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The board will play a key role in overseeing a years-long mapping process that will cement changes to Vermont’s statewide development review law.
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Lawmakers had hoped the temporary carve-outs would help ease Vermont’s acute housing shortage. Developers are using the new exemptions in at least a dozen locations across the state.
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“My sense is that the majority of the residents in Putney do support the project, and that there’s a small but loud, vocal minority that really opposes it,� said the Putney select board chair.
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A proposed 99-unit hotel in downtown Rutland that will include 26 residential apartments, a restaurant and rooftop bar will not need Act 250 approval, due to its location being within the designated downtown development district.
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The governor’s willingness to use his veto pen � and Democrats� ability to erase it � represents a deepening partisan chasm in Montpelier.
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The legislation, hailed as a compromise between advocates for housing and environmentalists, makes major changes to Vermont’s signature land-use law.
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It’s unclear whether the Democrat-led Legislature will have the votes to override the governor’s veto.
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Republican Gov. Phil Scott hopes voter disaffection over new government spending will erode the supermajority that Democrats have relied on to overcome his veto power.
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The question now is whether Gov. Phil Scott, who has repeatedly criticized earlier versions of the bill, will veto it.
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It’s not the end of the road for the bill, which seeks to make major changes to the state’s half-century-old land use review law.