Book nook
Nice on ice
UVM custodian fills his days filling shelves with free reading materials
CougarHawks skate to victory, plus other CVU sports scores
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Volume 53 Number 5
POSTAL CUSTOMER
PRSRT STD U.S. POSTAGE PAID PERMIT #217 CONCORD, NH ECRWSSEDDM
shelburnenews.com
February 1, 2024
CVSD approves $105 million in spending for TMD
Cold courage
Budget tacks on 18 percent school tax increase COREY MCDONALD STAFF WRITER
The Champlain Valley School District has unanimously approved $105 million in spending next year, sending the budget, and a roughly 18 percent school tax increase, to voters for Town Meeting Day. The budget “reflects the very best we can do for our students in a very challenging economic environment,” school board vice chair Meghan Metzler said. Since the Legislature passed Act 127 in 2022, Chittenden County school districts have been
bracing for steep financial cuts thanks to decreasing pupil-weighting counts. The FY2025 budget marks a roughly $10 million increase in spending from the current year’s $96 million budget and reflects significant increases in contractually negotiated salaries and benefits, and a double-digit increase in health insurance premiums affecting many school districts, towns, and businesses alike throughout the state. See CVSD on page 12
Planning commission gets an earful during zoning bylaw talks LIBERTY DARR STAFF WRITER
PHOTOS BY LEE KROHN
The Shelburne and Hinesburg fire departments worked together on joint ice rescue training exercises Saturday.
Minus a few minor technical difficulties for people who tuned in on Zoom, more than a dozen residents packed the room for the planning commission’s first listening session on feedback for the town’s current zoning bylaw overhaul. While most of the conversation has been centered on balancing the town’s dedication to natural resources with some of the state’s newest legislation regarding density requirements, residents and members of a town task force took the opportunity to voice a
new point to the commission: The lack of affordable housing in town is a major hindrance to the town’s economic growth. The housing task force was spearheaded out of the 3-month community-building exercise known as Shelburne Forward Together where residents narrowed three areas of importance to the town as it moves forward. Meagan Buckley, chief executive officer of Wake Robin and co-chair of the new task force, said she has personally felt the repercussions of the lack of housing See BYLAW on page 11