Phil Scott unveiled a sweeping education finance reform plan aimed at right-sizing the state’s school system and making it more affordable on Wednesday.Vermont’s rising education costs and talk of reform have been kicking around Montpelier for years,
Phil Scott's team revealed their plan to change education funding in Vermont. Scott's plan will eliminate supervisory unions in the state and create five school districts across Vermont. Each will have one school board and one superintendent.
Vermont Governor Phil Scott focused his weekly briefing Tuesday on housing policies he hopes to champion during the legislative session.
The Vermont Supreme Court is hearing arguments Wednesday in a case state lawmakers filed against Gov. Phil Scott and interim Education Secretary Zoie Saunders.
After his own landslide victory and Republican gains in the Legislature, the governor said voters have signalled Vermont is moving in the wrong direction. To fix it, he pledged to propose ambitious legislation.
The Scott administration is proposing a transition to a foundation formula, a commonly used way of paying for schools that would give more power to the state.
Part of the governor’s plan to make building housing units in Vermont faster and easier will be making the appeal of housing project permits more difficult.
The governor’s package of proposed changes would address the detention of repeat offenders and would repeal the remaining stage of Raise the Age.
Vermont’s governor thinks the state got out over its skis when it comes to setting targets for reducing carbon emissions.
The message came at Wednesday's meeting of the Emergency Board, a state panel that includes Gov. Phil Scott and chairs of the Legislature’s revenue and budget committees.
Two state lawmakers sued the governor last year, after he appointed Zoie Saunders to serve as an interim Secretary of Education after she was rejected for the job by the Vermont Senate.