
H.144 was controversial in part because it would have booted longtime Sen. Mark MacDonald, D-Orange, from the advisory panel while guaranteeing seats for three Windham County lawmakers.
MacDonald is vice chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, where H.144 remained when the Legislature adjourned last week. But another committee member, Sen. Dustin Degree, R-Franklin, said the bill stalled mainly because lawmakers were uncertain about its necessity and intent after receiving mixed messages.
โReally, the reason that it hit a stone wall was the lack of clarity,โ Degree said.
The process has left advisory panel Chairwoman Kate O’Connor frustrated.
โIt shouldn’t be this difficult,โ she said Monday.
The citizens advisory panel began meeting in September 2014, about three months before Vermont Yankee stopped producing power. The Legislature founded the panel to focus on decommissioning issues, with 19 members representing a variety of interests including the Vernon plant’s ownership.
In addition to advising the state government, the panel also is supposed to โserve as a conduit for public information.โ To that end, the panel hosts regular reports from state regulators, plant administrators and others involved in the decommissioning process.
The proposed buyer of Vermont Yankee, NorthStar Group Services, made its first local presentation at a December VNDCAP meeting. And Thursday federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission officials will attend an advisory panel meeting to take public comment on the sale to NorthStar.

First, the panel’s two legislative representatives no longer would be affiliated with the Senate and House committees on natural resources and energy. O’Connor proposed the change partly because the House Natural Resources and Energy Committee disbanded as part of a reorganization at the start of the 2017 legislative session.
O’Connor also proposed adding a third legislator to the advisory panel, and her plan called for each of those lawmakers to be from Windham County.
Among the VNDCAP members who were present at the January meeting, no one voted against OโConnorโs plan. MacDonald and several state officials abstained.
The House approved H.144 on March 2. As O’Connor had requested, the bill said the advisory panel would feature the House member representing Vernon as well as another House member and senator, both of whom would live in Windham County.
But the Senate Finance Committee received the bill the next day and came up with a different plan. The committee’s version of H.144 called for only two legislative representatives on the decommissioning advisory panel: a member of the Senate Natural Resources and Energy Committee, and a member of the House Energy and Technology Committee.
One effect of that arrangement would be to preserve MacDonald’s place on the panel, since he serves on Senate Natural Resources and Energy.

He also thinks there are plenty of local representatives on the panel. MacDonald said the Senate Finance Committee โwas surprised at how parochial and narrow the group wasโ when debating the advisory panel’s realignment.
Degree didn’t use those words in an interview Monday. But he did raise other objections to the House’s version of H.144.
For instance, he said the committee didn’t feel it was appropriate to add more legislative representation to the decommissioning advisory panel. He also said that, under O’Connor’s plan, the panel would have been โan unbalanced board โ you had more House members than Senate members.โ
Senate Finance proposed just enough of a tweak to keep the panel’s membership in step with current legislative committee names. But after a brief Senate debate April 18, the bill was recommitted to the Finance Committee and never moved after that.
Degree said there wasn’t enough time at the end of the session to take more testimony on H.144 or to work out a compromise with the House.
โAt the end of the day, we couldn’t find a happy medium between what the advisory committee wanted and what the House had passed, and what we felt we needed to do to keep the panel current,โ he said.
Degree added that MacDonald disclosed his involvement in the advisory panel and didn’t attempt to exercise any undue influence on the H.144 discussion. MacDonald in January said he wouldn’t participate in any votes on the bill.
โMark was very professional in how he went about this particular issue,โ Degree said.
Sen. Ann Cummings, D-Washington, who is the Finance Committee chair, agreed with that assessment and noted MacDonald’s long history with Vermont Yankee.
โHe does know the issues,โ Cummings said. โAnd he does look out for the people.โ
H.144 could come up for more debate in the 2018 session. O’Connor said she’d like another opportunity to address the Senate Finance Committee on the matter.
โI do understand why they don’t have a full understanding of what the panel does, because it’s really not in their orbit,โ O’Connor said. โI think that’s part of the problem.โ
O’Connor said sheโs fine with the Senate committee’s decision not to mandate Windham County residency for each of the advisory panel’s legislative members. But she still believes that, โat a minimum, it’s important to have the state representative who represents Vernon on the panel.โ
While there’s no question that Vermont Yankee decommissioning is a statewide issue, โultimately, the people in the state who are really most impacted are the people in Vernon and the people in Windham County,โ O’Connor said. โWe have been living with that plant in a very personal way.โ
