Calendar
Annual Meeting
It’s Button Up season – time to start thinking about weatherization and the great incentives that Efficiency Vermont has to offer. Is your Energy Committee interested in participating in the 2020 Button Up Vermont Campaign? Sign up here and help spread the word about Button Up to your neighbors. The 2020 Button Up campaign has a lot to offer, including:
- Weatherization Wednesdays: weekly webinars featuring trivia, Q&As, DIY-videos, and tips for weatherization.
- Free Virtual Home Energy Visits: residents in participating communities can sign up for a virtual visit from a home energy expert at Efficiency Vermont, while appointments are available.
- Regional Weatherization Trainings: TRORC and other Regional Planning Commissions are hosting custom webinars with special information for your communities. Register for TRORC’s training on November 18 at 12:00 PM.
- Button Up Vermont Share the Warmth Campaign: working with the Vermont Community Foundation, the Button Up campaign has established a way to donate to weatherization projects for low income Vermonters. Invite your neighbors to support energy and financial security in Vermont.
For more information contact Geoff Martin at [email protected].
While mid-century cars and clothing are cool, would you be surprised to know that the zoning in most communities is from the same era? Did you know that local solutions to housing affordability, community revitalization, climate change, and social justice are often stymied by policy decisions made in the 1970s? A lot has changed since then, from infrastructure spending, to household composition, to consumer preferences – but a lot of Vermont’s mid-century zoning bylaws aren’t keeping up with the times.
Many Vermonters are not getting the outcomes they urgently need because the cumbersome and costly process of overhauling a zoning bylaw is out of reach for most cities and towns. This training will help local leaders identify and select small-scale, incremental changes that can be made without having to overhaul all the zoning bylaws.
The training is built upon Enabling Better Places: Zoning for Great Neighborhoods, a how-to manual that promotes practical, small steps that Vermont’s cities, towns and villages can take to address widespread regulatory barriers that limit the choice of homes available to Vermont residents at prices people can afford. This guide stems from the Congress of the New Urbanism’s (CNU) Project for Code Reform, a strategic initiative to support cities and towns as they reform outdated zoning bylaws in favor of more walkable communities.
To register for this event, click here: https://accd.vermont.gov/sites/accdnew/files/documents/CD/CPR/201208_Zoning4Neighborhoods_Training.pdf
Agenda
- Call to order, any changes to agenda, and introductions– Bruce Martin, Chair
- Approval of minutes for 9/17/2020 (attached)
- Approval of treasurer’s report – Brad Salzmann, Treasurer
- LEPC12 EPCRA Review, Statewide LEPC Plan – Scott Jobeless and/or Jonathan DeLaBruere – IEM
- Other Business
LEPC12 next meeting – March 18, 2021
For any questions, please contact Kevin Geiger at [email protected].
While mid-century cars and clothing are cool, would you be surprised to know that the zoning in most communities is from the same era? Did you know that local solutions to housing affordability, community revitalization, climate change, and social justice are often stymied by policy decisions made in the 1970s? A lot has changed since then, from infrastructure spending, to household composition, to consumer preferences – but a lot of Vermont’s mid-century zoning bylaws aren’t keeping up with the times.
Many Vermonters are not getting the outcomes they urgently need because the cumbersome and costly process of overhauling a zoning bylaw is out of reach for most cities and towns. This training will help local leaders identify and select small-scale, incremental changes that can be made without having to overhaul all the zoning bylaws.
The training is built upon Enabling Better Places: Zoning for Great Neighborhoods, a how-to manual that promotes practical, small steps that Vermont’s cities, towns and villages can take to address widespread regulatory barriers that limit the choice of homes available to Vermont residents at prices people can afford. This guide stems from the Congress of the New Urbanism’s (CNU) Project for Code Reform, a strategic initiative to support cities and towns as they reform outdated zoning bylaws in favor of more walkable communities.
To register for this event, click here: https://accd.vermont.gov/sites/accdnew/files/documents/CD/CPR/201208_Zoning4Neighborhoods_Training.pdf
While mid-century cars and clothing are cool, would you be surprised to know that the zoning in most communities is from the same era? Did you know that local solutions to housing affordability, community revitalization, climate change, and social justice are often stymied by policy decisions made in the 1970s? A lot has changed since then, from infrastructure spending, to household composition, to consumer preferences – but a lot of Vermont’s mid-century zoning bylaws aren’t keeping up with the times.
Many Vermonters are not getting the outcomes they urgently need because the cumbersome and costly process of overhauling a zoning bylaw is out of reach for most cities and towns. This training will help local leaders identify and select small-scale, incremental changes that can be made without having to overhaul all the zoning bylaws.
The training is built upon Enabling Better Places: Zoning for Great Neighborhoods, a how-to manual that promotes practical, small steps that Vermont’s cities, towns and villages can take to address widespread regulatory barriers that limit the choice of homes available to Vermont residents at prices people can afford. This guide stems from the Congress of the New Urbanism’s (CNU) Project for Code Reform, a strategic initiative to support cities and towns as they reform outdated zoning bylaws in favor of more walkable communities.
To register for this event, click here: https://accd.vermont.gov/sites/accdnew/files/documents/CD/CPR/201208_Zoning4Neighborhoods_Training.pdf
March 18, 2021
6 – 8 p.m.
https://zoom.us/j/94105511782?pwd=L0lHMUVyVmRBOVhRSVBoNEZFT3VxZz09
1-312-626-6799, Access Code: 94105511782#
Under Act 92, this Committee is legally allowed to host electronic meetings due to the COVID-19 situation. If you need accommodations for this meeting, please contact Kevin Geiger at [email protected].
Agenda
- Call to order, any changes to agenda, and introductions– Bruce Martin, Chair
- Approval of minutes for 12/17/2020 (attached)
- Approval of TRORC Invoice
- Approval of treasurer’s report – Brad Salzmann, Treasurer
- LEPC12 Tier II Reports Summary – Kevin Geiger, TRORC
- Draft Regional Emergency Management Committee (REMC) structure and draft statewide LEPC plan – Kevin Geiger, TRORC and Kim Lapierre, SERC Chair
- Other Business
LEPC12 next and final meeting – June 17, 2021
For any questions, please contact Kevin Geiger at [email protected].
June 17, 2021
6 p.m.
https://zoom.us/j/92728020265?pwd=bnB1VGVZRWUydDdSRHVxUU90MzAxZz09
Phone: 1-312-626-6799, Access Code: 999443#
This meeting is virtual. Due to the recent rescinding of Act 92, this Committee is legally obligated to post a physical location for this meeting. Physical location: 128 King Farm Road, Woodstock, VT 05091. If you need accommodations for this meeting, please contact Kevin Geiger at [email protected].
Agenda
- Call to order, any changes to agenda, and introductions– Bruce Martin, Chair
- Approval of minutes for 3/18/2021 (attached)
- Approval of TRORC Invoice ($3,604.54)
- Approval of treasurer’s report – Brad Salzmann, Treasurer
- Green Mountain Power Resilient Infrastructure Plan – Ken Couture, GMP
- Other Business (Trainings, Ideas, etc).
- Membership Vote to Officially Dissolve LEPC #12 and it’s assets.
Stay tuned for a Regional Emergency Management Committee (REMC) Meeting in September!
For any questions, please contact Kevin Geiger at [email protected].
Webinar Thursday February 3, 5:30pm
Mount Ascutney Regional Commission and Two Rivers-Ottauquechee Regional Commission are teaming up to present to you a Clean Heat learning opportunity. How can one help to achieve the goals driven by the recent Comprehensive Energy Plan and Climate Action Plan? Options! For Upper Valley residents looking to update or upgrade their home heating system, advanced wood heat may be an effective option. We bring you two experts on the topic who will share how advanced wood heat compares to other non-fossil fuel heating options.
Speakers:
Emma Hanson, Wood Energy Coordinator, VT Department of Forests, Parks & Recreation
Bill Karis, Energy Consultant, Efficiency Vermont
Contacts: Alexander Taft, [email protected] Steven Bauer, [email protected]
To join the webinar:
Join Zoom Meeting
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Meeting ID: 837 3137 0705
Passcode: 818496
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