ESSEX VOTES
I believe one of my roles as a parent is to teach my son to use his voice – to advocate for himself and for others. I encourage all Village Voters to use your Vote as your Voice on April 13th. We are all tired of voting and the rhetoric that has surrounded this particular vote, but now is not the time to remain silent. Our community and state leaders need to see that we are all engaged in making decisions for our future. A high voter turnout is essential for what happens next. I urge those who have not voted yet and who have questions on any ballot articles to seek out reliable sources for information. I recommend www.greateressex2020.org for merger information, the Village Annual Report at www.essexjunction.org for information on the Village municipal items and www.ewsd.org for the school related items. Please take the time to read and vote on the articles on both sides of the ballot. Rep. Dolan and I provided our opinion on the Plan of Merger and you can find our statement at www.lorihoughton.com. Ballots must be returned to the town office ballot box by Monday April 12th or directly to the Essex High School polling location on Tuesday April 13th for your vote to be counted. Please reach out to Rep. Dolan or I with questions. Our contact information is: lhoughton@leg.state.vt.us or KNDolan@leg.state.vt.us. LEGISLATIVE UPDATE Impacts of the American Rescue Plan Act on Health Insurance: The House Health Care Committee received updates over the past two weeks on the health insurance changes for 2021 and 2022 in The American Rescue Plan Act signed into law on March 11th. If you purchase through Vermont Health Connect and have made too much money to receive financial help in the past, you may be able to receive financial help this year. Vermonters who receive premium tax credits will likely receive higher amounts, so your monthly bill from Vermont Health Connect may go down. You can also choose to get the entire tax credit when you file federal taxes. Details are still being worked out but the latest information including how to apply, financial help estimates, and updates for Vermonters who got unemployment benefits in 2021 can be found at INFO.HEALTHCONNECT.VERMONT.GOV/ARPA. To get financial help, Vermonters must enroll in health insurance through Vermont Health Connect. If you currently purchase health insurance directly through an insurance carrier, like BCBS or MVP, the parties are working on a process to help customers switch to Vermont Health Connect if they would like to. Information about this process will be posted to the above webpage as it becomes available. Also remember, now through May 14, 2021 Vermonters without health insurance have a special enrollment period to get Vermont Health Connect coverage. Bills passed by the House: The House approved an amended version of H.315, a mid-session COVID recovery bill, on a roll-call vote of 141-5. H315 allocates $97.5 million in federal stimulus funds to support businesses, schools, housing, workforce development, broadband and more. The bill represents a close collaboration between the House and Senate to provide timely economic relief to Vermonters in all 14 counties, relying primarily on federal COVID-19 stimulus funds. Highlights include: • $15 million to help schools improve indoor air quality; $5.5 million for summer meals for families; $4 million for afterschool and summer programs. • $10.5 million in Economic Recovery Bridge Grants, primarily for businesses impacted by COVID-19 that have not received any prior state or federal COVID-related aid. • $10 million to support community initiatives to strengthen the outdoor recreation economy, and to improve access to public outdoor recreation areas such as trail heads, boat launches and state parks. • $10 million to provide safe shelter and housing for low-income and at-risk Vermonters; $5 million to stabilize low- and moderate-income homeowners and prevent foreclosures. • $8.2 million to the Vermont State Colleges, UVM and VSAC to provide up to two free classes to adult Vermonters looking to boost job skills or change careers, to provide up to two free classes to all 2020 and 2021 high-school grads, and to train more LPNs. • $4 million to make mental health services more accessible; and $1.3 million to support ReachUp families. • Plus allocations for working lands, broadband, environmental clean-up, and New Americans and immigrants. Finally, H.315 also includes some tax language. For the tax year 2020 only, we are allowing the federal exclusion on the first $10,200 of unemployment insurance income from a taxpayer’s gross income, so long as that taxpayer’s adjusted gross income is less than $150,000. For businesses, it also carries through the 2020 federal treatment of Payroll Protection Program (PPP) forgivable loans as exempt from taxation. PPP loans converted to grants in 2021 will be treated like any other business income and subject to tax. The bill returns to the Senate with a proposed amendment; and then heads to the Governor for hopeful signature. H225 an act that decriminalizes small quantities of non-prescription buprenorphine was passed with a roll call vote of 126-19 in favor. Under current law, the possession of small amounts of "street bupe" is a misdemeanor in Vermont statute. H.25 lifts the penalty for 224 milligrams or less (a 1-2 week supply). Why was this passed? Some Vermonters use non-prescribed buprenorphine as a step before coming into Medication Assisted Treatment (MAT) under the care of a doctor. MAT is the gold standard, the evidence-based treatment for individuals with opioid use disorder. While possession of a small supply of non-prescribed buprenorphine is rarely prosecuted in Vermont, this legislation will provide clarity and equity across all 14 counties. For those under age 21, H.225 also aligns the statute for buprenorphine with that of cannabis and alcohol. Youth under 16 years of age stay within the court’s family division, while youth 16-21 years of age are cited with a civil violation. Opioid use disorder continues to be a public health crisis in Vermont. During this COVID-19 pandemic, the state has seen a 38 percent increase in overdoses. This legislation will save lives. Please continue wearing masks, washing hands, and practicing physical distancing. If you or someone you know needs help during this difficult time, please reach out to Representative Dolan or I and we will do our best to connect you with appropriate services. Contact us at lhoughton@leg.state.vt.us or KNDolan@leg.state.vt.us. Be kind to each other and yourself. Rep. Lori Houghton 802-373-0599 lhoughton@leg.state.vt.us
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Village Annual Meeting ballots are arriving in the mail alongside opinion pieces on the Plan of Merger. We urge every voter who has questions on any ballot articles to seek out reliable sources for information. We recommend www.greateressex2020.org for merger information, the Village Annual Report at www.essexjunction.org for information on the Village municipal items and www.ewsd.org for the school related items.
We miss Village Annual Meeting. Sharing a community dinner while talking about local issues and catching up with neighbors is one of the many things that make our Village special. We are missing this opportunity to engage in person on the important issues in front of us, but the use of mail-in ballots does ensure all voters who want to vote can do so easily. Although all our social media outlets are engaged in talks of merger and separation – this voting opportunity is also about the Village and EWSD municipal budgets; Trustee, Moderator, Library, and School Board elections; as well as other important municipal items. Please take the time to read and vote on the articles on both sides of the ballot. We do support the current Plan of Merger of the Town of Essex and the Village of Essex Junction into one new community that will value the unique identities of our various neighborhoods while ensuring we have the focus and resources for future opportunities and challenges. Over 70% of Village voters supported merger in the November 2020 election and over 80% in the March election. And yes, we are frustrated that we are voting again. But this is democracy in action. Due to a mere 19 vote difference in the March vote residents worked within the statutory framework for a reconsideration vote. We support their efforts and encourage everyone to vote. This question is found at the bottom of the ballot under Special Meeting Town of Essex, VT Article 1. We also support the Village Article 6 which is a non-binding resolution directing the Trustees to create a charter for an independent City of Essex Junction – or in other words a charter to separate from the Town of Essex – if the Plan of Merger fails. We have heard from numerous residents that the status quo is not acceptable and if merger doesn't pass, they want a clear path for change. Conversations about our combined or separate futures have occurred over decades. The conversation that led to this Plan of Merger consideration started over 3 years ago. Although we want the Plan of Merger to pass, we know the Village will need to begin focusing their efforts on its own future challenges and opportunities if it fails. Sending a substantial amount of our tax revenues to services that are duplicative to ones in our own community is not sustainable. But we need to be clear – separation is not guaranteed. Trustees and community members will need to work diligently to craft a new charter. Then another Village community wide vote will need to occur. Finally, the Legislature would need to approve the charter passed by our community. Each step will encounter tough decisions and hurdles that may not be overcome. While merger provides a clear path to efficiency, transparency, and immediate action. Community member’s perspectives on merger are as vast as our beautiful mountainsides. Here we provide our perspective: many years ago, Heart and Soul of Essex discovered that the Town of Essex and Village of Essex Junction residents possess a clear set of shared values – Education, Community Connections, Safety, Thoughtful Growth, Health and Recreation and Local Economy. We believe these values hold true today and that the commitment to make Essex the best it can be runs deep. We will strengthen these values with the passage of our current merger plan that provides tax equity and fair representation. We will strengthen these values as we forge a new path forward holding strong to what makes us each special while uniting behind one vision. Please vote. Rep. Karen Dolan Rep. Lori Houghton LEGISLATIVE UPDATE
This past Friday marked crossover in the statehouse. The day all policy bills must be voted out of committee to potentially pass to the other chamber (money bills have another week). Any bills not voted out will remain “on the wall” until next year. Our time quickly shifts from majority committee discussion to House floor debate. You can find the House calendar at hc210316.pdf (vermont.gov) and watch all proceedings on zoom at Vermont House of Representatives - YouTube. Last week the Vermont House gave overwhelming approval, 144-1, to H.128, banning the LGBTQ+ "panic defense.” This bill prohibits the legal tactic of allowing a defendant to claim that a victim's sexual orientation or gender identify is to blame for the defendant's violent reaction, including murder. H.128 moves to the VT Senate for consideration. A few of the bills passed out of House committees this week include: H.210 an act relating to addressing disparities and promoting equity in the health care system is an important step forward in systematically transforming our systems of care. H.171 an act relating to the governance and financing of Vermont’s child care system continues laying the foundation for Vermont’s future early childhood education system with an overarching, aspirational goal: that a family not spend more than 10 percent of its gross annual income on child care by 2025. H.101 Grant funding for systems-driven, sustainable literacy supports provides grant funding to supervisory unions to build systems-driven, sustainable literacy supports for students with measurable outcomes. This bill offers additional support to supervisory unions in implementing Act 173 (landmark special education reform bill passed in 2017) and transitioning to best practices recommended in the District Management Group “Expanding and Strengthening Best-Practice Supports for Students Who Struggle.” Because these three bills require money, they will move to the House Appropriations committee for testimony and a vote. You can read these, and all bills, at Bill, Act & Resolution Search (vermont.gov). ESSEX VOTES After a close outcome on the plan of merger vote a group of residents collected signatures for and presented petitions to both the Town Selectboard and Village Trustees. With both petitions the presenters requested that the votes associated with the petitions occur on April 13th when both communities are already voting on other subjects resulting in a substantial savings to our communities. This request was made within the necessary 30-day time for reconsideration votes allowed by state statute. The outcome of these petition requests for residents is outlined below. Plan of Merger: All Town of Essex residents, which include Village residents, will vote again April 13th on the plan of merger. The plan is the exact same plan we voted on in March. A majority yes vote means the two communities will merge, a majority no vote means the two communities will not merge. A yes votes sends the plan to the Vermont State Legislature for approval. Non-binding advisory vote on separation: Village residents only will vote to advise the Trustees ‘’if the current Plan for Merger with the Town of Essex does not pass, the Board of Trustees shall draft a charter to create the independent City of Essex Junction, for consideration by the Village of Essex Junction voters no later than November 2021.” This vote advises the Trustees on the resident’s desire for the future of the community. A majority yes vote means the residents want the Trustees to create a new charter to separate the Village from the Town. A yes vote does not mean an immediate separation as Village residents would vote again in November on the proposed charter. A no vote would leave the question of the Village’s future back at the Trustee table. A yes vote in November sends the plan to the Vermont State Legislature for approval. On April 13th all Town residents will vote on the school board articles and Village residents will also vote on Annual Meeting articles including the Village budget. Rep. Dolan and I will continue to provide updates on the upcoming votes, but please do not hesitate to reach out to either of us with questions. VACCINATIONS UPDATE: Vermont is progressing steadily in our vaccination efforts. Please visit Getting the COVID-19 Vaccine | Vermont Department of Health (healthvermont.gov) for the most up-to-date information. If you or someone you know needs help during this difficult time, please reach out to Rep. Dolan or I and we will do our best to connect you with appropriate services. Contact us at lhoughton@leg.state.vt.us or KNDolan@leg.state.vt.us. Please continue wearing masks, washing hands, and practicing physical distancing. Be kind to each other and yourself. Rep. Lori Houghton 802-373-0599 Lhoughton@leg.state.vt.us The days are getting longer, and the vaccinations are continuing - two things I am grateful for. I hope everyone is enjoying the sunshine when we have it.
If you or someone you know needs help during this difficult time, please reach out to Representative Dolan or I and we will do our best to connect you with appropriate services. Contact us at lhoughton@leg.state.vt.us or KNDolan@leg.state.vt.us. VOTE All active voters received their Town Meeting Day ballot in the mail. If you have not yet voted, please bring your ballot to the Town offices by Monday March 1 or ballots may be returned in person at the polling places on Tuesday, March 2 from 7:00 am to 7:00 pm. If you did not receive a ballot in the mail, you may vote in person Tuesday, March 2nd. The polling place for Village of Essex Junction voters is the Essex High School. Please do not mail your ballot as it will not be received in time for your vote to be counted. This vote is for the Plan of Merger, Town of Essex budget and Selectboard members. Remember as Village residents we are also residents of the Town. This means we vote the Town of Essex budget now and the Village budget in April. We also vote as residents of the Town on the plan of merger between the Village of Essex Junction and the Town of Essex. Yes, the Village voters passed this plan last November, but we must vote again as a Town of Essex resident – this vote matters. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Town Meeting will be an informational online meeting Monday March 1 starting at 7:30pm. This year we will have a brief update from Congressman Peter Welch. How to join and more information is available at www.essexvt.org. LEGISLATIVE UPDATE The Vermont House gave approval last week to nearly $80 million in additional COVID-19 RELIEF & RECOVERY AID for Vermonters. H.315 provides critical assistance to working families and businesses struggling due to the pandemic. The intent of the funding is to address health disparities, increase social equity, and stimulate economic recovery. The COVID-19 relief package includes funding for:
SPECIAL HEALTH INSURANCE ENROLLMENT The State of Vermont is offering a COVID-19 Special Enrollment Period for Vermonters to enroll in a qualified health plan and receive premium and cost-sharing assistance, if eligible. Please apply by CALLING the State’s Customer Support Center at 855-899-9600, M-F, 8 am-4:30 pm, NOT ONLINE. Vermonters declared ineligible in the past are welcome to apply again. More details here: https://info.healthconnect.vermont.gov. This enrollment period is open through May 14th 2021. VACCINATIONS UPDATE: Starting 8:15 a.m. on Monday, March 1, people in Vermont who are age 65 and older will be able to make their appointment to receive the COVID-19 vaccine. Going online to healthvermont.gov/myvaccine is the fastest way to make an appointment and provides information on the process. I recommend you visit the site now to create an account to be ready to make the appointment starting Tuesday. If you already have an account because you were tested for COVID-19 through a Health Department site, use the same account to make your appointment. Family members and friends are encouraged to assist their loved ones with the online system as needed. Anyone who is unable to make their appointment online, or who needs to speak with someone in a language other than English can call 855-722-7878. The call center is open Monday to Friday 8:15 a.m. – 5:30 p.m. and Saturday and Sunday 10:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m. Please continue wearing masks, washing hands, and practicing physical distancing. Be kind to each other and yourself. Rep. Lori Houghton |