The microtransit program MyRide replaces traditional bus lines with on-demand transportation, much like Uber or Lyft. Photo by Riley Robinson/VTDigger

Vermont is exploring microtransit as a way to expand public transportation in rural areas across the state. But the Agency of Transportation cautioned lawmakers this might not be a silver bullet.  

โ€œI’ve heard so many good things about it, maybe that caused or created a little bit of an irrational exuberance on my part, to talk about how it’s going to transform rural transit,โ€ Ross MacDonald, Agency of Transportation public transit manager, told lawmakers Wednesday.

Microtransit functions much like Uber or Lyft, in that users can summon a ride via their phone. Companies like Via โ€” a main player in microtransit tech โ€” argue this approach can be more convenient and environmental than traditional bus routes, while expanding service in rural areas. 

Green Mountain Transit launched a fare-free microtransit pilot, called MyRide, in January 2021. Since then, it has provided 34,860 rides, according to the Agency of Transportation.

An average MyRide trip in Montpelier is a little over 3 miles long, and costs taxpayers $16.75, Bloomberg reported last month. 

About 40% of trips have been along the old Hospital Hill bus route, MacDonald told the House Transportation Committee. 

โ€œI would call it largely successful, but it isn’t the slam dunk that has shown such an efficient service, with a reduced per-mile cost, with every user saying this is a far improvement over what we had,โ€ MacDonald said. 

The future of microtransit could be a hybrid approach, MacDonald said, such as offering on-demand rides as shuttles between Montpelier and Barre, while keeping traditional bus routes. 

The Agency of Transportation is working on feasibility studies in 12 other Vermont communities: Barre, Brattleboro, Ludlow, Manchester, Middlebury, Morrisville, Randolph, Rutland, Springfield, St. Albans, St. Johnsbury and Windsor. The agency plans to award three or more microtransit pilot programs in FY2023. 

โ€” Riley Robinson


IN THE KNOW

Vermontโ€™s eyeball war began with a controversial request to let non-physician doctors cut into eyeballs. The battle ended Tuesday with a bureaucratic whimper.

The factions in this fight โ€” two kinds of eye practitioners โ€” disagree on who should have the right to cut into eyes and eyelids.

Optometrists, the primary care providers of the eye world, are asking for the right to perform some superficial surgeries in Vermont. Their medical counterparts, ophthalmologists, argue that non-physician practitioners canโ€™t conduct these procedures safely.

But after hours of impassioned testimony โ€” and accusations โ€” from both sides, lawmakers on the Senate Committee on Government Operations on Tuesday reached a stalemate on S.158. 

Committee members were locked 3-2 in favor of the bill. Sen. Jeanette White, D-Windham, who sponsored the bill, said S.158 couldnโ€™t survive a floor vote without more buy-in.

The move effectively killed the bill for now, though lawmakers said theyโ€™d like to revisit the proposal in a future legislative session.

โ€” Liora Engel-Smith

The Senateโ€™s bill to end qualified immunity for police officers has gotten a makeover โ€” but not necessarily a pretty one, at least according to stakeholders.

The Senate Judiciary Committee on Wednesday walked through the latest iteration of S.254, featuring a strike-all amendment that essentially replaced the bill with the Vermont Supreme Courtโ€™s 2018 Zullo v. Vermont case precedent. Sen. Dick Sears, D-Bennington, who chairs the committee and is leading the bill, said the rewrite was his attempt at a compromise.

Ultimately, both proponents and opponents agreed โ€ฆ that they donโ€™t like this version, according to Sears.

โ€œOnce I’ve heard from both sides that they don’t like this version, it’s probably a good sign that it’s probably not gonna fly,โ€ he said.

Thereโ€™s not much time left to get the bill across the committeeโ€™s finish line before lawmakersโ€™ deadline. The committee isnโ€™t scheduled to hear the bill again until the morning of Crossover Day, Friday, when itโ€™s set for a mark-up and possible vote.

โ€” Sarah Mearhoff

Sen. Brian Campion, D-Bennington, opened a Senate Education Committee meeting with a big question: How do we deal with the teacher shortage

Campion then kicked off the brainstorm โ€” meant to result in a letter to the Agency of Education โ€” with a follow-up question. What if Vermont created a minimum teacher salary? He pointed to New Mexico, which recently increased teachersโ€™ minimum salary by $10,000. 

Sen. Cheryl Hooker, D/P-Rutland, a former teacher, then suggested debt forgiveness and scholarships. 

โ€œOne of the things we actually talked about in committee this morning was having workshops for teachers, the wellness workshops that have been so lacking recently,โ€ said Sen. Ginny Lyons, D-Chittenden. Other committee members offered vocal agreement for the idea.  

The committee volleyed a few other suggestions: a more efficient licensure and application process, more flexible child care. But they came full-circle about 20 minutes later: โ€œYou know, bottom line, itโ€™s the money,โ€ Hooker said. 

โ€” Riley Robinson

The House was scheduled on Wednesday to attempt an override of Scottโ€™s veto on the bill that would grant Brattleboro a charter change allowing 16- and 17-year-olds the right to vote in local elections. But lawmakers ultimately postponed action on H.361 to March 11.

House leadership believes they have just enough votes to override, but a few too many people were absent Wednesday.

โ€” Lola Duffort


ON THE MOVE

The Senate Committee on Finance voted unanimously to advance a bill to update the school funding formulaโ€™s โ€œpupil weights,โ€ mathematical tools intended to make the K-12 systemโ€™s funding system fairer.

The as-yet-unnamed bill would replace the current weights with new, upgraded weights that would give โ€œunderweighted” districts โ€” low-income or rural districts, or districts with many students learning English โ€” more tax capacity.

If school funding across the stateโ€™s school districts did not change from todayโ€™s amounts, the shift in tax capacity means that โ€œsome townsโ€™ tax rates would increase, while other townsโ€™ tax rates would decrease,โ€ according to an analysis by the stateโ€™s Joint Fiscal Office.

The bill also would establish a grant program for districts with small numbers of students learning English, and would establish a committee to monitor the stateโ€™s school funding into the future.

Sen. Ruth Hardy, D-Addison, a member of the Senate Finance Committee and a task force that examined the issue last year, said it would โ€œ(move) us toward a funding system that is more equitable for all students.โ€

The legislation must now pass through the Senate Rules Committee and the Appropriations Committee before reaching the floor.

Read more here.

โ€” Peter Dโ€™Auria

Miracle of miracles: A bill creating a state ethics code binding all three branches is moving after all. Despite earlier concerns from advocates that lawmakers would revise the legislation to death, the Senate Government Operations Committee voted 5-0 to endorse the latest draft of S.171 and send it along to the floor.

Read more here.

โ€” Lola Duffort


ON THE CAMPAIGN TRAIL

The Democratic National Committee really wants you to know itโ€™s paying attention to โ€” and investing in โ€” the Green Mountain State. A DNC official reached out to VTDigger to pitch a story about the partyโ€™s generous infusion of cash to the Vermont Democratic Party, and when we did not immediately reply, they made sure to call.

The DNC has made a big show of investing at the local level ahead of the midterms, and, since June, its monthly contribution to the state Democratic Party has been upped to $12,500 a month, a 25% increase from base funding levels in 2020, according to a representative who, for some odd reason, insisted on speaking to VTDigger without being named. For the first time ever, the national party has also awarded the Vermont Democratic Party a grant to pay for its coordinated campaign director, the staffer charged with coordinating between Democratic campaigns up and down the ballot.

But how much is this grant for? The DNC official would not say โ€” five figures is all they would offer in the way of clarity. 

They also offered this written statement from DNC Chair Jaime Harrison: โ€œWith open Senate, House and governorโ€™s seats, we have the opportunity to elect strong Democratic leaders who will work for working families, fight for lower costs, continue growing the economy and stand up for Vermonters everywhere.โ€

An open gubernatorial race? I wonder what the DNC knows about Gov. Phil Scottโ€™s plans that we do not!

โ€” Lola Duffort

The Vermont State Labor Council AFL-CIO endorsed David Zuckerman, a Progressive/Democrat, in his bid to reclaim the lieutenant governorship. 

The Vermont AFL-CIO is made up of nearly 100 locals representing more than 11,000 members, according to the campaignโ€™s press release. Zuckerman, who was lieutenant governor from 2017 to 2021, got a unanimous vote of approval from the executive committee. 

โ€” Riley Robinson


IN CONGRESS

Earmarks are back, baby!

Itโ€™s been more than a decade since members of Congress could request money from the annual appropriations omnibus bill to fund specific projects in their home states. Colloquially, such requests are dubbed โ€œearmarksโ€ โ€” but you probably already knew that if youโ€™ve read this far down in the newsletter, right?

Vermont is set to reap hundreds of millions, due in large part to Democratic U.S. Sen. Patrick Leahyโ€™s outsize influence as chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee.

Read more here.

โ€” Sarah Mearhoff


MARCH MADNESS

Rep. Jim Harrison, R-Chittenden, informs us that the annual Statehouse March Madness tournament is back on this year. โ€œIt reminds us that we all have a life and something to talk about other than the goings on of the Statehouse!โ€ the House Appropriations member wrote in an email that went out to lawmakers and legislative staff this morning.

Weโ€™re not actually sure about that, but as it happens we at Final Reading also need a life, and so will sheepishly accept his invitation to join. The deadline for entries on who will win the national collegiate basketball championship is Thursday, March 17.

โ€” Lola Duffort


WHATโ€™S FOR LUNCH

Tomorrow, salmon is the special. Always one to ask the tough follow-up questions, I pressed chef Bryant Palmer for more details: What about the sides? Any rice? โ€œProbably rice,โ€ he answered. Vegetables, too.

โ€” Lola Duffort


WHATโ€™S ON TAP

THURSDAY, MARCH 10

9 a.m. โ€” Senate Natural Resources to discuss and possibly vote on S.129, an act relating to the management of fish and wildlife.

9 a.m. โ€” House Judiciary to discuss and possibly vote on H.505, which would reclassify penalties for unlawfully possessing, dispensing and selling a regulated drug.

1 p.m. โ€” House Government Operations takes testimony on H.661, which would amend the licensure requirements for mental health professionals.


WHAT WEโ€™RE READING

House Impossible: How the Real Estate Rush and Other Factors Have Pushed Homeownership Out of Reach for Many Vermonters (Seven Days) 

 Senate advances a bill providing incentives for more housing (VTDigger)
NEK educators noticing student behavioral changes since onset of pandemic (VPR)

Previously VTDigger's statehouse bureau chief.

Previously VTDigger's political reporter.