As a member of the House Energy & Digital Infrastructure Committee and its previous version (Environment & Energy Committee), I work directly on important issues related to energy and climate resilience, telecommunications siting and broadband access, as well as the state’s use of digital technology to improve government services to Vermonters.

Clean energy for a stable climate

I’m committed to acting on climate and pursuing innovative policies that are responsible and equitable. In my committee and a co-chair of the Climate Solutions Caucus, I’m working to ensure we keep moving forward in combatting climate change while helping to reduce overall household spending on energy. Although federal IRA incentives for cleaner heat and vehicles have been hit hard, see the available incentives at this link and from your local utility.

  • Expanding solar in Vermont

    Our solar industry has been dealt a tough blow under the current federal administration, making it harder than ever for Vermonters to go solar. Despite these headwinds, we advanced some bills in the 2025-26 session to make it easier and more cost-effective to site solar and to enable smaller, portable solar panel usage.

    • H.710 makes it easier and more cost-effective for developers to co-locate solar facilities on the same parcel, delivering cost savings and supporting smarter land-use.

    • S.202 enables the use of portable, plug-in solar panels. Also called “balcony or porch solar,” these plug-in photovoltaic (PIPV) devices are widely used in Europe, allowing apartment residents to offset their electricity usage, especially when paired with batteries. While neither utility nor Public Utilities Commission approval is needed to use them (unlike with rooftop solar), the bill ensures safe usage of PIPV by requiring that stringent national safety standards (UL-approved) are met.

  • Renewable Energy Standard (Act 179, 2024)

What is a Renewable Energy Standard?

A Renewable Energy Standard (RES) specifies how much renewable energy (solar, wind, hydro) our electric utilities must procure to ensure a cleaner grid. Legislators worked with electric utilities, environmental groups, housing groups and others to update the current RES that was passed in 2015. The new RES directs all Vermont utilities to achieve 100% renewable energy purchases by at least 2035. The bill doubles the amount of new in-state renewables and sets a higher target for renewables from regional sources. Here is an overview of the RES.

Does the RES increase electric bills?

The Vermont Department of Public Service (DPS) tracks the costs and benefits of complying with the RES every year, and these reports show that our electric utilities have been able to meet the current requirements without big cost increases. In considering higher renewable targets in 2024, the DPS ran several different scenarios that showed a range of costs but none of the scenarios matched up with the bill we passed that year. DPS proposes a different approach than the RES, called a Clean Energy Standard, that would enable existing nuclear power that feeds into our regional grid (ISO-NE) to count towards our RES targets, in the interest of reducing cost impacts. The Joint Fiscal Office analyzed the costs of the bill as passed and their fiscal note estimates a modest cost increase over ten years even without nuclear. While there’s a lot of interest in smaller, modular nuclear technology, it seems unlikely to scale or become an affordable option any time soon. For that reason, I’m supportive of doubling down on renewables.

  • Affordable electric bills

Although we cannot control the price of fossil fuels, as a global commodity, there are things we can do in Vermont to help keep electric rates affordable as the energy system changes to cleaner sources. While electricity prices may rise, overall spending on energy is projected to decline as we transition to electric cars and heating. As our homes become “smarter” and more connected to the electric grid via electric car and home batteries, for example, they can act as “virtual power plants”, helping to store or discharge power as needed to reduce costly peaks, stabilizing electric rates and improving the reliability of the grid. In the meantime, there is wide variability in the costs of electricity depending on where you live and which utility serves your home, and not all our utilities offer accessible energy assistance programs for low- and moderate-income Vermonters. In 2024 (S.305/Act 142), we tasked the Public Utilities Commission with studying current and potential future programs and initiatives focused on reducing or stabilizing energy costs (including electricity, heating and transportation) for low- or moderate-income households and determining whether a statewide program to reduce energy burden is needed in Vermont. See the Public Utilities Commission’s Act 142 Energy Cost Stabilization Report (2025) and recommendations. The main takeaway from the PUC’s report is that more coordination of existing programs rather than a new program may be in order; an assessment by the Department of Public Service is underway with a report coming next year.

In 2026, I advanced a bill to update our disconnection policies given increasing rates of disconnection in recent years; unfortunately, it was stalled in the Senate.

  • Cleaner, more affordable heat

    I worked closely with advocates and committee members on 2024 legislation (S.305/Act 142) that supports clean heating at the neighborhood-level via Thermal Energy Networks or TENs. To reduce our reliance on fossil fuels for heating buildings, this technology brings the concept of geothermal energy to a larger footprint like a neighborhood or downtown. Underground networks of water-filled pipes can provide heating and cooling to connected buildings using networked geothermal, taking advantage of the stable temperature deep below the ground, and/or waste heat from other systems like wastewater. The bill we passed clarifies that municipalities may operate a TEN just like a public water or wastewater system, without requiring authorization from the Public Utilities Commission (PUC). For electric utilities to develop such networks, the bill tasks the PUC with some analysis of the permitting, construction, operation, and rates of TENs as well as recommendations for any necessary statutory changes. 

  • Affordable Heat Act (S.5/Act 18)

What was the Affordable Heat Act?

This was a complex law passed in 2023 that encouraged cleaner heating, reducing our reliance on fossil fuel sources that contribute to climate change. It directed the Public Utilities Commission (PUC) to design a program that would drive more investment in clean heating equipment and energy efficiency improvements for households and businesses. Here is an overview of the clean heat standard program envisioned in the bill. In January 2025, the Public Utilities Commission (PUC) submitted its draft rule to the Legislature with a recommendation not to implement the clean heat standard at this time due to administrative complexity. In February 2026, the PUC issued an order closing the case after the Legislature failed to vote to move forward. A repeal of the Clean Heat Standard was added to H.740, a 2026 bill that would have created better tracking of fuel usage and emissions in the state, but the bill failed to make it to a vote in the House before adjournment.

State IT oversight

Another important aspect of committee work in the 2025-2026 biennium was improving our oversight of state spending on big information technology (IT) projects. Vermont’s IT systems are critical to our state government, enabling Vermonters to find information and access vital services through Vermont.gov.  Vermont has more than $700 million in projects scheduled over the next several years to replace some systems that date back to the 1970s. Recent IT project upgrades include: the Department of Motor Vehicles system (myDMV); the Department of Labor’s Unemployment Insurance system; integrated Eligibility and Enrollment--a single point-of-entry for many state-assistance programs; and one unified system for state government payroll, HR and procurement. The Agency of Digital Services’ dashboard and 2026 annual report provide a snapshot of state IT projects.