2022 Legislative Crossover Update

“Crossover” describes the deadlines by which policy bills and those with money involved have to pass one chamber in order to make it through the process in the same year. Good news: H.501 on regulating depackaging technology made crossover! Read on for status updates on other priority bills including H. 273 - BIPOC land access and opportunity bill and S. 166 - improving liability of utility companies for poor workmanship.

Contents:

H. 501 on regulating depackaging technology passed the House

H.501, as recommended out of House Natural Resources and passed by the House

Rural Vermont is part of the Protect Our Soils Coalition that advocates for the passage of H.501 to regulate depackaging facilities that aim to mechanically separate food residuals from their packaging, including plastics, with a greater likelihood of the end products to be contaminated with micro and nano plastics. The depackaging process can result in microplastics ending up in compost or methane digestate produced with this material, which then ends up in farm soils when it is applied. Some packaging materials contain PFAS (forever chemicals) that could end up in soils as well. In 2018 the Vermont Agency of Natural Resources reinterpreted key provisions of the Universal Recycling Law governing the management of discarded food and allowed for the use of mechanical depackaging technology to separate food from packaging. Our coalition argued that this would negate the ‘source separation requirement’ which had been established in 2012 and requires generators of food residuals to separate these from other recyclable materials, like their packaging, and trash.  

Our bill, H. 501, would establish a moratorium on further permits for food depackaging facilities, charge the Vermont Agency of Natural Resources to conduct a collaborative stakeholder process that would report on the management of the materials produced by those facilities, including an assessment of the amount of microplastics, plastics, or other contaminants present in the materials produced from depackaging facilities. Stakeholders would also be charged to recommend ways on how to implement the source separation requirement and the organics management hierarchy in a more stringent manner. These recommendations will then be subject to a subsequent rulemaking process of the Vermont Agency of Natural Resources. 

We are hopeful that this bill will pass the Senate as the current language of the bill originated in the Senate Committee of Natural Resources and Energy which already started to pick up their work on the bill this week! Contact Senators from the committee now and express your support for H.501 as well as the importance to consider our coalition's recommendations: find their contact information here.

News: Website launch of the Protect Our Soils Coalition - learn more about this important issue here!

Protect Our Soil Coalition Testimonials: 

S. 166 - Poor Workmanship of Utility Companies Causing Animal Welfare Issues

S. 166, An act relating to utility construction worksites and consumer protection, as recommended out of the Senate Judiciary.

This important bill did not pass through the Senate in time to make the crossover deadline. The good news is that legislators did not want to fall short on their ultimate goal of getting this complicated liability issue right and thus resisted in passing the latest version of the bill that did fall short of their expectation to prevent instances of poor workmanship of utility companies like the one that still impacts the Hoyt Family in Tunbridge today in the future as well as providing sufficient liability coverage. Part of the struggle is to find the best way to ensure that if subcontractors don’t have sufficient insurance coverage that the contractor becomes liable.

On Friday afternoon, the last day of crossover, the committee started to review a third proposal that would have required the Vermont Public Utility Commission (PUC) to issue an order, instead of a rulemaking process, to specify requirements about contractors and their subcontractors working on pole attachments. The proposal also included establishing best practices for safe removal and disposal of construction worksite debris and requirements for proofing sufficient insurance coverage to ensure a robust chain of custody. Senators expressed support for the quick turnaround on this third proposal to get at their intent to create the best protection while also providing flexibility to the PUC to find the best way of regulating this. Unfortunately, the PUC has not had a chance to provide input to the proposal prior to the hearing and questioned the practicality of this approach given the scope and limitations of existing PUC domains. 

Chair Cummings of the Senate Finance Committee announced that the committee will continue to work on language to include in a miscellaneous insurance bill instead so that her committee will continue to be working on finalizing language during this second half of the session. Lead Champion of this work, Senator Ruth Hardy, has a seat in the committee and will continue to push to get this done. The committee already started brainstorming other ideas like the one of Senator Serotkin to establish a joint liability between contractors and their subcontractors. 

Watch the recording from the last Senate Finance hearing prior to crossover on 3/11/22 here.

View this comparison chart of the three different proposals to date here

H. 709 - An act relating to miscellaneous agricultural subjects

This miscellaneous agricultural bill has passed the House Committee on Agriculture and Forestry after a single (!) hearing. The bill addresses a wide array of agriculture-related issues, including:

  • slight changes to the on-farm business standards—which removes a single word to clarify that 50% of a sold product needs to be “produced on the farm at which the business was located”—as well as changes to general powers that now allow the Agency of Agriculture (AAFM) to serve enforcement and other documents electronically rather than by mail. The latter change prompted some discussion among Senators from the Agriculture Committee- who already started to discuss this bill more thoroughly- about rural Internet access as well as concerns that a served party could overlook the electronic notice. 

  • changes to how AAFM considers licensing applications and would allow AAFM to assess whether an applicant already has any pending violations to a  license they already hold.  To the surprise of some of the legislators, AAFM does not currently have a system in place to consider pending violations during the licensing process.

  • changes to mosquito control district treatment options, only allowing in-kind larvicide treatments as a result of ongoing litigation about adulticide.  This proposed change has received pushback from one mosquito district in Rutland County, which the committee heard testimony on the week after H.709’s introduction.

  • changes to language and definitions to produce inspection that would better align state policy with the corresponding Federal Information Security Modernization Act (FISMA).  In response to this, committee Chairman Bobby Starr (D, Essex-Orleans) inquired about the degree to which current practices would change to come into compliance with federal law, as well as whether these changes would open opportunities for Vermont to engage more with an interstate market.  Both issues were referred to VAAFM for further inquiry.  

  • H.709 also aims to bring Vermont’s hemp regulations in line with federal law, changing some language and ensuring that hemp can be considered an ag product. Changes to the enforcement of non-conforming hemp product are being simplified through remediation by the extraction of Delta-9-THC so the non-conforming hemp can be brought into compliance and introduced into the market.

  • Finally, H.709 makes some changes to farm permitting certification.  The bill suggests the repeal of the required notice of change of ownership and lease for permitted small farms. Under this change, there is no need to report the selling of a permitted small farm.  Some changes to medium farm permitting make it easier for medium farms to retain existing permits, but keeps the more rigorous permitting process for new permit applicants.

Status: H.709, originating in the House Committee on Agriculture & Forestry, has crossed over to the Senate and was introduced to the Senate Committee on Agriculture on March 8th, 2022 (watch initial walk-through here).

S.258 - Housekeeping Bill

Originally, this bill was drafted to amend the Required Agricultural Practices to address climate resiliency (see bill as introduced here). The idea to test how waterproof the RAP’s are to meet the challenges of the changing climate, including the flood resiliency of our agricultural soils, had been stressed by environmental organizations prior to the session (read the related VTDigger article here). After taking testimony from VAAFM on the issue the committee dismissed the original language given that VAAFM is underway to open up the RAPs for amendments anyways this year. Instead, the bill was amended to become another miscellaneous or housekeeping bill for VAAFM and now includes (read the bill as passed out of committee here):

  • provisions to streamline requirements for being in good standing with the agency in order to access programs and funding;

  • tweaks to provisions regarding waste storage facilities and the management of non-sewage waste - including a permit requirement prior to transporting non-sewage waste to the farm;

  • a repeal of the provisions for incentive grants for Nutrient Management Plans;

  • a minor tweak to the capital Equipment Assistance Program;

  • the inclusion of soil-based practices in the eligibility for the Farm Agronomic Practices Program;

  • an extension of the task force to revitalize the VT Dairy industry.

Status: The bill is currently moving on the Senate floor and has a good chance to make crossover this week!

S. 148 Environmental Justice Bill

S.148, An act relating to environmental justice in Vermont, as recommended out of Senate Natural Resources Committee on 2/25/22

This important legislation seeks to establish an explicit environmental justice policy in Vermont where “no segment of the population should, because of its racial, cultural, or economic makeup, bear a disproportionate share of environmental burdens or be denied an equitable share of environmental benefits.”  The bill encourages the redirection of agency funding to these underserved groups, and the mechanisms and tools in S.148 that, if passed, will attempt to achieve this goal include the creation and adoption of agency-specific community engagement plans, the establishment of an Environmental Justice Advisory Council and an Interagency Environmental Justice Committee, and agency inventory of the past three years of spending to identify where certain communities have been underserved along with annual reports on agencies’ redirection of funds.  

The bill sets the ultimate goal of having each agency direct at least 55% of overall environmental benefits to “environmental justice populations,” which the bill defines as census block groups that an annual median household income of less than 80% of the state median, have a BIPOC population of at least 6%, and 1% or more of households have limited English proficiency.  In a recent Senate Committee on Natural Resources meeting, it was noted by Elena Mihaly, Vice President of the Conservation Law Foundation, that those “benefits” may not necessarily be monetary benefits, and that the 55% figure is a goal and not a requirement.  

The Environmental Justice Advisory Council would serve to advise participating agencies on how to incorporate environmental justice procedures into their operations to ensure equitable distributions of funds and benefits.  The bill encourages the Advisory Council to have as diverse a membership as possible, with 50% of its members residing in environmental justice populations.  In recent committee hearings on S.148, a topic of significant discussion was how to ensure that the Advisory Council’s feedback is taken into consideration, particularly during the rulemaking process.  The Interagency Committee, which includes representation from each relevant state agency, would be tasked with developing guidance on community engagement plans and determining which agency investments provide environmental benefits.

The efforts of S.148 would largely be led by the Agency of Natural Resources (ANR) and the bill explicitly names the other agencies and departments that would be subject to the adoption of environmental justice policies: “Agencies of Natural Resources, of Transportation, of Commerce and Community Development, of Agriculture, Food and Markets, and of Education; the Public Utility Commission; the Natural Resources Board; and the Departments of Health, of Public Safety, and of Public Service.”  

The bill was voted out of the Senate Natural Resources and Energy Committee on Friday, February 35th with a bipartisan 5-0 vote.

Forest bills: Forest Future Program (H.566) and Current Use (H.697)

H.697, An act relating to eligibility of reserve forestland for enrollment in the Use Value Appraisal Program 

H.566, An act relating to the establishment of the Vermont Forest Future Program

Since our last update, the H.697, An act relating to eligibility of reserve forestland for enrollment in the Use Value Appraisal Program, a bill that opens up a new avenue for forestland to be enrolled into Current Use, passed the House and has crossed over to the Senate. As of March 16, it has not yet been introduced to the committee.  As we wait for more committee discussion on this bill, read our previous write-up on the content of H.697 here!

         Another forest bill of interest is H.566, An relating to the establishment of the Vermont Forest Future Program.  It is unclear whether this bill will make it in time for the crossover deadline out of House Appropriations and through the House floor. As of March 16, H.566 remains in the House Committee on Appropriations with a deadline of March 18 to be voted out.  As we await the fate of H.566, read our initial write up on it here.

Racial Equity and Land Access 

H.273 - An act relating to promoting racial and social equity in land access and property ownership

The Vermont House Committee on General, Housing, and Military Affairs has continued taking testimony.  An amended draft was proposed on February 16th.  On February 22nd, Seeding Power Vermont (the organization spearheading efforts on H.273) hosted an online celebration during which they provided updates on the bill.  The following is information and calls to action shared by Seeding Power.  We have heard that the Committee may not continue to work on this bill since our Feb. 25 update, and that there may be support for moving the program to another piece of legislation.  Please continue to make your voice heard in support of this bill.

Information on H. 273 shared by Seeding Power:

  • Creates a $10 million dollar BIPOC Land Access Opportunity Fund.

  • Establishes an independent Board that will direct investment of the fund into grants for individual and collective land access and property ownership, financial assistance, and anti-racist mutual aid.

  • Expands financial education and resource management programs for BIPOC.

  • Was designed by a BIPOC-led team with widespread BIPOC network and community input.

  • Calls for the independent Board to be made up of Vermonters who have historically suffered from discrimination and who have not had equal access to public or private economic benefits due to race, ethnicity, sex, geography, language preference, immigrant or citizen status, sexual orientation, gender identity, socioeconomic status, or disability status.

  • Explores mortgage assistance for BIPOC and tax benefits for BIPOC and owners.

Calls to action shared by Seeding Power:

  • Share your name and where you live

  • Describe your support for H. 273, the BIPOC-led Land Access & Opportunity Act

  • Share why you support the bill, and make it as personal as possible

  • Ask your legislature to commit to championing this bill

  • Find your legislator here.

  • House Committee on General, Housing, and Military Affairs Committee Page

A little more information compiled by Rural VT:

Did you know? 

  • Between 1920 and 1997, the number of African Americans who farmed decreased by 98 percent, while white Americans who farmed declined by 66 percent OR at the time of World War I there were 1 million black farmers, and in 1992 there were 18,000

  • In Pigford v. Glickman 1997, thousands of black farming families won settlements against the USDA for discrimination between 1981 and 1996; with outlays over $2 billion

  • TIAA is a pension company originally set up for teachers and professors and people in the nonprofit world. Investment in farmland has proved troublesome for TIAA in Mississippi and elsewhere. “In Tunica County, where TIAA has acquired plantations from some of the oldest farm-owning white families in the state, black people make up 77 percent of the population but own only 6 percent of the farmland.”

Read More in The Great Land Robbery - The shameful story of how 1 million black families have been ripped from their farms, by Vann R. Newkirk II, theatlantic.com, September 2019 Issue.

Cannabis Bills

S.188 (Amended Version moving now) - Agriculture, Wholesaler allowances, etc.

H.701 (Recent amendment can be found in here) - Fees, Social Equity

We continue to work to influence primarily two bills related to the coming recreational cannabis market: S.188 and H.701.

S.188 has moved from the Senate Agriculture Committee to the Senate Finance Committee and if voted out will move to the Senate Floor, where it is likely to pass over to the House.  On February 11, Sen. Pearson and Chair Pepper (CCB) said the quiet part out loud about S.188 and the market the legislature has designed:

Sen. Pearson:  “I guess I worry that at some level we will be almost guaranteeing that they [outdoor cultivation operations greater than 1,000 sq ft] will not be happening on current farms because the cost benefit analysis will be difficult for a farm to consider if the cannabis plot could be subject to local zoning… a different regulatory scheme….”

James Pepper (Chair of the CCB):  “...small cultivation, those playing at 1,000 sq ft or less will be playing with a different playbook no matter what… and this is just one of the kind of growing pains we’re going to have to suffer through.  My only concern is that this bill doesn’t get across the finish line…”

After this exchange, the Senate Agriculture Committee voted out S.188 without including our recommendations, or those of any of the many people we brought in to testify before a joint hearing of the House and Senate Agriculture Committees for our Small Farm Advocacy Day focused on cannabis.  It may be acceptable to the Senate Ag Committee that meaningful participation in this economy by farmers will likely not happen due to the barriers they have put in place - but it is not acceptable to Rural VT and the VT Cannabis Equity Coalition.

Graham, RV Policy Director, testified (see app. 40 min. mark) in the Senate Finance Committee on February 23rd, in support of our recommendations (proposed changes and background information) and the lack of action related to them from the legislature.  He received little support there, despite testimony from the Fiscal Office supporting his concerns related to farmers’ challenges entering the market.  See our specific proposals here, and more background info here.

H. 701 is the cannabis “fee bill”.  This bill must pass this year in order for the market to roll out.  It includes the fees for licensing, as well as specific Social Equity components.  Our primary Social Equity goal right now is integrating one of our, and the CCB’s (Jan. 15th Report, Slide 25), most significant Social Equity recommendations into H. 701 (or another legislative vehicle) which would:  

  • bring 20% of excise tax revenue from this market to a “reinvestment fund” to invest in the needs of communities impacted, and disproportionately impacted, by the criminalization of cannabis

  • bring 5% of the excise tax to the Cannabis Development Fund (a fund established by the legislature to fund social equity initiatives largely within the industry, but which has no source of ongoing funding).  

The legislature has put forth no plan to act on this fundamental social equity recommendation from the CCB and our Coalition despite its statutory obligations and expressed prioritization for social equity.  We have contacted House and Senate Leadership, Chairs of various committees, and more seeking their support.  

Bring your voice to the table!

Contact your representatives to make sure the State’s profits from this market share in the repair of, and generating of opportunities for, communities who have been harmed by the criminalization of this plant; and that this market protects and supports cultivators, product manufactures, and consumers - the primary actors and producers - rather than providing disproportionate privileges and power for wholesalers, retailers, and vertically integrated dispensaries.  

Contact your representative and copy:

  • All tiers of outdoor production given the status of agriculture

  • Direct market access for producers, product manufacturers, and consumers

  • Increased home grow allowances that bring VT closer in line to other States

  • For Social Equity:

    • Contact the House Speaker Jill Krowinski (jkrowinski@leg.state.vt.us) and Senate Pro Tem Becka Balint (bbalint@leg.state.vt.us) urging action on this Social Equity provision fundamental to the statutory goals and obligations of the legislature:

      • bring 20% of excise tax revenue from this market to a “reinvestment fund” to invest in the needs of communities impacted, and disproportionately impacted, by the criminalization of cannabis

      • bring 5% of the excise tax to the Cannabis Development Fund (a fund established by the legislature to fund social equity initiatives largely within the industry, but which has no source of ongoing funding).  

Neonicotinoid Pesticides

H. 626 - An act relating to the sale, use, or application of neonicotinoid pesticides

In recent weeks, the House Agriculture & Forestry Committee has taken testimony from over 20 expert witnesses on H.626 - a bill that would prohibit the use of neonicotinoids unless the Agency of Agriculture, Food & Markets (AAFM) creates regulations that protect pollinators from exposure.  It was recently passed out of committee after the adoption of significant amendments proposed by Cary Giguerre and the Agency of Agriculture reducing its focus to only treated seeds, including funding for 2 agency positions only partially related to the subject of the bill, and potentially not including the needed focus on immediate transition away from the prophylactic use of neonics.  The bill will likely pass through the House and then move to the Senate Committee on Agriculture where we will continue to advocate.

"Neonics" are regularly applied as a seed coating on corn and soybean seeds to protect seeds from early season pests. Currently, nearly all corn seed planted in the state is coated with these pesticides whether or not there is a known pest threat that calls for them.  The impacts of neonics which are understood broadly in the scientific community.  Beekeepers, agronomists, researchers, and farmers have presented powerful, science-based testimony making the case that widespread use of neonics is harming bees and other non-target insects while not, in most cases, helping farmers' bottom lines. As Vermont beekeepers report record losses (up to 50% of hives are dying annually), one beekeeper told the committee, "There's a saying in the industry that we're no longer beekeepers - we've become bee replacers."

H.626 originally included recommendations for neonicotinoids made to the legislature by the Pollinator Protection Committee in 2017. Despite having been granted the authority to regulate treated seeds, the Agency of Agriculture has not acted on these recommendations.  Rural VT, NOFA VT, and the Lake Champlain Committee had proposed an amended version of H.626 which Graham (RV) introduced to the Committee in his testimony to House Agriculture on February 17th.  The amended version phased out the prophylactic use of neonics by providing a deadline by which AAFM must work with the newly created Agriculture Innovation Board, agricultural service providers, and others to develop and administer this IPM protocol and training, and to support farmers in transitioning away from prophylactic use of treated seed further by assisting in sourcing seed not treated with neonics.  In addition to phasing out the use of neonic treated seeds, we are calling for an appropriate Integrated Pest Management (IPM) protocol and training for farmers and service providers.  

We are working across organizations to determine paths forward as we anticipate the bill moving to the Senate Committee on Agriculture, and to also consider the potential revision of the VT Pesticide Rules.  

In the meantime, we are pursuing emergency funding for beekeepers and apiaries through the legislature and will keep you updated on how you can support those efforts!

Surface Water Withdrawal Regulation

H.466 - An act relating to surface water withdrawals and interbasin transfers

H.466 is a bill which seeks to regulate surface water withdrawals which moved very quickly through the House Natural Resources Committee, has now passed the House, and has now been introduced in the Senate Natural Resources Committee.  We hope that the Senate Committee process is more deliberate and inclusive of the voices of the people living in VT who may be affected by this legislation.  Now is the time to consider offering testimony and contacting your representatives and members of the Senate Committee on Natural Resources to voice your concerns and ideas for this bill.  This week and next they are scheduling in testimony.  

Rural VT has been concerned about and monitoring conversations about H.466 among farmers, will support farmers providing testimony as is needed, and will offer our own testimony. We have heard substantial concerns from many different farmers about this bill: from extremely low thresholds for inclusion in registration and metering, to the eventual permitting program envisioned in the bill, to the lack of consideration of how this water is used, and the overall positionality and impact of agricultural water use in VT in comparison with other uses.

Some excerpts / key features of the bill identified by the VT Veg and Berry Association include:

Registration. Beginning on January 1, 2023, any person withdrawing 5,000 gallons or more of surface water within a 24-hour period shall register with the Secretary. Registration shall be made on a form provided by the Secretary, and shall include the following information:

(1) the location of each withdrawal, including each impacted surface water;

(2) the frequency and rate of each withdrawal;

(3) a description of the use or uses of the water to be withdrawn;

(4) the capacity of the system to be used for the withdrawal; and

(5) a schedule for the withdrawal.

(a) Program development. On or before July 1, 2026, the Secretary shall implement a surface water withdrawal permitting program that is consistent with section 1041 of this subchapter provided by the Secretary and shall include all of the following information:

(1) the total amount of water withdrawn each month;

(2) the location of each withdrawal, including each impacted surface water;

(3) the daily maximum withdrawal for each month;

(4) the date of daily maximum withdrawal; and

(5) any other information required by the Secretary.

(c) Methods of estimating withdrawals. The following methods shall be used to report the amounts of withdrawn surface water required to be reported under subsection (b) of this section:

(1) Withdrawals of between 5,000 and 50,000 gallons of surface water in a 24-hour period shall either provide an estimate of total volume or provide meter data. The report shall describe how any estimate was calculated.

(2) Withdrawals of more than 50,000 gallons of surface water in a 24-hour period shall provide meter data.

.....

(5) establish limitations on withdrawals based on low flow or drought conditions and the development of potential alternatives to meet surface water withdrawal needs in such cases; and

(6) require assessment of any reasonable and feasible alternatives to proposed withdrawals that may have less of an impact on surface water quality.

What can you do?

  • Contact your representative and the Chair of the Senate Natural Resources Committee, Christopher Bray (cbray@leg.state.vt.us) and tell him how this law may affect you.

  • Join a conversation with other producers about your concerns and make a time to testify in the Senate Natural Resources Committee:  contact Graham@ruralvermont.org

S.268 – The Right to Farm Bill

Based on current information, the Senate Judiciary Committee will take no further action on S.268 this session. They do intend to include a provision in their Misc. Judiciary Bill recommend that revisions to Vermont’s Right to Farm Law should be reconsidered in 2023. The committee noted that the conclusion of the lawsuit concerning pollution from the Vorsteveld Farm near Lake Champlain should inform any revisions to the Right to Farm Law. 

Rural Vermont
Legislative Update 2.28.22

H. 501 on regulating depackaging technology passed the House

H.501, as recommended out of House Natural Resources and passed by the House

Draft No. 3.1 of H.501 includes the language our Protect Our Soils coalition suggested that includes a moratorium on further permitting of food depackaging facility while also charging ANR to facilitate a collaborative stakeholder process that would further research the use and impact of the existing facility in preparation of a rulemaking process on depackaging technology. 

In a strike-all amendment these suggestions replaced the original language of the bill that would have set a contamination standard for soil amendments. Testimonials have shown that science and technology are in the midst of developing more consistent methodologies for analyzing contamination levels of composts with plastics of all the various particle sizes in an efficient way. Rural Vermont recommended in testimony to leave setting contamination standards to the upcoming VAAFM rulemaking process, on the regulation of on-farm composting of food residuals and soil amendments, because of the lower bar to be inclusive of farmer perspectives. Farmers  perspectives will be critical on questions about entry barriers, liability for contaminants, testing cost and frequency in the upcoming rulemaking process. 

S. 148 Environmental Justice Bill

S.148, An act relating to environmental justice in Vermont, as recommended out of Senate Natural Resources Committee on 2/25/22

This important legislation seeks to establish an explicit environmental justice policy in Vermont where “no segment of the population should, because of its racial, cultural, or economic makeup, bear a disproportionate share of environmental burdens or be denied an equitable share of environmental benefits.”  The bill encourages the redirection of agency funding to these underserved groups, and the mechanisms and tools in S.148 that, if passed, will attempt to achieve this goal include the creation and adoption of agency-specific community engagement plans, the establishment of an Environmental Justice Advisory Council and an Interagency Environmental Justice Committee, and agency inventory of the past three years of spending to identify where certain communities have been underserved along with annual reports on agencies’ redirection of funds.  

The bill sets the ultimate goal of having each agency direct at least 55% of overall environmental benefits to “environmental justice populations,” which the bill defines as census block groups that an annual median household income of less than 80% of the state median, have a BIPOC population of at least 6%, and 1% or more of households have limited English proficiency.  In a recent Senate Committee on Natural Resources meeting, it was noted by Elena Mihaly, Vice President of the Conservation Law Foundation, that those “benefits” may not necessarily be monetary benefits, and that the 55% figure is a goal and not a requirement.  

The Environmental Justice Advisory Council would serve to advise participating agencies on how to incorporate environmental justice procedures into their operations to ensure equitable distributions of funds and benefits.  The bill encourages the Advisory Council to have as diverse a membership as possible, with 50% of its members residing in environmental justice populations.  In recent committee hearings on S.148, a topic of significant discussion was how to ensure that the Advisory Council’s feedback is taken into consideration, particularly during the rulemaking process.  The Interagency Committee, which includes representation from each relevant state agency, would be tasked with developing guidance on community engagement plans and determining which agency investments provide environmental benefits.

The efforts of S.148 would largely be led by the Agency of Natural Resources (ANR) and the bill explicitly names the other agencies and departments that would be subject to the adoption of environmental justice policies: “Agencies of Natural Resources, of Transportation, of Commerce and Community Development, of Agriculture, Food and Markets, and of Education; the Public Utility Commission; the Natural Resources Board; and the Departments of Health, of Public Safety, and of Public Service.”  

The bill was voted out of the Senate Natural Resources and Energy Committee on Friday, February 35th with a bipartisan 5-0 vote.

Forest bills: Forest Future Program (H.566) and Current Use (H.697)

H.697, An act relating to eligibility of reserve forestland for enrollment in the Use Value Appraisal Program 

H.566, An act relating to the establishment of the Vermont Forest Future Program

Currently, House committees are considering two bills that pertain to Vermont’s forestland.  H.697, recently voted out of the House Committee on Ways & Means, offers a new way to enroll forestland into Vermont’s Use Value Appraisal Program (often referred to as “current use”).  Per Michael Snyder, Commissioner of the Department of Forest, Parks, and Recreation, H.697 was the result of requests from advocates for “wide open enrollment” into current use for land that retains old forest functions.  The new category, referred to as “reserve forestland,” allows for parcels of land managed for old forest values to be enrolled into the current use program at the standard forestland value rate.  Moreover, if more than 30% of a parcel of land falls into what the bill refers to as an “ecologically significant treatment area,” then the remainder of the parcel can be enrolled as reserve forestland as well.  This new category would pave the way for 230,000 acres of unenrolled forestland eligible for enrollment. Though it was noted in a recent committee hearing that this would ultimately result in some acres of forestland coming out of forest product production.  The bill would also incur costs to the general fund as well as the education fund–a caveat that elicited some concern from some lawmakers.

The second forest-related bill, H.566, seeks to establish a “roadmap” for bolstering Vermont’s forest economy, spearheaded by the Vermont Sustainable Jobs Fund in collaboration with the Commissioner of Forest, Parks, and Recreation.  The intended outcomes of H.566 are the sustainable economic development of the forest industry, developing a workforce to support the forest industry, and encouraging responsible forest management practices.  Lawmakers heard testimony from witnesses that included a forest industry professional who had been part of a similar strategic plan in Maine in the wake of the closing of several paper mills.  H.566 encourages all state agencies to engage with the forest industry as well as mandates a public stakeholder process for consultation as the Sustainable Jobs Fund develops its action plan.  On February 22, H.566 was voted out of the House Committee on Agriculture & Forestry and referred to the House Committee on Appropriations.

S. 166 - Poor Workmanship of Utility Companies Causing Animal Welfare Issues

S. 166, An act relating to utility construction worksites and consumer protection, as recommended out of the Senate Judiciary.

Kudos to Amber and Scott Hoyt from Tunbridge to testify again in committee this past week to continue their advocacy in support of this bill that aims to protect fellow farmers from poor workmanship scenarios in the future. Left behind wire from a utility company subcontractor continues to impair up to two thirds of their hayland to date. The Farm Bureau takes the lead on this bill that aims to tighten the chain for liability issues in relation to the ongoing broadband expansion. Watch the recording of their testimony here.

Racial Equity and Land Access 

H.273 - An act relating to promoting racial and social equity in land access and property ownership

The Vermont House Committee on General, Housing, and Military Affairs has continued taking testimony.  An amended draft was proposed on February 16th.  On February 22nd, Seeding Power Vermont (the organization spearheading efforts on H.273) hosted an online celebration during which they provided updates on the bill. 

Information on H. 273 shared by Seeding Power:

  • Creates a $10 million dollar BIPOC Land Access Opportunity Fund.

  • Establishes an independent Board that will direct investment of the fund into grants for individual and collective land access and property ownership, financial assistance, and anti-racist mutual aid.

  • Expands financial education and resource management programs for BIPOC.

  • Was designed by a BIPOC-led team with widespread BIPOC network and community input.

  • Calls for the independent Board to be made up of Vermonters who have historically suffered from discrimination and who have not had equal access to public or private economic benefits due to race, ethnicity, sex, geography, language preference, immigrant or citizen status, sexual orientation, gender identity, socioeconomic status, or disability status.

  • Explores mortgage assistance for BIPOC and tax benefits for BIPOC and owners.

Calls to action shared by Seeding Power:

  • Share your name and where you live

  • Describe your support for H. 273, the BIPOC-led Land Access & Opportunity Act

  • Share why you support the bill, and make it as personal as possible

  • Ask your legislature to commit to championing this bill

  • Find your legislator here.

  • House Committee on General, Housing, and Military Affairs Committee Page

A little more information compiled by Rural VT:

Did you know? 

  • Between 1920 and 1997, the number of African Americans who farmed decreased by 98 percent, while white Americans who farmed declined by 66 percent OR at the time of World War I there were 1 million black farmers, and in 1992 there were 18,000

  • In Pigford v. Glickman 1997, thousands of black farming families won settlements against the USDA for discrimination between 1981 and 1996; with outlays over $2 billion

  • TIAA is a pension company originally set up for teachers and professors and people in the nonprofit world. Investment in farmland has proved troublesome for TIAA in Mississippi and elsewhere. “In Tunica County, where TIAA has acquired plantations from some of the oldest farm-owning white families in the state, black people make up 77 percent of the population but own only 6 percent of the farmland.”

Read More in The Great Land Robbery - The shameful story of how 1 million black families have been ripped from their farms, by Vann R. Newkirk II, theatlantic.com, September 2019 Issue.

Cannabis Bills

S.188 (Amended Version moving now) - Agriculture, Wholesaler allowances, etc.

H.701 (Recent amendment can be found in here) - Fees, Social Equity

We continue to work to influence primarily two bills related to the coming recreational cannabis market: S.188 and H.701.  

S.188 has moved from the Senate Agriculture Committee to the Senate Finance Committee and if voted out will move to the Senate Floor, where it is likely to pass over to the House.  On February 11, Sen. Pearson and Chair Pepper (CCB) said the quiet part out loud about S.188 and the market the legislature has designed:

Sen. Pearson:  “I guess I worry that at some level we will be almost guaranteeing that they [outdoor cultivation operations greater than 1,000 sq ft] will not be happening on current farms because the cost benefit analysis will be difficult for a farm to consider if the cannabis plot could be subject to local zoning… a different regulatory scheme….”

James Pepper (Chair of the CCB):  “...small cultivation, those playing at 1,000 sq ft or less will be playing with a different playbook no matter what… and this is just one of the kind of growing pains we’re going to have to suffer through.  My only concern is that this bill doesn’t get across the finish line…”

After this exchange, the Senate Agriculture Committee voted out S.188 without including our recommendations, or those of any of the many people we brought in to testify before a joint hearing of the House and Senate Agriculture Committees for our Small Farm Advocacy Day focused on cannabis.  It may be acceptable to the Senate Ag Committee that meaningful participation in this economy by farmers will likely not happen due to the barriers they have put in place - but it is not acceptable to Rural VT and the VT Cannabis Equity Coalition.

Graham, RV Policy Director, testified (see app. 40 min. mark) in the Senate Finance Committee on February 23rd, in support of our recommendations and the lack of action related to them from the legislature.  He received little support there, despite testimony from the Fiscal Office supporting his concerns related to farmers’ challenges entering the market.  See our specific proposals here, and more background info here.

H. 701 is the cannabis “fee bill”.  This bill must pass this year in order for the market to roll out.  It includes the fees for licensing, as well as specific Social Equity components.  Our primary Social Equity goal right now is integrating one of our, and the CCB’s (Jan. 15th Report, Slide 25), most significant Social Equity recommendations into H. 701 (or another legislative vehicle) which would:  

  • bring 20% of excise tax revenue from this market to a “reinvestment fund” to invest in the needs of communities impacted, and disproportionately impacted, by the criminalization of cannabis

  • bring 5% of the excise tax to the Cannabis Development Fund (a fund established by the legislature to fund social equity initiatives largely within the industry, but which has no source of ongoing funding).  

The legislature has put forth no plan to act on this fundamental social equity recommendation from the CCB and our Coalition despite its statutory obligations and expressed prioritization for social equity.  We have contacted House and Senate Leadership, Chairs of various committees, and more seeking their support.  

Bring your voice to the table!

Contact your representatives to make sure the State’s profits from this market share in the repair of, and generating of opportunities for, communities who have been harmed by the criminalization of this plant; and that this market protects and supports cultivators, product manufactures, and consumers - the primary actors and producers - rather than providing disproportionate privileges and power for wholesalers, retailers, and vertically integrated dispensaries.  

Contact your representative and copy:

  • All tiers of outdoor production given the status of agriculture

  • Direct market access for producers, product manufacturers, and consumers

  • Increased home grow allowances that bring VT closer in line to other States

  • For Social Equity:

    • Contact the House Speaker Jill Krowinski (jkrowinski@leg.state.vt.us) and Senate Pro Tem Becka Balint (bbalint@leg.state.vt.us) urging action on this Social Equity provision fundamental to the statutory goals and obligations of the legislature:

      • bring 20% of excise tax revenue from this market to a “reinvestment fund” to invest in the needs of communities impacted, and disproportionately impacted, by the criminalization of cannabis

      • bring 5% of the excise tax to the Cannabis Development Fund (a fund established by the legislature to fund social equity initiatives largely within the industry, but which has no source of ongoing funding).  

Neonicotinoid Pesticides

H. 626 - An act relating to the sale, use, or application of neonicotinoid pesticides

In recent weeks, the House Agriculture & Forestry Committee has taken testimony from over 20 expert witnesses on H.626, a bill that would prohibit the use of neonicotinoids unless the Agency of Agriculture, Food & Markets (AAFM) creates regulations that protect pollinators from exposure.

"Neonics" are regularly applied as a seed coating on corn and soybean seeds to protect seeds from early season pests. Currently, nearly all corn seed planted in the state is coated with these pesticides whether or not there is a known pest threat that calls for them.  Beekeepers, agronomists, researchers, and farmers have presented powerful, science-based testimony making the case that widespread use of neonics is harming bees and other non-target insects while not, in most cases, helping farmers' bottom lines. As Vermont beekeepers report record losses (up to 50% of hives are dying annually), one beekeeper told the committee, "There's a saying in the industry that we're no longer beekeepers - we've become bee replacers."

H.626 includes recommendations for neonicotinoids made to the legislature by the Pollinator Protection Committee in 2017. Despite having been granted the authority to regulate treated seeds, the Agency of Agriculture has not acted on these recommendations.  Rural VT, NOFA VT, and the Lake Champlain Committee have proposed an amended version of H.626 which Graham (RV) introduced to the Committee in his testimony to House Agriculture on February 17th.  The amended version phases out the prophylactic use of neonics by providing a deadline by which AAFM must work with the newly created Agriculture Innovation Board, agricultural service providers, and others to develop and administer this IPM protocol and training, and to support farmers in transitioning away from prophylactic use of treated seed further by assisting in sourcing seed not treated with neonics. 

We're not asking the farmers using these seeds to quit cold turkey. Farms have already invested in this year’s seed, and their ability to source the appropriate amount and varieties of seed not treated with neonics is challenging given - among other things - the consolidation and concentration of seed companies.  In addition to phasing out the use of neonic treated seeds, we are calling for an appropriate Integrated Pest Management (IPM) protocol and training for farmers and service providers.  

Cary Giguerre, Vermont Agency of Agriculture, has released a competing proposal, which does not focus on neonicotinoids, and which directs considerations for all treated articles (and determining which are problematic) to the Agricultural Innovation Board (which Cary and VAAFM direct).  This bill provides for no direct action, and does not acknowledge the impacts of neonics which are understood broadly in the scientific community.

Right now, the House Agriculture & Forestry Committee has the ability to take clear steps to limit the use of neonicotinoids in ways that protect bees and beekeepers, while actively supporting other farmers in transitioning away from widespread, prophylactic use. 

What can you do?

  • Write to your legislator (find them here) and urge their support for NOFA-VT and Rural Vermont's redraft of H.626 which requires AAFM to phase out prophylactic use of neonics by 2024 and support farmers in accessing untreated seed and implementing Integrated Pest Management (IPM).

  • Copy Carolyn Partridge, Chair of House Agriculture & Forestry Committee, cpartridge@leg.state.vt.us, on your message.

Surface Water Withdrawal Regulation

H.466 - An act relating to surface water withdrawals and interbasin transfers

H.466 is a bill which seeks to regulate surface water withdrawals which moved very quickly through the House Natural Resources Committee, has now passed the House, and will head to the Senate Natural Resources Committee.  We hope that the Senate Committee process is more deliberate and inclusive of the voices of the people living in VT who may be affected by this legislation.  Rural VT has been monitoring conversations about H.466 among farmers, and will support farmers providing testimony in Senate Natural Resources when the bill is taken up.  We have heard substantial concerns from many different farmers, including the eventual permitting program envisioned in the bill.

Some excerpts / key features of the bill identified by the VT Veg and Berry Association include:

Registration. Beginning on January 1, 2023, any person withdrawing 5,000 gallons or more of surface water within a 24-hour period shall register with the Secretary. Registration shall be made on a form provided by the Secretary, and shall include the following information:

(1) the location of each withdrawal, including each impacted surface water;

(2) the frequency and rate of each withdrawal;

(3) a description of the use or uses of the water to be withdrawn;

(4) the capacity of the system to be used for the withdrawal; and

(5) a schedule for the withdrawal.

(a) Program development. On or before July 1, 2026, the Secretary shall implement a surface water withdrawal permitting program that is consistent with section 1041 of this subchapter provided by the Secretary and shall include all of the following information:

(1) the total amount of water withdrawn each month;

(2) the location of each withdrawal, including each impacted surface water;

(3) the daily maximum withdrawal for each month;

(4) the date of daily maximum withdrawal; and

(5) any other information required by the Secretary.

(c) Methods of estimating withdrawals. The following methods shall be used to report the amounts of withdrawn surface water required to be reported under subsection (b) of this section:

(1) Withdrawals of between 5,000 and 50,000 gallons of surface water in a 24-hour period shall either provide an estimate of total volume or provide meter data. The report shall describe how any estimate was calculated.

(2) Withdrawals of more than 50,000 gallons of surface water in a 24-hour period shall provide meter data.

.....

(5) establish limitations on withdrawals based on low flow or drought conditions and the development of potential alternatives to meet surface water withdrawal needs in such cases; and

(6) require assessment of any reasonable and feasible alternatives to proposed withdrawals that may have less of an impact on surface water quality.

What can you do?

  • Contact your representative and the Chair of the Senate Natural Resources Committee, Christopher Bray (cbray@leg.state.vt.us) and tell him how this law may affect you.

  • Join a conversation with other producers about your concerns and make a time to testify in the Senate Natural Resources Committee:  contact Graham@ruralvermont.org

Rural Vermont
Governor’s Investment Priorities for the Future of Agriculture

The Future of Agriculture Commission released their Action Plan earlier this month (click here) that identifies priority strategies for the Governor to leverage the Farm to Plate strategic plan for the Vermont food system. Highlights include: support for institutional local purchasing, investments to realize a Payment for Ecosystem Services Program, valuing apprenticeship programs and further boosting programs like the Working Lands Enterprise Program and the Farm and Forest Viability Program. Another focus will be advancing so-called “climate smart” agriculture strategies. Rural Vermont will monitor and advocate for solutions that foster resilient, bioregional food systems; food sovereignty and farm viability; and which are inclusive of agroecological approaches rather than trends such as market based solutions, consolidation and industrialization.

Rural Vermont
Rural Vermont Testifies in support of H. 501

Rural Vermont provided testimony (watch recording below) today with Peter Blair from CLF for the Protect Our Soils Coalition in support of H. 501 - a bill that aims to protect our soils from microplastics by regulating depackaging technology and avoiding the land application of slurries and digestates derived from this technology. Depackaging involves mechanically separating food residuals from their packaging through crushing, grinding and screening, which is much more likely to contaminate composts with micro and nano plastics than the preferred practice of source separation.

From the testimony:

"It is Rural Vermont’s goal to secure pathways for clean streams of food residuals that may be composted on farms and either land applied or sold as soil amendments to enhance soil quality with valuable composts. We do not need scientific proof that commingling, crushing, and grinding packaged and unpackaged food residuals together create a greater likelihood of composts being contaminated with micro and nano plastics. We also don’t need to wait until we experience harm to the environment through human health effects that can not be compensated anymore in the future. We urge the legislature now to address the unregulated consolidation of waste streams of food residuals that prevents their use at highest and best use, including their decentralized diversion for agricultural use and the consumption by animals."

Rural Vermont
The Legislative Session 2022 - Updates as of February 7, 2022

February marks the month leading up to the so-called “crossover” deadline - by town meeting week a bill needs to be passed from one chamber over to the other in order to have a realistic chance to make it through the legislative session in time to become law. Rural Vermont advocates for more equitable cannabis markets, clean streams of food residuals free of microplastics and keeps you up to date on bans of neonicotinoids, improvements to BIPOC land access, dairy, protecting farmers from poor workmanship from utility companies and much more. Reach out to info@ruralvermont.org with your policy inquiries and if you’d like to support this work.

Speak Up For Farms!

Contact legislators from the agricultural committees with your concerns & join Rural Vermont and NOFA-VT for Small Farm Action Days!

Rural Vermont Policy Priorities

Plastic Residues in Compost

Relevant bills for Rural Vermont:

S. 282, An act relating to the regulation of food depackaging facilities - Rural Vermont is in support of this bill that addresses the current unregulated expansion of the consolidation of food residual management and the increased soil contamination with microplastics. 

H. 501, An act relating to physical contaminant standards for residual waste, digestate, and soil amendments - The Protect Our Soils Coalition, that RV is part of, is informing the work on this bill with expressed concerns and suggestions for improvement (read more below).

What has happened so far?

  • Read this recent The Guardian article on Microplastics damage Human Cells

  • Recording SAG hearing 1-11-22 (watch recording here) on depackaging machines and microplastics in compost. Lawmakers expressed frustration about how little the problem has been investigated while contamination has been allowed to occur.

  • The Protect Our Soils Coalition is working to uphold the original intent of the Universal Recycling Law and is aiming to protect our soils while preventing pollution of composted food scraps with microplastics, as well as the incarceration of recyclable materials.  Watch the coalitions hearing on April 28, 2021 with Professor Deborah Neher, Professor of Plant and Soil Science at UVM here.

  • H. 501, introduced by Vice Chair of the House Natural Resources Committee (Rep. McCullough) would set a contamination standard. 

Most recently Senator Bray, Chair of the Senate Natural Resources Committee, made a motion to introduce S.282 with the Senate Natural Resources and Energy Committee that would establish a moratorium on permitting depackaging facilities until the Agency of Natural Resources completed rulemaking on the same. Natasha Duarte of the Compost Association of Vermont (CAV) testified to the House Natural Resources, Fish and Wildlife committee on H.501 with the recommendation of a strike all amendment - suggesting to replace the language of H.501 with S.282. Rural Vermont supports CAV’s concern that the contamination standard of H.501 leaves unclear how to test for the contamination level as there currently is no standard for that. The bill also doesn’t clarify who would be liable for any contamination and who would pay for the tests. The Agency of Agriculture, Food and Markets will launch rulemaking on Soil Amendments soon, following their mandate to regulate composts from food residuals now that farmers can compost up to 2,000cy of the same per year. Tom Gilbert from Black Dirt Farm made recommendations that could advance the draft of S.282 to also include pursuing source separation more vigorously:

  • To be clear: Food residuals, as already currently defined, must be source separated from non-compostable materials at the point of generation and managed in a manner consistent with the priorities listed in the food residuals management hierarchy. Meaning that mixing food residuals with packaged organics does not satisfy the source separation requirement and automatically precludes the materials from being utilized by any of the higher priority options on the hierarchy, like composting for example. 

  • Haulers in this state make an effort to ensure source separation and thus avoid hauling contaminated food 

  • ANR must ensure that recyclable materials are being recycled and not being landfilled or incinerated as a result of depack.

  • Depackaging only of highly homogenous materials, until there’s a better understanding of the pollution potential from mixed loads.

Tom also emphasized the social and ecological interdependence and consequences that would occur from a continued contamination of ag soils with microplastics -pointing to the recent PFAS contamination case at Song Bird Organic Farm in Maine suggesting: “While we don’t have the full picture of potential risks associated with microplastics, we have enough insight to know it’s worth taking preventative action.” Watch the full testimony from last Friday, 2/4/22, in House Natural Resources, Fish, and Wildlife here. This precautionary approach suggests not to wait for further scientific information about substantial evidence of environmental and human health effects before taking steps to avoid soil contamination and to implement the Universal Recycling Laws source separation requirement as intended. 

Sign the Petition by February 15th and Join the Protect Our Soils Coalitions call on the Legislature to protect and prioritize the separation of food scraps from packaging while preventing the incineration and landfilling of recyclable plastic packaging. This will create a stable market for operators, ensuring good resource stewardship and that these resources be used to build healthy soils and support local food systems.  Sign here.

Webinar on UVM research on the state  of microplastic pollution of compost  here

Rural Vermont factsheet for farmers interested in composting food residuals here

Ongoing On-Farm Slaughter Issues

No formal bills at this time

The matter of on-farm slaughter restrictions has seen some movement in the past few weeks as Rural Vermont continues to put pressure on the relevant agencies, committees, and offices.  First, we received a number of complaints from farmers and consumers as a response to our Call to Action, which also landed in the inbox of Julie Boisvert, Chief of Meat Inspection.  Rural Vermont had the opportunity to share a summary of these complaints to the Senate Committee on Agriculture on January 27 where, upon hearing testimony from Rural Vermont, committee members supported the idea of writing a letter to VAAFM and/or USDA FSIS stating that the Vermont statute 6 V.S.A. § 3311a called the On-Farm Slaughter law will be enforced as written until the new restrictions can be provided in writing and point to their enabling statute, which has not been seen yet.

That same week, Senate Agriculture discussed the on-farm slaughter restrictions in a separate meeting where some committee members expressed agreement that the restrictions pose real challenges to the practicality of the law.  Legislative Counsel Michael O’Grady in particular shared a “troubling” anecdote about a family farm affected by the restrictions.  In this meeting, Senate Agriculture committee members also discussed the “murky” definition of what FSIS considers “involvement” or “participation” in slaughter.  

Because of the dual state and federal nature of this issue, Rural Vermont also solicited the involvement of Senator Sanders and Senator Leahy’s offices.  RV met with staffers from Vermont’s federal delegation in late January to discuss the issues as they pertain to the USDA FSIS, which spurred the federal delegation to then meet with FSIS leadership.  In their February 3 testimony before the Vermont House Committee on Agriculture & Forestry, the federal delegation relayed that their meeting with FSIS did not yield much clarity on owner involvement in slaughter, but FSIS did reinforce their desire for  a “direct correlation” between animal and owner through the slaughter process.  The federal delegation did indicate that they have turned their attention to the State Audit Division of FSIS, which is the arm of FSIS that determines a state’s “equal-to” status, with the belief that their communication with VAAFM may be where the problem lies.  House Agriculture Chair Carolyn Partridge (D, Windham-3) made clear the need to resolve the on-farm slaughter issue as quickly as possible.

Want to get involved?

In addition to provoking action among public officials and staffers, Rural Vermont also wants to involve our grassroots network.  Rural Vermont will be convening an on-farm slaughter stakeholder group that will meet once a month to discuss progress on the issue and strategize next steps with input from stakeholders.  Our meetings will take place via Zoom on the second Wednesday of the month.  If you are interested in joining our stakeholder group, please email our Legislative Intern at elena@ruralvermont.org

Payment For Ecosystem Services

Relevant bills?

Legislation for a PES program proposal is currently being developed by the Payment for Ecosystem Services working group. Read VAAFMs interim report (Read Feb 2022 interim report here) on the PES WG progress here, including all relevant links to meeting recordings and supplemental documents.  A final report is due on January 15, 2023 (see Act 47, 2021, p. 8). Speak Up and provide Public Comment during one of the PES working group meetings! Register for their next meetings, which are every other Tuesday @ noon, online here.

Attention! If you want to get involved in the PES program development - consider joining our Small Farmer Group that meets in between PES WG meetings to discuss ideas on how to engage best. Next meeting of the Small Farmer Group is February 16, 2pm (email catduffybuxton@gmail.com). Read here the most recent programmatic proposals from Vermont farmers for PES program development. 

Cannabis

See THIS BLOG POST for the latest update.

Bills we’re tracking out of interest or support are:

Poor Workmanship of Utility Companies causing Animal Welfare issues

Relevant bills for Rural Vermont:

S. 166 - An act relating to utility construction worksites and consumer protection

What has happened so far?

  • Last fall, two farms in Tunbridge Vermont experienced significant harm to their animals due to remains that (subcontractors) from utility companies have left behind

  • S. 166 would  require rules to ensure a standard of care related to construction worksite cleanup to hold companies accountable 

  • Senate Judiciary took testimony from the affected farmers (watch their testimony here). 

  • Rural Vermont supports this initiative to prevent harm from poor workmanship of utility companies in the future

Good news! The Senate Judiciary committee heard a bunch more testimony (Senate Judiciary hearings on S.166 from 2/08/22) on the bill onTuesday and expressed their support of Draft 3.1 of the amended S.166 by voting the bill out of committee to the Senate Finance Committee unanimously. While voting in favor, Sen. Joe Benning criticized the short scope of the pole types that included only distribution lines and not also transmission lines in the new protections for livestock and (land-) owners from left behind hazardous materials.

Neonics, and Pesticides

Relevant bills for Rural Vermont:

H. 626 - An act relating to the sale, use, or application of neonicotinoid pesticides

What has happened so far?

The House Committee on Agriculture and Forestry continued to hear testimony from beekeepers (see Charles Mraz’s very compelling testimony), agricultural technical service providers (see Heather Darby’s important testimony), industry (Syngenta, Seed Dealers, etc.), ecologists and bird experts, and the Agency of Agriculture.  The bill, as written, would charge AAFM to amend the pesticides rules related to the use of neonic “treated articles” (largely seeds), and includes a complete prohibition on the use of neonicotinoid pesticides should the Secretary fail to adopt such rules by July 1, 2024.  The Agency of Agriculture is asking for the Committee to let the Agricultural Innovation Board take this on, and address this in the Pesticide Rule rewrite also happening now; suggesting it needs to do VT specific studies, and more in order to determine how to move forward.  Rural VT is in conversation with NOFA VT and many environmental organizations, citizen advocates, and farmers - and Graham will be testifying this coming week in House Agriculture on this bill.  We will provide testimony saying the following:  the Pollinator Protection Committee was convened by the Legislature many years ago and made the recommendations in this bill - we do not need more research to understand the impacts of these substances and their negative impacts on farms (and lack of effectiveness as prophylactic on farms using them in regions like ours); the Agency’s draft Pesticide Rule rewrite does not even address treated seeds; we need the legislature to set a deadline for phasing out the use of treated seeds (evidenced by the lack of follow through by VAAFM despite their authority), allowing enough time and support for the Agriculture Innovation Board, the Agency of Ag, technical service providers, and farmers to find affordable untreated seed and to develop (and train folks in) an IPM management protocol which would facilitate monitoring for pests in order to be approved for variances to apply treated seed, or alternative pest control options.  We cannot continue to use these substances prophylactically, we cannot continue to use substances which threaten other farms and the environment, and we need a just transition for farmers using these seeds.

BIPOC Land Access and Opportunities

Relevant bills for Rural Vermont:

H. 273 -  An act relating to promoting racial and social equity in land access and property ownership

What has happened so far?

  • Now is the time for advocates to move and pass this important bill that was introduced last year

  • H. 273 reconciles with wealth disparities in home and land ownership of BIPOC  Vermonters that have been historically marginalized by creating a fund. 

  • The Housing Committee on General, Housing, and Military Affairs heard from the coalition Seeding Power including (not exhaustive) Ashley Laporte, Every Town organizers Kenya Lazuli (NEFOC) and Mindy Blank, Steffen Gillon from the Windham County NAACP and Rep. Brian Cina of Burlington. Watch the hearing here

The House Committee on General, Housing, and Military Affairs considered last week to integrate the BIPOC land access fund into the working lands enterprise fund and took testimonials from AAFM staff and NOFA-VT. As crossover deadline is approaching, Rural Vermont wants to see the bill moved soon but misses any announcement of H.273 on this week's committee agenda (which could notably change any moment).

Reach out to committee members to express your support of the bill with a brief message: “I’m in support of H. 273 - An act relating to promoting racial and social equity in land access and property ownership - because …. (your message). Please vote in support of the bill.”  

Did you know? 

  • Between 1920 and 1997, the number of African Americans who farmed decreased by 98 percent, while white Americans who farmed declined by 66 percent OR at the time of World War I there were 1 million black farmers, and in 1992 there were 18,000

  • In Pigford v. Glickman 1997, thousands of black farming families won settlements against the USDA for discrimination between 1981 and 1996; with outlays over $2 billion

  • TIAA is a pension company originally set up for teachers and professors and people in the nonprofit world. Investment in farmland has proved troublesome for TIAA in Mississippi and elsewhere. “In Tunica County, where TIAA has acquired plantations from some of the oldest farm-owning white families in the state, black people make up 77 percent of the population but own only 6 percent of the farmland.”

Read More in The Great Land Robbery - The shameful story of how 1 million black families have been ripped from their farms, by Vann R. Newkirk II, theatlantic.com, September 2019 Issue.

Right to Farm

Relevant bills for Rural Vermont:

S. 268 - An act relating to the right to farm

What has happened so far?

 While waiting for the current committee of jurisdiction, the Senate Committee on Judiciary, to take action, the Senate Committee on Agriculture already did a walk through of the bill that was proposed by two of the committee members (Sen. Parent and Sen. Starr, watch recording here). Legislative Council Michael O’Grady explained early February that most if not all states in the U.S. have a right to farm law with the intent to protect farms that have been in operation from lawsuits from neighbors. Usually the farm has to meet certain conditions, like being engaged in agricultural  activities or in existence for a specific amount of years prior to the neighbors property ownership. The right to farm laws don’t prevent neighbors from filing lawsuits but simply how courts respond to the lawsuit - their ruling in favor of farms in response to a nuisance claim. He further explained that VT’s current right to farm law is fairly different from those in other states by including a rebuttable presumption that a farm is in accordance with the law. S. 268 would implement a standard more similar to states like Arkansas, Michigan, Oregon, and others - without a rebuttable presumption. Legislators gauged the need to adjust Vermont's nuisance lawsuit protection by asking for how many related lawsuits have been filed in recent years - with the legislative council stating that it doesn’t seem like there have been any Vermont cases. That said - it remains unclear if legislators will prioritize the formal adjustment to secure greater protection from nuisance lawsuits for Vermont farmers. 

Read more about the Proposed change in Right to Farm law would limit nuisance suits against Vermont farms in VTDigger from Feb 6 2022 here

Forestry Related Legislation

Current Use Program Amendments to Include Forever Forests

Relevant bills for Rural Vermont:

H. 697 - An act relating to eligibility of reserve forestland for enrollment in the Use Value Appraisal Program

What has happened so far?

The House Ways and Means Committee will pick up this bill to include two new categories of tax incentives for landowners to leave forever forests in Vermont's Current Use Appraisal Program this Wednesday, February 9th at 1:15pm (see the agenda with the link for live streaming here). The bill defines the new Current Use categories as follows:

  • “Ecologically significant treatment areas” means lands within a parcel of managed forestland that will be managed using protective or conservation management strategies and are not required to be managed for timber, including old forests; State-significant natural communities; rare, threatened, and endangered species; riparian areas; forested wetlands; and vernal pools.

  •  “Reserve forestland” means land that is managed for the purpose of attaining old forest values and functions in accordance with minimum acceptable standards for forest management and as approved by the Commissioner. 

The findings of the bill ground the initiative in the limited eligibility and enrollment to lands that are actively managed for timber and related forest products. Points to Climate change causing significant negative ecologic and economic impacts including challenges that threaten forest health, working forests, and ecological functions. Following the goal to mitigate and adapt to Climate Change through a diversity of forest management strategies the bill now aims to include forests that exhibit old forest characteristics and that can provide unique contributions to biodiversity, improve climate resilience and adaptive capacity of Vermont’s working landscape, and serve as ecological benchmarks in Vermont's Current Use Program. The bill language acknowledges that currently only less than one percent of Vermont’s forestland show old forest characteristics with potential to grow - given the Current Use Value Appraisal program covering nearly 80 percent of Vermont’s forests through privately owned forestland. 

Read more about the bill in the recent VTDigger article Bill proposes expanding Current Use program to include some wild forests from January 25, 2022 here.

Rural Vermont supports farmer activist Stephen Leslie in speaking up on behalf of soil health in the States various ambitions to measure soil health and also suggests to measure the soil health status in comparison to old growth forests, stating recently publicly:

“It is estimated that VT has lost 1/2 of its soil since the era of the 1810 Merino sheep boom. If we take as our measure the health of agricultural and forest lands nationally, VT does indeed look good. And we can  recognize all the great work that has been done, especially over the last 20 years to reduce phosphorus pollution and promote soil health and sustainable working lands. But soil health nationally is not a good measure---it is in catastrophic condition. Nationally, soil loss is estimated to continue apace at 4 tons per acre per year (5 tons in IA)---that's the equivalent of a pickup truck of soil leaving every acre every year. Nationally, SOM in ag soils is 1% or less----even on the great plains, where Mollisol soils were typically 9%-12%.

My supposition is that we should not use national comparisons to determine the health of our baseline, but rather look back to what this region was like pre-European settlement. 

If the heavily farmed rich alluvial clay and silt loam soils of the Champlain basin are now at 4-5%---imagine what they would have been when they were under the cover of the clayplain ancient old growth forests of white oak and pine? Forests that evolved over a period of 12,000 years in the wake of retreating glaciers (and where recent findings suggest the ancestors of the Abenaki were already present hunting mega-fauna). Though many of our soils are rocky, they were not poor and thin. Early VT settlers reported bumper yields from their cleared fields, far exceeding what they had experienced farming the already worn-out soils of southern New England. For a time prior to westward expansion, the Champlain Valley was known as the "bread basket of the Republic".

We should take the soil health of the ancient old growth forests as the baseline measure for soil health in our region (emphasis added). That means understanding the ecology of ancient old growth forests, where deep soil carbon accrued through centuries. That legacy is the carbon bank we are still farming on. If we consider how the soil health principles are exemplified in an intact old growth forest system, and then mimic those functions in our land management practices, then we have before us a tremendous opportunity to heal and regenerate our land---and to respond in a most powerful and meaningful way to the challenges of a changing climate.” (Stephen Leslie, Cedar Mountain Farm/ Cobb Hill Cheese, Hartland Vermont via email to the Vermont Soil Health Policy Network on January 21, 2022)

Forest Future Program

Relevant bills for Rural Vermont:

H.566, An act relating to the establishment of the Vermont Forest Future Program

In the past several weeks, the Vermont House Committee on Agriculture & Forestry has heard testimony from a variety of stakeholders and experts about H.566, An act relating to the establishment of the Vermont Forest Future Program.  H.566 will require the Vermont Sustainable Jobs Fund to “strengthen, promote, and protect the forest products industry in Vermont” by creating a Vermont Forest Future Action Plan in collaboration with the Department of Forests, Parks, and Recreation.  

The bill as written seeks to encourage “sustainable economic development” and includes language pertaining to climate change mitigation and “sustainable and responsible forest management practices.”  Most recently on February 1, House Agriculture & Forestry heard from two forest industry professionals, one of whom provided the committee with insight on how a similar action plan rolled out in Maine to support their timber industry in the wake of several paper mills closing in rapid succession.  The witnesses expressed optimism about the potential for Vermont’s forest products industry while emphasizing the need for stakeholder groups to have a seat at the table for all those who have interests in Vermont’s forests, with Rep. Vicki Strong (R, Orleans-Caledonia) and committee Chair Carolyn Patridge (D, Windham-3) echoing that need.  As of February 9, H.566 still sits in House Agriculture & Forestry.

Environmental Justice Bill

S.148 - An act relating to environmental justice in Vermont

S.148, An act relating to environmental justice in Vermont, seeks to establish solutions for the problem of unequal exposure to environmental hazards between certain groups in Vermont–as Elena Mihaly, Vice President of the Conservation Law Fund, noted in her February 3 testimony before the Vermont Senate Committee on Natural Resources, BIPOC and low income Vermonters tend to face more of those hazards and the benefits intended to remediate those hazards than white Vermonters.  The passage of S.148 would put into motion five specific tools: an environmental justice mapping tool for the Agency of Natural Resources, community engagement plans, guidance on how government agencies can assess total environmental impacts, an inventory of where state funds have been invested in the past, and an environmental justice advisory council.  In the first two weeks of February, Senate Natural Resources will finish editing and complete the markup phase of the bill, anticipating that it will be voted out of the committee by the end of the month.

RAP Amendment Bill Update

S. 258 - An act relating to amending the Required Agricultural Practices in order to address climate resiliency

What has happened so far?

S. 258 has been a conversation starter for legislators in response to environmental groups issuing a letter to use the upcoming RAP revision to also assess how far the rule is fit to mitigate agricultural practices in facing the changing climate. Senators from the agricultural committee heard from VAAFM about how they currently see the current RAPs as being already relevant for climate mitigation. Since then the bill has not been moved - possibly a sign that legislators look to rulemaking at this point. Rural Vermont is preparing for the revision process and discussing the RAPs internally as well as with other organizations. 

Want to get involved?

Join the monthly meetings of the Vermont Soil Health Policy Network where a diversity of stakeholders shares about their work in the field and consults about policy proposals, contact caroline@ruralvermont.org. This week Abbie Corse shared insights about the Climate Action Plan and gave a passionate testimony of the need to think intersectional and link environmental programs with farm viability goals as farmers lack healthcare, childcare, retirement plans and other social benefits. 

Rural Vermont
OFS - Back To Don’t Ask Don’t Tell

To protect farmers who organize on-farm slaughter, as well as the integrity of the VT on-farm slaughter law and the work done for over a decade through the democratic process to create it, Senator Starr (Chair, Senate Committee on Agriculture) suggested on Thursday the 27th to repeal the registration requirement in Vermont law and his and the committee’s willingness to pursue writing a letter to FSIS and the Vermont Agency of Agriculture in support of VT’s on-farm slaughter law and community, asking for both entities to produce written justifications for their actions and interpretations of law, and until doing so to cease and desist their communications and enforcement thereof.

Rural VT also met with representatives of Sen. Sanders and Sen. Leahy’s offices.  The representatives expressed understanding and support, and are going to reach out to FSIS to understand more about its communications to the Vermont Agency of Agriculture Food and Markets (given that VAAFM has not produced written communications from FSIS) and its position and report back.

Rural Vermont reported on Thursday (1/27) (watch recording here) to the Senate Agriculture Committee about our communities’ complaints about the new requirement that the Vermont Agency of Agriculture, Food, and Markets (VAAFM) announced on Jan 6, 2022 via email to registrants for on-farm slaughter that: “USDA has reinforced the requirements in all states, including Vermont, that in order to qualify for the personal exemption, the owner(s) of the animal has to conduct the slaughter and/or be present if they hire an itinerant slaughterer.” Read AAFM's response to the complaints about the new restrictions here.

VAAFM publicly also announced that farmers wouldn’t be allowed to hire itinerant slaughterers (VAAFM Virtual Forum, Q&A, and presentation) and Steven Collier (General Council, VAAFM) stated in testimony to the House Committee on Agriculture and Forestry this week that farmers wouldn’t be allowed to take carcasses to custom butcher shops on behalf of the owners of the carcass (watch the recording here). It is our opinion that none of this is grounded in law - and it is extremely problematic that VAAFM continues to introduce new interpretations of the law while refusing to offer written guidance to practitioners or justification for its interpretations. We can not trust that VAAFM will not enforce these restrictive interpretations on those who register for on-farm slaughter and effectively prevent farmers from continuing to organize the slaughter of animals raised on their farm themselves in coordination with itinerant slaughters. In consequence, we voiced in Senate Agriculture this past week that we cannot recommend that farmers continue to comply with the law and register with the VAAFM for on-farm slaughter. 

Senator Starr (Chair, Senate Committee on Agriculture) and his committee are now seeking ways to address these new restrictions that mark a swift policy shift in stark contrast to their legislative intent behind the improvements of the Vermont law for (mostly small-scale) livestock managers over the past decade. Aside from imposing political pressure on the agencies to uphold State law, Senator Starr also suggested today to repeal the registration requirement from the on-farm slaughter law in 6 V.S.A. § 3311a.

Thank Senator Starr (Chair, Senate Committee on Agriculture) and support the Agricultural Committees acting in defense of the VT on-farm slaughter law, and the proposal to repeal the registration requirement for on-farm slaughter!

Use this template message and reach out to Senator Robert Starr (rstarr@leg.state.vt.us) and CC your legislators (find your legislators by Town here).

“You are our Starr! Thank you for promoting the interest of farmers, homesteaders, itinerant slaughterers and communities in the State by protecting stakeholders from the irresponsible directives of FSIS and VAAFM which are far removed from the realities of on-farm slaughter in Vermont. Farmers have been, and will continue to organize on-farm slaughter on behalf of livestock owners and to act as their agent for the successful and efficient use of Vermont's on-farm slaughter law that is so important to mitigate the devastating shortages in the meat processing industry, especially during this pandemic.

It is unrealistic and unsafe to require owners who may have no interest or experience to engage in the act of slaughtering on-farm and to force them to be present to witness the act. When have people ever been excluded from a food because they wouldn’t witness its production? Customers of on-farm slaughtered meat know that they are liable for the quality of the product because they own the animals and have consciously chosen to, and prefer to, have their livestock be slaughtered on the farm where it was raised. 

To protect farmers who sell their livestock for on-farm slaughter, and the history of work and precedent supporting this law, I support:

  • The VT Senate and House Committees on Agriculture providing a written letter to VAAFM and FSIS stating their support for the VT law as written, requiring that FSIS and VAAFM provide written justifications for their actions and interpretations, and that VAAFM immediately halt its actions.  

  • The repeal of the registration requirement for on-farm slaughter. 

Thank you for your support!”

Next steps?

Join our stakeholder group to strategize how to move forward in this dispute! Reach out to elena@ruralvermont.org to join the OFS Stakeholder Group meeting on Wednesday, February 9 at 11:00am. 

Rural VermontOFS
Cannabis Update

Discussion of S.188 has continued in Senate Agriculture, and Graham (Rural VT) and VT Cannabis Equity Coalition colleague Geoffrey Pizzutillo (VT Growers’ Association) provided testimony (our testimony begins 1 hour into the video) on Friday the 21st in support of particular changes to the bill.  Senator Starr suggested in our introduction to Senate Agriculture on Thursday the 27th that the Committee was favorable to our proposal that all outdoor production be considered agricultural - which would be a significant improvement to legislation.  

A critical next step in achieving our Coalitions’ goals is to get lawmakers and the CCB to pursue our recommendations and the CCB’s Social Equity recommendations of getting portions of the cannabis excise tax revenues committed to the Cannabis Development Fund and to historically underserved and disproportionately affected communities.  The legislature and the CCB have by statute and in testimony committed to prioritizing social equity, small farmers, and bringing the legacy cannabis economy along with the regulatory process.  How does the CCB and legislature plan to act on this fundamental social equity recommendation from the CCB and our Coalition given its statutory obligations and expressed prioritization for social equity?  We have not seen a bill introduced addressing this.  Our Coalition submitted H.414 in 2021 which is focused on social equity; it is a vehicle for social equity recommendations and it is still waiting to be taken up by the House Government Operations Committee.  

We continue to also support and advocate for a number of other components of our Coalition’s platform on cannabis - in particular scale appropriate regulations supporting direct sales from cultivators to consumers of the very plants and products they have grown - as well the platform of the VT Cannabis Nurses Association / Green Mtn. Patient Alliance.

Rural Vermont
The legislative session 2022 - what’s happening?

The legislature hit the ground running and we are blessed with support from our legislative intern Elena Roig (UVM) to cover the State House issues around cannabis, neonicotinoids, land access, plastic contamination, dairy, protecting farmers from poor workmanship from utility companies and much more. Despite the question about whether or not legislators will resume in person next week - which appears unlikely - hearings will continue to be streamed live on YouTube where recordings will also continue to be available. Check out this initial overview outlining bills and issues that have a good chance to be passed during this second half of the biennium. Reach out to info@ruralvermont.org with your policy inquiries and if you’d like to support this work. 

Rural Vermont Policy Priorities 2022 - some have already been picked up! 

Cannabis

Relevant bills for Rural Vermont:

S.185, An act relating to miscellaneous cannabis establishment procedures

S.186, An act relating to the Medical Cannabis Registry

S.188, An act relating to regulating licensed small cannabis cultivation as farming

S.154, An act relating to cannabis excise tax revenue and the Vermont State Colleges

S.152, An act relating to the cannabis excise tax and local fees (I believe this replaced S.94) 

H. 414, An act relating to cannabis social equity programs - VT Cannabis Equity Coalition, that RV is part of, supports this bill

H.502, An act relating to the cannabis wholesale gross receipts tax

What has happened so far?

We are currently focused on S.188 (recently introduced in the Senate Ag Committee) and H.414 or other coming social equity focused bills which may emerge.  S.188 would classify all licensed small cultivators as “agricultural”.  It would allow licensed cultivators to purchase and sell seeds and immature plants to one another and licensed wholesalers to sell such products to licensed cultivators.  This bill does not support any of the recommendations our coalition has made directly, and we intend to meet and share with its sponsors ideas for amending the bill.  Some of our recommendations include: all outdoor production be classified as “agricultural” (this is a core aspect of our advocacy), we do not think it’s wise to include indoor production as agricultural (as this bill would), we have questions about allowing wholesale license holders to also have the same abilities as nurseries (a separate license category). We are also trying to determine to what extent agricultural exemptions and allowances would apply - such as the direct sale of “principally produced product” - and continue to advocate for some means of direct sales allowance for cultivators.  Significantly, last week the CCB voted to affirm a recommendation of its Social Equity Subcommittee that 5% of the excise tax go to the Cannabis Development Fund, and that 20% go to reinvestment in communities which have been disproportionately impacted by the criminalization of cannabis (our coalition has been making a similar recommendation).  We are awaiting a bill reflecting this recommendation.

Plastic Residues in Compost

Relevant bills for Rural Vermont:

H. 501, An act relating to physical contaminant standards for residual waste, digestate, and soil amendments - The Protect Our Soils Coalition, that RV is part of, is informing the work on this bill

What has happened so far?

The Senate Committee on Agriculture held a meeting (watch recording here) on depackaging machines and microplastics in compost (Read this recent The Guardian article on Microplastics damage Human Cells). Lawmakers expressed frustration about how little the problem has been investigated while contamination has been allowed to occur. The Protect Our Soils Coalition is working to uphold the original intent of the Universal Recycling Law and is aiming to protect our soils while preventing pollution of composted food scraps with microplastics, as well as the incarceration of recyclable materials.  Senator Bray, Chair of the Senate Natural Resources Committee, wants to see a committee bill on this issue alongside H. 501, introduced by Vice Chair of the House Natural Resources Committee (Rep. McCullough) that would set a contamination standard. Learn more about the issue and listen to this hearing from April 28, 2021 with Professor Deborah Neher, Professor of Plant and Soil Science at UVM here.

Get more info! 

Webinar on UVM research on the state  of microplastic pollution of compost  here

Rural Vermont factsheet for farmers interested in composting food residuals here

Payment For Ecosystem Services

Relevant bills?

Legislation for a PES program proposal is currently being developed by the Payment for Ecosystem Services working group. A final report is due on January 15, 2023 (see Act 47, 2021, p. 8). Speak Up and provide Public Comment during one of the PES working group meetings! Register for their next meetings, which are every other Tuesday @ noon, online here.

What has happened so far?

The House Agriculture and Forestry Committee heard a presentation by Dr. Sara Via of the University of Maryland who gave an overview on known, science-backed methods to improve carbon sequestration such as no-till and the use of cover crops.  Much of this data is based on modeling, however–soil sampling to test for carbon levels is very costly, complex, and tends to be outside of a farmer’s capabilities. Notably the PES working group continues to explore how to focus their programmatic proposal on measurable outcomes that prove to improve soil health only. 

Attention! If you want to get involved in the PES program development - consider joining our Small Farmer Group that meets in between PES WG meetings to discuss ideas on how to engage best. Next meeting of the Small Farmer Group is January 19, 1pm (email catduffybuxton@gmail.com)

Poor Workmanship of Utility Companies causing Animal Welfare issues

Relevant bills for Rural Vermont:

S. 166 - An act relating to utility construction worksites and consumer protection

What has happened so far?

Last fall that two farms in Tunbridge Vermont experienced significant harm to their animals due to remains that (subcontractors) from utility companies have left behind. This bill would require rules to ensure a standard of care related to construction worksite cleanup to hold companies accountable for instances like this. The bill starts off in the Senate Judiciary where legislators already took testimony from the affected farmers earlier this week (watch their testimony here). We are in support of this initiative to prevent harm from poor workmanship of utility companies in the future. 

Bills we’re tracking out of interest or support are:

Neonics, and Pesticides

Relevant bills for Rural Vermont:

H. 626 - An act relating to the sale, use, or application of neonicotinoid pesticides

What has happened so far?

The House Committee on Agriculture and Forestry heard about  EPA findings that three chemicals - clothianidin, imidacloprid, thiamethoxam - were determined to likely adversely affect the majority of endangered species and critical habitats they studied, with a frequent mode of exposure being abrasion dust coming off of treated seeds. The committee will consider H.626 that finds that treated seeds violate science-based integrated pest management principles and aims to reinstate to apply pesticides only to mitigate existing pest problems rather than on the presumption of one. The bill would charge AAFM to amend the pesticides rules to uphold this standard and includes a complete prohibition on the use of neonicotinoid pesticides should the Secretary fail to adopt such rules by July 1, 2024.

BIPOC Land Access and Opportunities

Relevant bills for Rural Vermont:

H. 273 -  An act relating to promoting racial and social equity in land access and property ownership

What has happened so far?

Advocates hope to now move and pass this important bill that was introduced last year and aims to reconcile with historical marginalization of BIPOC Vermonters by addressing wealth disparities in home and land ownership by creating a fund. A hopeful sign was the initial hearing right at the beginning of this week in the Housing Committee on General, Housing, and Military Affairs on Tuesday with the coalition Seeding Power including (not exhaustive) Ashley Laporte, Every Town organizers Kenya Lazuli (NEFOC) and Mindy Blank, Steffen Gillon from the Windham County NAACP and Rep. Brian Cina of Burlington. Watch the hearing here

Climate Action Plan

Relevant bills for Rural Vermont (not exhaustive):

S. 234 - An act relating to changes to Act 250

S. 148 - Environmental Justice Bill

Note: Legislators are still soliciting recommendations derived from the Climate Action Plan for informing legislation. Rural Vermont is in contact with legislators emphasizing our recommendations to the Agriculture and Ecosystems Subcommittee of the Climate Council and offering our feedback and takeaways from the final CAP recommendations and mitigation strategies. Watch Rural Vermont's committee introduction to the House Committee on Agriculture and Forestry and read more on what’s moving from CAP in this VTDigger article

What has happened so far?

While there is a LOT of chatter in the virtual State House, the Rural Vermont perspective largely focuses on discourses in the agricultural complex of the Climate Action Plan (CAP) and the requirements of the Global Warming Solutions Act and intersectional issues. In the House Ag committee the week began with hearing from Jane Lazorchak, the Director of Global Warming Solutions Act (ANR)

Watch the hearing in House Ag and Forestry Committee or House Nat Resources and hear farmer and Climate Council member Abbie Corse testify about her experience in working towards the CAP. 

Jane pointed to improved manure management systems as one of the main opportunities for reducing Greenhouse Gas Reduction goals in the agricultural sector. Rural Vermont emphasised during Rural Vermont's committee introduction to design policy incentives that support farmers who want to compost their manure.  

CAP, p. 123 states in this regard:

“Manure from livestock contains carbon and nitrogen, which can be lost to the atmosphere primarily as methane (CH4) but also nitrous oxide (N2O), both potent greenhouse gases—25 and 298 times more potent than CO2 over a 100-year period, respectively. Emissions from manure management are significantly affected by storage type, duration, temperature, moisture and manure composition. Storage of manure as a liquid has four times higher emissions compared to solid storage because more methane, which is more potent, is emitted from the anaerobic conditions of liquid storage, compared to more aerobic conditions of solid storage, which emits carbon dioxide (less potent). As such, switching from liquid storage (2.01) to solid storage (0.49), especially one that composts (0.28 MTCO2e/dairy cow/year), reduces emissions from manure storage (4-7 times).”

We also support farmer advocates like Stephen Leslie from Cedar Mountain Farm in speaking up on the benefits of old growth forests (see mitigation strategy d “Implement agroforestry and silvopasture practices that integrate woody vegetation in agricultural production,” CAP p. 117). Commissioner of Forest, Parks and Recreations Snyder gave his take on Agroforestry and Silvopasture in his presentation to HAG (following Rural Vermont's introduction, see link above). Along these lines, legislators of the House Natural Resources committee started discussion to establish more forever wild forests.

Jane also pointed to an increased net loss of natural or working lands, especially in agricultural and forest land and pointed to Act 250 amendments as a cross cutting solution to promote compact settlement as opposed to increased subdivision of the landscape. The Senate Natural Resource Committee is therefore working on a bill, S. 234, that would allow municipalities privileges through waivers from Act 250 requirements for towns that adopt municipal plans that designate so-called “Smart Growth” centers to attract development of town centers. Watch the SNR hearing here

Essential for a Just Transition towards enacting any climate related policy - or policy in general - are questions of equity that start with upholding principles like creating transparency or facilitating public participation. The Environmental Justice Bill S. 148 demands policy makers to catch up on those fronts where Vermont is lacking behind. Sen. Kesha Ram Hinsdale presented the bill for the first time to the Senate Natural Resources Committee this morning - watch the recording here if you want to learn more. 

Want to get involved?

Join the monthly meetings of the Vermont Soil Health Policy Network where a diversity of stakeholders shares about their work in the field and consults about policy proposals, contact caroline@ruralvermont.org. This week Abbie Corse shared insights about the Climate Action Plan and gave a passionate testimony of the need to think intersectional and link environmental programs with farm viability goals as farmers lack healthcare, childcare, retirement plans and other social benefits. 

Rural Vermont
Vermont Agency of Agriculture, Food and Markets’ Hemp Program receives USDA approval on the Vermont Hemp Production Plan

The Vermont Agency of Agriculture, Food and Markets’ Hemp Program received USDA approval on the Vermont Hemp Production Plan. The plan supports the Vermont Hemp Rules and governs registration, production, sampling and compliance for hemp cultivation for all growers of any scale beginning in 2022. There are some significant changes in Vermont’s Hemp Plan from the pilot program producer’s in the state have been operating under for a number of years. 

As part of Federal requirements for hemp producers, in 2022 all individuals interested in growing hemp must obtain and submit to the Vermont Agency of Agriculture, Food and Markets Hemp Program a criminal history report from the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The 2018 farm bill prevents anyone with a drug-related felony from participating in legalized hemp production for 10 years after their date of conviction and that applicants for growers (only) must be fingerprinted by the FBI. For information on how to obtain a criminal history report, please go here. This requirement does not apply to processor only registrants of the Vermont Hemp Program. 

Rural Vermont testified strongly against the drug-related felony ban and background check requirements for growers as part of the 2019 Hemp Rulemaking process (section 4.3). We also testified against registration and fees for hemp grown for personal use. Currently, growing small quantities of hemp for personal use is significantly more regulated than growing high THC cannabis for personal use.  

Federal requirements in the 2018 Farm Bill authorizes significant shared state-federal regulatory power over hemp cultivation and production. State departments of agriculture must consult with the state’s governor and chief law enforcement officer to devise a plan that must be submitted to the Secretary of USDA.

The following summary of changes is via Stephanie Smith from VAAFM. Follow the Agency of Agriculture’s Hemp Blog for updates.

THC Compliance is 0.3% and includes both THC and THC-A

  • The acceptable hemp tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) level is when, after the application of the measurement of uncertainty, the range of total delta-9-THC concentration includes 0.3 percent or less, as measured on a dry weight basis. Total delta-9-THC includes the potential conversion of tetrahydrocannabinolic acid into THC.

  • Cannabis plants exceeding the acceptable hemp THC level constitute marijuana, a schedule I controlled substance under the federal Controlled Substances Act and registrants/licensees must either ensure the disposal of such cannabis plants on site at the farm or hemp production facility or use a DEA-registered reverse distributor or law enforcement to dispose of non-compliant plants.

  • A negligent violation occurs when a cannabis plant’s total delta-9- THC concentration exceeds 1.0%.

  • Registrants may be able to remediate and retest a harvest lot that exceeds the acceptable hemp THC level by

    • Removing flowers and leaves and disposing of them appropriately, and retaining only stalk; or

    • Chipping the entire plant into biomass for extraction or other commercial purposes.

            
New registration and reporting requirements

  • A registration will not be issued unless a criminal history report(s), submitted within 60 days of an application submission, confirms that the key participant listed on the registration has not been convicted of a felony relating to a controlled substance within the past ten (10) years. If the applicant registrant was lawfully cultivating hemp under the 2014 Farm Bill and registered on or before December 20, 2018, and has felony conviction relating to a controlled substance that also occurred before that date, they may be a registrant of the program.

  • All registrants/licensees must report hemp crop acreage to the Farm Service Agency within 30 days of planting hemp and provide the location where hemp is being produced, acreage or square footage of all areas dedicated to hemp production, and the issued registration/license number.

Significant changes to sampling practices including the requirement to use sampling agents when taking samples for potency testing

  • Registered hemp producers are no longer able to collect samples of their own crops. Sampling must be performed by a “sampling agent”. Vermont will use USDA’s sampling agent training to establish who is eligible to be a sampling agent.

    • Hemp producers (registrants of the Vermont Hemp Program), employees of individuals or businesses registered to grow or process hemp, individuals residing in the same household as a hemp producer registrant, or individuals related to Vermont hemp producers are not eligible for to become sampling agents.

  • Sampling agents must collect floral material from the flowering tops of the plant by cutting the top five to eight inches from the “main stem” (that includes the leaves and flowers), “terminal flower” (that occurs at the end of a stem), or “central cola” (cut stem that could develop into a flower) of the top of the plant. Depending on the size of harvest lot, multiple cuttings will comprise the representative sample.

  • Sampling must occur no more than 30 days prior to harvest.

  • If the registrant/licensee fails to complete a harvest within thirty (30) days of a sample collection, a second pre-harvest sample of the remainder of the lot shall be required to be submitted for potency testing.

  • Sampling agents must have complete and unrestricted access to all hemp and other cannabis plants, (whether growing or harvested), all hemp production and storage areas, all land, buildings, and other structures used for the cultivation, handling, and storage of all hemp and other cannabis plants, and all locations listed in the producer license.

Laboratories that conduct pre-harvest potency testing must report their results to USDA, using the HeMP online document management system here: 
https://www.ams.usda.gov/rules-regulations/hemp/hemp-emanagement-platform.

Effective on January 1, 2023, all registrants/licensees may only use DEA-registered laboratories to conduct THC potency testing.  

Please see the Code of Federal Regulation review the requirements of the Domestic Hemp Production Program, 
https://ecfr.federalregister.gov/current/title-7/subtitle-B/chapter-IX/part-990

For more information on hemp regulation in Vermont,
please contact Stephanie Smith, Stephanie.smith@vermont.gov 
or Michael DiTomasso, Michael.DiTomasso@vermont.gov.

Rural Vermonthemp, Hemp
Cannabis Update: Legislation, CCB recommendations, and RV Priorities

The legislative session brings the sudden arrival of a number of bills related to cannabis:

S.185, An act relating to miscellaneous cannabis establishment procedures
https://legislature.vermont.gov/bill/status/2022/S.185

S.186, An act relating to the Medical Cannabis Registry
https://legislature.vermont.gov/bill/status/2022/S.186

S.188, An act relating to regulating licensed small cannabis cultivation as farming
https://legislature.vermont.gov/bill/status/2022/S.188

S.154, An act relating to cannabis excise tax revenue and the Vermont State Colleges
https://legislature.vermont.gov/bill/status/2022/S.154

S.152, An act relating to the cannabis excise tax and local fees
https://legislature.vermont.gov/bill/status/2022/S.152

H.502, An act relating to the cannabis wholesale gross receipts tax
https://legislature.vermont.gov/bill/status/2022/H.502

This new need for advocacy and attention intersects with the ongoing Cannabis Control Board rulemaking process, as well as its ongoing meetings addressing proposals to the legislature.  We continue to actively work with our coalition partners to affect the rulemaking process by attending and providing testimony at meetings of the Cannabis Control Board (CCB), as well as meeting with members of the Board and offering written testimony.  We also continue to hear from members of our community - from cultivators to manufacturers to wholesalers - about their needs and concerns and ideas for an equitable economy around cannabis.  

Of the current bills cited above, S.188 is one we are monitoring and intend to testify on. This bill would classify all licensed small cultivators as “agricultural”.  It would allow licensed cultivators to purchase and sell seeds and immature plants to one another and licensed wholesalers to sell such products to licensed cultivators.  This bill does not support any of the recommendations our coalition has made directly, and we have a number of concerns we intend to share with its sponsors as well as ideas for amending the bill to include our recommendations.  Some of our recommendations and concerns include: all outdoor production be classified as “agricultural” (this is a core aspect of our advocacy), we do not think it’s wise to include indoor production as agricultural (as this bill would), we have questions about allowing wholesale license holders to also have the same abilities as nurseries (a separate license category).  Senators Sears (Bennington), Pollina (Washington), Benning (Caledonia) and Thomas (Chittenden) are the sponsors of this bill - and it will need to proceed through both ag committees in order to be successful.  


The current proposed Rules of the CCB can be found here - they are taking public comment for a period of time.  Significantly, last week the CCB voted to affirm a recommendation of its Social Equity Subcommittee that 5% of the excise tax go to the Cannabis Development Fund, and that 20% go to reinvestment in communities which have been disproportionately impacted by the criminalization of cannabis.  There are currently no mechanisms ensuring ongoing funding for the Cannabis Development Fund in statute - and no money for reinvestment in communities; so this recommendation will require legislative action, but we have not yet seen anything introduced.  Achieving funding for these initiatives from the excise tax as well as vertically integrated dispensaries has been an important recommendation of our coalition from its inception.  


We continue to be disappointed to see no direct sales retail option for producers - leaving them price-takers in a wholesale marketplace.  Direct markets (the opportunity for a producer to sell their product directly to a consumer) are critical for small farmers’ and businesses’ viability.  Direct markets and sales do not mean unregulated sales - scale appropriate regulations exist which ensure that farm stands and stores, home kitchens, farmers markets, and particular products like raw milk and on-farm slaughtered poultry are not required to meet the same regulatory standards as full grocery or retail operations or full kitchens or fully inspected meats.  A direct sales license would have a lesser regulatory burden than full retail (only selling product “principally produced on the farm”), and could be limited or expanded in a variety of ways: from a CSA type model (pick-up or delivery), to a salespoint with particular operating hours on-site, to online ordering and pick-up.  A marketplace which does not offer accessible direct markets for producers of the very product they produce is not an equitable marketplace, and continues the pattern of undervaluing these people in our economy and policy making.  The CCB and legislature are considering additional licenses - now is a good time to explain to your representatives the value and need for this type of license and / or ability for cultivators.  

Please be in touch with us about your ideas, concerns, and interests.  This is an important time to be active with your legislators on this issue.  

Rural Vermontcannabis
Depackaging Technology and Soil Pollution with Plastics

We are working in the Protect our Soil Coalition to uphold the values embedded in the Universal Recycling law and to hold ANR accountable for implementing the requirement to separate food residuals from other recyclables at the source of generation. Seven Days has been shedding light on the current practice of co-mingling food waste with their packaging aiming separation through an industrial process that results in micro and nano particles of plastic in the otherwise compostable material. Read more here

Rural VermontURL
Update on lawsuit to strike down USDA GMO labeling rules

As plaintiff in the ongoing lawsuit against the USDA GMO labeling rules, our coalition of nonprofits and retailers took an important step in filing details with the federal court. The case challenges USDA’s decision to allow GMO labeling to be hidden behind QR codes, especially because that will restrict access for so many in rural areas of Vermont. The Center for Food Safety’s recent press release shares more information:

Rural VermontGMO
NFFC Dairy Platform and Letter to Congress

The National Family Farm Coalition (NFFC) organized a broad coalition of over 90 organizations (including Rural VT) who sent a letter to Congress calling for sweeping reforms to the US dairy industry based on ensuring a just price to farmers, supply management, and increased competition. Alongside the letter, the NFFC released its new Milk from Family Dairies Act (MFDA), based on these principles.  From here, the real work begins of pushing Congress to advance the policy debate on dairy ahead of the upcoming Farm Bill negotiations in 2022.

Rural VermontDairy, dairy
Cannabis Control Board Update

The Cannabis Control Board (CCB) has released two of its proposed Rules related to the Licensing and Regulation of Cannabis Establishments. Rural VT and the VT Cannabis Equity Coalition are reviewing them and providing comments. Sen. White has submitted a bill for introduction, S.94, which proposes to cap the local control license fee which municipalities can charge cannabis establishments, and distribute cannabis excise tax revenue that is equal to two percent of the taxable retail sales to municipalities that host a cannabis establishment. We’ll continue to share updates and encourage you to contact us, your reps, and the CCB with your suggestions!

Rural Vermont
VT Climate Council Update

The Vermont Climate Council has formally adopted the VT Climate Action Plan, and the Legislature’s Climate Solutions Caucus will be hosting a Virtual Town Hall on Wednesday, December 15 at 7pm to share their reactions to the Climate Action Plan, plans for the upcoming legislative session, and to hear directly from Vermonters about what climate policies they should prioritize in 2022.  Rural VT will work with its allies and members to understand the Plan and its impacts on our farms and in our communities (it’s a 270 page document), and work to continue to improve how the State addresses climate change and agriculture.  

Rural Vermont
CSA’s with Animal Shares are (supposedly) legal

In October, we shared with you information about our dispute with the Agency of Agriculture, Food, and Markets (AAFM) and USDA’s Food Safety Inspection Service (FSIS) about whether or not CSA programs can include animal shares from on-farm slaughtered livestock like it is legal to include on-farm slaughtered poultry (more info here). Legislators intended with Act 47 (2021) to explore the legal situation for livestock and the need for further legislation. Rural Vermont engaged in that process with AAFM and the legislative council earlier this year. From our interpretation of the law, these types of CSA programs should be already legal, given that Rural Vermont advocated successfully in 2019 to allow for multiple owners in the VT statute. The CSA program would be an option for the contractual relationship between those owners about sharing those animals and carcasses. In contract law, anything that is not prohibited is allowed. In the now issued final report on the matter, the legislative council agrees with Rural Vermont and states: 

“Moreover, in review of existing law under the FMIA, FSIS regulations, and FSIS guidance, Legislative Counsel agrees with Caroline Gordon that there is a reasonable interpretation that personal slaughter under an animal share agreement, although not specifically referenced, is allowed under federal and state law. FSIS guidance seemingly provides that there may be multiple owners of an animal under the personal use exemption and that the multiple owners under the personal use exemption do not need to reside at the same physical location. 

One would assume that persons who do not reside together but own livestock together have some legal arrangement, formal or informal, addressing ownership of the livestock and rights in that livestock. In addition, Vermont law explicitly allows for a person or persons to own livestock subject to the personal use exemption in State law.”

Michael O’Grady (Office of Legislative Counsel), Memo- Slaughter of Livestock under Animal Share Agreements, Dec 1, 2021, page 6

The report also shows that FSIS is inconsistent by opposing language around animal shares in statute but allowing for multiple owners in the past in their guidance documents. Aside from Vermont, most states allow for multiple owners, like California, Texas, Massachusetts, Maine, and New Hampshire. See a list of on-farm slaughter laws across the US on the Farm to Consumer Legal Defense Fund website here. FSIS is rendering the multiple owners' allowance ad absurdum by indicating that all owners need to take part in the slaughter of the livestock. Rural Vermont also criticized AAFM in the past for interpretations of the VT statute that render the on-farm slaughter exemption impractical and make it extremely difficult for practitioners to comply. AAFM Meat Inspection Chief Julie Boisvert stated that not farmers but customers of animals sold for on-farm slaughter have to hire an itinerant slaughterer- even though the statute does not rule out that farmers can organize on-farm slaughter themselves (watch the AAFM virtual forum from May 2021 here). From a business standpoint, it would be impossible to have customers reach out to the few busy itinerant slaughters in the state individually, creating an extreme organizational burden for the itinerant slaughter community who then would have to concert the inquiries with the farmer. 

The discourse around animal shares with AAFM and legislative council revealed that our State agency is handcuffed themselves as FSIS is threatening Vermont's ‘equal-to status’ that allows AAFM to conduct and receive funding for the state's meat inspection program under an agreement with FSIS.

Take Action! Speak with VPR about what on-farm slaughter means to you, if the law currently is clear or confusing to you and if it would be meaningful to you if AAFM would support CSA’s with shares from on-farm slaughter. Email VPR reporter Howard Weiss-Tisman (hweisstisman@vpr.org) and CC: caroline@ruralvermont.org. 

More info? 

* Read the memo from legislative council Michael O’Grady from December 1, 2021, “Slaughter of Livestock under Animal Share Agreements” here

* Find the current interpretation of the Agency of Agriculture, Food, and Markets presented in this virtual Q&A forum here, and in their online brochure here

Get in touch - and join our on-farm slaughter supporter email list, email caroline@ruralvermont.org, and seek practitioners to join our core stakeholder group to consult on the issue (Subject: OFS core).

Rural Vermont
Casella hires UVM to learn about plastic contamination of soils through depackaging technology

Anyone knows that plastics decompose on a very different timescale than organics - they basically don't decompose. Google says it can take anywhere between 20 to 500 years depending on size and structure. Yet our Agency of Natural Resources and Vermont's number one waste systems management company, Casella, believe that we don't have to go through the inconvenient process of separating plastics from food wastes, as mandated by the Universal Recycling Law, at the source. Instead, Casella’s new innovative solution to the mandated landfill ban is a so-called Depackaging Facility that does the hard work automatically and separates food scraps from the plastics that package them.

Watch the video above and learn in 6 minutes from Casella that the technology is so proficient that the resulting stream of food scraps may be composted, sent through biodigesters, and even land applied on farms. But what about the remaining plastic contamination, yet the hard to scope microplastic contamination? Casella is funding research at UVM to analyze the issue and associated risks for the environment, including human health (learn more here).

“Our findings are hugely important to Vermont’s Universal Recycling Law (URL) which necessitated this kind of research,... There is so much we don’t know about using food waste, particularly the impacts of plastic contamination.” said Kate Porterfield, a PhD student in College of Engineering and Mathematical Sciences (CEMS).

Rural Vermont is in coalition with Poultry Farmers For Compost Foraging (PFCF), Vermonters for a Clean Environment, Vermont Public Interest Research Group (VPIRG) and the Conservation Law Foundation (CLF) to emphasize that there are decentralized pathways to compost food residuals that have been separated from their recyclable packaging materials at the source on farms in a way that does not create another resource concern but that truly enhances the soils of agricultural producers in Vermont. The coalition imposes political pressure on the Agency of Natural Resources to implement and enforce the related source separation requirement and the priority uses of food residuals as laid out in the Universal Recycling Law (more info here).

Depackaging technology conveniently alleviates generators' responsibility under the Universal Recycling Law to separate organics from other waste streams in stark contrast to the mandate and definitions in the law but upon incentive from ANR. Alongside the pressing environmental concerns resulting from plastic contaminations of soils, this mismanagement or lack of implementation of the URL directives also furthers corporate consolidation towards a monopoly on food residuals management (remember that Casella bought Grow Compost? see story here). A development that infringes upon opportunities for market development for decentralized on-farm composting facilities like Black Dirt Farm, Perfect Circle Farm, Cloud Path Farm, Sunrise Farm and others. The easy way out for generators, including institutions like grocery stores and schools, through depackaging facilities makes collaborations with decentralized actors less attractive/ less cost effective.

Contact caroline@ruralvermont.org to stay in the loop on this campaign for protecting the Universal Recycling Law.

Rural VermontURL
MORE Opportunities for Public Input on How VT Should Spend ARPA $$$

Legislative leadership (Speaker Krowinski and Pro Tem Balint) have scheduled more community conversations in the following counties: 

  • Washington County Conversation, Thursday, October 28th, 5:30 - 6:30. Register here.

  • Orange County Conversation, Tuesday, November 2th, 5:30 - 6:30. Register here.

  • Chittenden County Conversation, Thursday, November 4th, 5:30 - 6:30. Register here.

  • Orleans County Conversation, Monday, November 8th, 5:30-6:30. Register here.

  • Lamoille County Conversation, Wednesday, November 10th, 5:30 - 6:30. Register here.

  • Final conversation open to anyone across the state, Tuesday, November 16th. Register here.

You can also fill out an online survey to share what your community needs and your recommendations on how VT should spend the ARPA funds here: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSf5jgOMdwDpuDGcdKbSCnJ5yTpyyY2ebN9SJriWMY8z2X1VyQ/viewform

Sign up for email updates on this process here:  https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScad6wzCAqPJO-rfiSDAo2HuwXbtj35fAlGJVwEP454kw14Yw/viewform 

Rural Vermont
Vermont Cannabis Equity Coalition Releases Sweeping Recommendations to Cannabis Control Board: Will There be a Place for Equity, Small Farmers, and Small Local Businesses?

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE October 23, 2021

Vermont Cannabis Equity Coalition Releases Sweeping Recommendations to Cannabis Control Board: Will There be a Place for Equity, Small Farmers, and Small Local Businesses?

Montpelier, VT — The Vermont Cannabis Equity Coalition has recently submitted its sweeping recommendations to the Cannabis Control Board (CCB) for its public rulemaking process, and in support of a cannabis economy in Vermont which is racially just, economically equitable, agriculturally accessible, and environmentally sound.
Collectively, the Vermont Cannabis Equity Coalition represents tens of thousands of Vermonters, including local communities and individuals most impacted by cannabis prohibition, and it is the Coalition’s sincere hope that the CCB integrates its vision, principles, and proposals into its own work, process, and recommendations to the legislature. The Coalition likewise expresses hope that the CCB take a different posture than the most of the Vermont legislature, and invite in and prioritize the voices of Black, Brown and poor communities, individuals and communities disproportionately impacted by the criminalization of cannabis, as well as small businesses, legacy growers and cultivators, patients, nurses, caregivers, and small farmers.

The Vermont Cannabis Equity Coalition shares a vision for a cannabis economy in Vermont which is racially just, economically equitable, agriculturally accessible, and environmentally sound. We envision a Vermont cannabis market where Black, Brown and poor folks are assured an equitable opportunity for success within every aspect of this industry. This vision for a racially just economy is grounded in an understanding of our true national history and the impacts of systemic racism; the history of criminalization and disproportionate, violent, enforcement of prohibition in communities of color and poor communities; and, the necessity for mechanisms of repair being established by members of those communities most impacted. In this decentralized economy, scale- appropriate regulations facilitate and prioritize small businesses, outdoor cultivation, and distributed access to the wealth generated by this industry to community members throughout the State. Cannabis is grown, packaged, and distributed in ways which protect and improve soil health, water quality and account is taken for climate change mitigation, adaptation, resilience, and human health.

The CCB was handed a rushed and impractical timeline by the legislature - through ACT 164 (2020) and ACT 62 (2021) - for developing rules and regulations for every aspect of the legal cannabis marketplace, and to reform the state medical cannabis program. The Vermont Cannabis Equity Coalition would like to call attention to the inadequacy of this timeline within which the CCB has been asked to complete its rule making process, and the inadequacy of the associated timeline by which the legislature must act on the CCB’s recommendations. In conversations with members of the CCB, with consultants hired by the CCB, and with legislators, the Coalition's concerns about this timeline have repeatedly been reflected and shared by these other actors.. The CCB is doing its best within the limitations set by the legislature - however, it is very clear that the rulemaking process and regulatory considerations would be afforded more thorough public input, and more comprehensive research if more time were available - and thereby move us further in the direction of our collectively desired equitable outcomes.

“Though we will still need action from the legislature to address foundational issues of inequity in existing statute outside of the rulemaking process, the CCB public rulemaking process is a significant opportunity to affect change and grow our collective movement for an equitable, accessible, affordable, and scale appropriate cannabis economy in VT. Our coalition’s recommendations with respect to racial and social equity programs and funding, a scale appropriate and affordable licensing structure (including producer to consumer direct sales), and more have the potential to affect a greater distribution of wealth and access in the coming market.”
– Graham Unangst-Rufenacht / Rural VT

The conception of an entirely new market is a unique opportunity for Vermonters to generate wealth, especially for local people of color, economically disadvantaged, and those most harmed by prohibition, and Vermont must get it right at the start. The recommendations from the Vermont Cannabis Equity Coalition lead with racial equity and market access and construct a viable craft-centric marketplace ready for federal legalization and bringing redress to those harmed by cannabis prohibition.”
– Geoffrey Pizzuillo / Vermont Growers Association

Members of the Vermont Cannabis Equity Coalition include the Vermont Racial Justice Alliance, Justice for All, the Northeast Organic Farming Association of Vermont (NOFA-VT), Rural Vermont, and the Vermont Growers Association (VGA). We have received significant support from Vermonters in our advocacy demanding the inclusion of structures ensuring the racial justice and agricultural and economic equity that a viable adult-use and medical cannabis marketplace needs.

With the rulemaking process moving forward at an unreasonable pace, member organizations of the Vermont Cannabis Equity Coalition and their constituents are calling on the CCB and legislators to work to integrate their recommendations which truly promote racially just, economically equitable, agriculturally accessible, and environmentally sound legal cannabis industry in VT.

Link to recommendations: https://www.vtcec.org/s/20211006-vcec-ccb-recs.pdf

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About the Vermont Cannabis Equity Coalition: We are a local coalition representing communities across Vermont that came together to support a cannabis economy that is racially just, economically equitable, agriculturally accessible, and environmentally sound for all Vermonters.

Press Conference 10/25/21:

Rural Vermontcannabis