Debate

Data Privacy Bill Advances with Significant Changes Following Intense Debate

After two years of debate, negotiation, and advocacy, S.71, Vermont’s comprehensive data privacy legislation, officially passed the Legislature this week after the House approved the bill and the Senate concurred with House changes. The legislation now heads to Governor Phil Scott.

For Vermont businesses, the final version of S.71 reflects substantial movement from earlier proposals in the House that would have made Vermont a significant national outlier. While the legislation still creates new compliance obligations for businesses operating in the state, the final product more closely aligns with surrounding states and regional privacy frameworks, creating a more workable path forward for Vermont businesses and organizations navigating increasingly complex state privacy laws.

The Vermont Chamber was a chief advocate for Vermont’s business community throughout this process, consistently pushing for a balanced approach that protects consumer privacy while maintaining regional compatibility and avoiding provisions that would unnecessarily disadvantage Vermont businesses.

Significant credit is owed to Senator Thomas Chittenden for initially sponsoring legislation grounded in a more regionally compatible framework, as well as the members of the House Commerce and Economic Development Committee, who continued working toward a practical path forward even as national lobbying groups pushed for Vermont to adopt far more aggressive first in the nation standards.

Debate on the House Floor became unusually contentious after the bill’s reporter delivered remarks that many viewed as mischaracterizing the work of her own committee and the extensive negotiations during the committee process. The representative voted against the bill she was reporting before moving on to lobby senators to reject concurrence. For an institution that traditionally operates with a high level of decorum and professionalism, this situation stood out from the normal legislative process.

The Senate ultimately voted to concur with the House version, recognizing the inclusion of an 18-month implementation timeline that provides lawmakers additional opportunity to revisit the law if adjustments are needed before it takes effect.

Key Components of the Final Bill

The final version of S.71 includes:

  • Consumer rights to access, correct, delete, and obtain copies of personal data held by businesses.
  • Opt out rights for targeted advertising, sale of personal data, and certain automated profiling activities.
  • New requirements around privacy notices, consumer consent for sensitive data, and data security practices.
  • Protections for sensitive data categories include health information, biometric data, precise geolocation, and information related to minors.
  • Applicability thresholds that limit the law to businesses processing significant amounts of consumer data rather than sweeping in every Vermont small business.
  • Exemptions for many federally regulated entities and data are already governed under laws such as HIPAA and Gramm-Leach-Bliley.

The Vermont Chamber will continue working with policymakers, stakeholders, and our members during implementation to ensure the law is interpreted and applied in a way that protects consumers while maintaining Vermont’s economic competitiveness.

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Megan Sullivan

Vice President of Government Affairs

Economic Development, Fiscal Policy, Healthcare, Housing, Land Use/Permitting, Technology

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Conference Committees Finalize Education Reform and Yield Bills

Conference Committees Finalize Education Reform and Yield Bills

After weeks of negotiations, conference committees finalized agreements Thursday night on both H.955, the education transformation bill, and H.949, the annual yield bill. Both measures are expected to receive final votes in the House and Senate today and together represent the Legislature’s attempt to address both the immediate cost of Vermont’s education system and its long-term structure.

The two bills are interconnected. H.949 determines how Vermont funds education next year and what property tax rates taxpayers will face, while H.955 lays out the structural reforms lawmakers hope will slow future cost growth and stabilize the system over time.

This connection matters for Vermont businesses. Employers continue to raise concerns about affordability, workforce attraction, housing costs, and Vermont’s overall competitiveness. Education spending is one of the largest drivers of property taxes, which directly impacts businesses, employees, and the cost of living statewide.

H.949: The Yield Bill

The yield bill establishes the education property tax rates needed to fund Vermont’s education system for FY27, while also incorporating several policy changes intended to support the transition envisioned in H.955.

Key provisions include:

  • $100 million property tax buy down
    Lawmakers used approximately $100 million in one-time funds to reduce the education property tax increase for FY27. That buy down lowered the statewide average property tax increase to approximately 3.5%, significantly below what many communities were originally projecting.
  • FY27 property tax yields
    The agreement sets the property dollar equivalent yield at $9,401 and the income yield at $12,960. The nonhomestead tax rate was set at $1.643 per $100 of equalized property value.
  • Excess spending penalty transition
    Rather than immediately imposing the full excess spending threshold, the conference committee created a phased transition between FY28 and FY32, gradually tightening the threshold over time.
  • Property tax relief expansions
    The bill expands renter credits and circuit breaker style property tax relief programs for lower income Vermonters, increasing renter credits and raising income eligibility thresholds.
  • Tuition growth limits
    Beginning in FY28, tuition increases paid to public and approved independent schools would be capped based on statewide education spending growth.
  • Alignment with foundation formula transition
    The bill includes several technical and conforming changes tied directly to the future implementation of the foundation formula established under H.955.

While the lower average property tax increase will provide short term relief, the agreement relies heavily on one-time money to buy down costs for a second consecutive year. In many ways, lawmakers put part of the education funding challenge on a credit card that will eventually need to be reconciled in future years. This increases the pressure on policymakers to ensure the structural reforms contemplated in H.955 actually produce long-term cost containment.

H.955: Education Transformation Bill

The final conference committee agreement on H.955 moves Vermont further toward statewide education restructuring, while stopping short of mandatory school district mergers.

Key elements of the agreement include:

  • Creation of merger committees statewide
    School districts across Vermont will be grouped into regional merger committees that are tasked with studying and recommending potential governance consolidation opportunities. The conference committee finalized 20 regional groupings covering districts throughout the state.
  • Continued movement toward regionalization
    While mergers are not directly mandated, districts are expected to participate in a formal review and planning process that is intended to encourage larger, more regionally coordinated governance structures.
  • Foundation formula transition
    The bill continues Vermont’s transition toward a foundation funding formula, which would significantly change how education funding is distributed beginning later this decade. Several timelines in the bill were accelerated during negotiations.
  • Limits on tuition and supplemental spending
    The agreement includes guardrails intended to control future spending growth, including restrictions on schools charging tuition above public tuition amounts and limits on supplemental district spending above educational opportunity payments.
  • Legacy debt aid
    The bill creates a new legacy debt aid structure that would provide districts with 75 percent aid on eligible school construction debt approved before the end of 2024, though eligibility is tied to participation in the merger process.
  • Class size and operational standards
    The conference committee also refined definitions and implementation timelines around class size standards and district quality requirements.

Why These Bills Matter Together

Together these bills reflect the Legislature’s acknowledgment that Vermont’s education finance system faces both immediate affordability pressures and long-term structural challenges.

H.949 attempts to manage next year’s property tax impacts while H.955 seeks to create a framework for longer term cost containment and governance reform. Whether these reforms produce meaningful cost stabilization remains an open question, but the conference committee agreements signal that lawmakers are attempting to connect short term tax policy with longer term structural change.

For employers, the stakes are significant. Property taxes impact commercial taxpayers directly while also influencing housing affordability, workforce retention, and Vermont’s broader economic competitiveness. Businesses have consistently identified affordability as one of the largest barriers to growth, and these bills will likely shape that conversation for years to come.

Both bills now head to the House and Senate floors for final action today.

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Megan Sullivan

Vice President of Government Affairs

Economic Development, Fiscal Policy, Healthcare, Housing, Land Use/Permitting, Technology

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Issue Updates from the State House | Week of May 25, 2026

Issue Updates from the State House

Week of May 25, 2026

A weekly snapshot of key legislative activity impacting Vermont’s business community. 

Housing: The House and Senate advanced S.328, maintaining permitting language from H.775 that will streamline housing development and reduce regulatory barriers. The bill now moves to the Governor’s Desk.

 

Telecommunications: The House concurred with changes made by the Senate to H.527, ensuring telecommunication improvement projects remain within the Public Utility Commission approval process for another three years. The bill now moves to the Governor’s Desk.

 

Primary Care: The House and Senate advanced S.197, a bill exploring expansion of primary care services and potential movement toward a universal primary care model. The bill now moves to the Governor’s Desk.

 

Event Ticketing: The Governor signed into law H.512, curbing excessive resale prices of event tickets and strengthening protections for venues using online ticketing platforms.

 

Career Technical Education (CTE): The House and Senate advanced S.313, moving forward a bill that will continue CTE on a path toward integration with broader education reform. bill now moves to the Governor’s Desk.

 

Budget: The Committee of Conference for H.951 advanced a compromise bill, concurring with the Senate-proposed funding for the Small Business Law and Small Business Development Centers and the Rural Industry Development Program, ensuring that businesses will retain access to vital growth and development tools. The bill now moves to the Senate Floor.   

 

Bottle Bill: The House and Senate advanced H.915, with the House rejecting proposed amendments that would have delayed implementation of the increased handling fee estimated to cost distributors nearly $2 million. The bill now moves to the Governor’s Desk.

 

Tax Conformity: The Committee of Conference for H.933 advanced a compromise bill, concurring with the Senate-proposed one year delay for changes to qualified small business stocks and maintaining critical tax federal tax conformity changes. The bill now moves to the Senate Floor.

 

Land Use: The House and Senate approved the conference committee’s report on S.325. The bill now moves to the Governor’s Desk.

 

Healthcare Savings: The House and Senate advanced S.190, directing health care savings at select groups, and slowing relief for the wider commercial market. The bill now moves to the Governor’s Desk.

 

Cannabis: The House and Senate advanced S.278, moving forward with a cannabis event permit pilot program. The bill now moves to the Governor’s Desk.

 

Wastewater Systems: The Senate advanced S.212, concurring with changes made by the House. The bill now moves to the Governor’s Desk.

 

Sister State: The Senate advanced H.907, concurring with changes made by the House to adjust and advance the Sister State program. The amended language now moves to the Governor’s Desk.

 

Data Centers: Governor Phil Scott vetoed H.727, a bill regulating large-scale data centers, saying it would add unnecessary regulation beyond existing oversight through Act 250, environmental permitting, and utility regulation. While acknowledging concerns about large-scale data centers, Scott warned the measure could discourage investment and job growth in advanced manufacturing, semiconductors, clean energy, and other key Vermont industries. Legislators were ultimately unsuccessful in overriding the veto on a vote of 83-52

 

Who’s running? The filing deadline for candidates in the 2026 primary for major parties was due yesterday. Find out who is running in your district

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