Issue Updates from the State House
Week of April 20, 2026
A weekly snapshot of key legislative activity impacting Vermont’s business community.
- Housing: The Senate Economic Development, Housing, and General Affairs Committee reviewed H.775, continuing discussions on the off-site construction pilot program, report timelines, and balancing funding with permitting priorities. It remains uncertain which of the two housing bills advanced this session will move forward as the vehicle to incorporate shared provisions.
- Bottle Bill: The Senate Natural Resources and Energy Committee reviewed amendments to H.915, establishing a temporary funding mechanism for moving towards a Producer Responsibility Organization and increasing handling fees on beverage distributors The short-term funding is expected to fall short of the costs required for implementation, while higher handling fees could increase operational burdens across the system.
- Act 250: The House Environment Committee began work on amendments to S.325, repealing the road rule and tier 3 from Act 181. The bill will add a study on protecting natural resources and create a new oversight committee to deal with increasingly problematic regulatory processes.
- Education: The Senate Education and Senate Finance Committees began reviewing H.955, addressing both policy and funding components of the bill. With limited cost savings in the House-passed version and three weeks remaining, the bill falls to the Senate to ensure meaningful education finance reform.
- Mileage Based User Fee: Legislative Committees reviewed changes to H.944, the omnibus transportation bill that would advance a phased-in mileage-based user fee beginning at 1.4 cents per mile for electric vehicles in 2027, with potential expansion to most vehicles by 2031. While ensuring sustainable transportation funding is critical, broader discussions around new fees highlight the need to also address underlying statewide spending challenges.
- Vocational Rehabilitation: The House Commerce and Economic Development Committee advanced S.173, which includes additional education for injured employees and a working group to evaluate potential improvements. This approach maintains program stability while laying groundwork for future enhancements. The bill now moves to the House Floor.
- Water Connections: The House Environment Committee continued work on S.212, adding streamlined general permits for subdivision of empty land and boundary adjustments. These changes could help reduce delays and costs associated with permitting processes, making development more efficient.
- Career Technical Education (CTE): The House Commerce and Economic Development Committee advanced S.313, adding additional considerations for student access and transportation. While making few structural changes, the bill queues up alignment with broader reform and moves toward aligning workforce training with industry needs. The bill now moves to the House Education Committee.
- Sister State: The Senate Economic Development, Housing, and General Affairs Committee advanced H.674, concurring with the House-passed bill. The bill now moves to the Senate floor.
- Alcohol: The Senate Economic Development, Housing, and General Affairs Committee advanced H.921, adding a requirement that malt beverage manufacturers maintain records of distribution and sales under expanded self-distribution allowances. The bill now moves to the Senate floor.
- Yield Bill: The Senate Appropriations Committee advanced H.949, allocating $100.9 million in one-time funding for a significant property tax buydown and bringing the average increase to 3.8%. While this approach lowers short-term property tax increases, it relies on anticipated education cost savings that have yet to be realized. The bill now moves to the Senate Floor
- Tax Conformity: The Senate Appropriations advanced H.933, preserving the language used by the Senate Finance Committee to make targeted updates to Vermont’s tax code, including provisions to enhance the state’s research and development environment. The bill now moves to the Senate Floor.
- Budget: The Senate Appropriation and Finance Committees advanced H.951, funding a $9.4 billion budget and investing additional onetime funds in additional economic development programs, including the Rural Industrial Development Program, the Small Business Law and Development Centers, and the first generation homebuyer program. These changes reflect thoughtful investments in programs that align efficient spending with growth opportunities. The bill now moves to the Senate Floor
- Event Ticketing: The Senate Economic Development, Housing, and General Affairs Committee reviewed a new draft of H.512, clarifying definitions of ticket resellers, and adding a 2028 sunset to the regulation as a check back mechanism to ensure effectiveness.
- Franchise Agreements: The Governor signed into law H.733, a bill requiring businesses filing with the Secretary of State to indicate if the business is operating as a franchisee or franchisor. This new regulation will take effect January 1, 2027.
- Non-compete: The House General and Housing Committee advanced S.230, creating distinctions between exempt and nonexempt employee non-compete contracts and banning non-competes for non-exempt employees starting on July 1st. The bill now moves to the House Floor

