Vermont
Bear hunting season to start in Vermont: What to know about rules, dates, costs
Hiking safely during hunting season
Outdoor pros share safety tips with hikers who are exploring nature and fall foliage during hunting season.
Bear hunters will be in the woods soon in Vermont, as the early season opens on Sept. 1 and runs through Sept. 15, with one exception. Nonresident hunters using dogs are not allowed to start hunting until Sept. 15.
The late bear hunting season starts on Nov. 16 and continues through Nov. 24. Hunters are limited to one bear during the year.
Early-season hunters must have a special bear tag, which costs $5 for residents and $15 for non-residents. For late-season hunters, a bear tag is included with their hunting licenses. In addition to a hunting license, a bear hunter using a bow or crossbow must have a bow license or a certificate showing completion of a bow hunter education course.
Bears must be field-dressed before the reporting station in Vermont
Game Warden Jeremy Schmid, who covers an area stretching from Bolton to Cambridge, said Vermont Fish and Wildlife requires bears to be field-dressed before showing up at a reporting station, so the meat can be preserved and cooled as quickly as possible.
“Bear meat has a tendency to spoil quicker than deer meat, especially in the early part of the season when temperatures can be hot,” Schmid said.
Joshua Morse, Fish and Wildlife’s public information officer, said the department wants people hunting bears to “make good use of the meat.”
Bear hunters are also required to collect and submit a pre-molar tooth from the bear at the time it’s reported, or within 30 days. The tooth provides important information on the age, structure and size of the bear population.
Do hunters have to return to the kill site if requested?
Hunters, whether of bear, moose or deer, are required by Vermont law to return to the kill site at the request of a warden. Schmid declined to say what might trigger such a request, but he said the purpose was to make sure the game in question was taken legally, and in the case of bears, to make sure the animal wasn’t baited into the site, which is illegal.
“We monitor all reports as reports get inputted to our database by the reporting stations,” Schmid said. “We have live access to the reports.”
Where can bears be found in Vermont during hunting season
Bears will be feeding along power lines and in forest openings and old fields where berries and apples can be found, as well as in forested beech and oak stands, Jaclyn Comeau, Vermont’s bear biologist, said in a news release.
“They also are likely to be feeding on standing corn,” she added.
How likely are hunters to find a bear in Vermont
Vermont Fish and Wildlife reported recently that Vermont’s bear population is between 6,300 and 7,600, which is down from a record year last year, but still robust, making it a great opportunity for those who have never hunted bear to give it a try this year.
Comeau asks hunters not to shoot a bear with cubs, or bears observed in groups, as they are usually made up of sows with cubs.
“Black bear cubs are dependent on their mother through the following spring,” Comeau said. “It is important to maintain these family groups.”
Fish and Wildlife has tips on its website for identifying sows with cubs, as well as the 2024 Black Bear Hunting Guide.
New Vermont law prohibits selling black bear paws and internal organs
Vermont also has a new law in effect that prohibits the sale of paws or internal organs of a black bear, which is a problem around the country, fueling a black market. Bear gallbladders are used in Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) and bear paws are used to make a soup that’s considered a delicacy.
Contact Dan D’Ambrosio at 660-1841 or ddambrosio@freepressmedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @DanDambrosioVT.
Vermont
L.A. County office building adds glass exterior at 550 S. Vermont Ave. in Koreatown
At the intersection of 6th Street and Vermont Avenue in Koreatown, the former headquarters of the Los Angeles County Department of Mental Health has a shiny new glass curtain wall, and a $210-million renovation and expansion project takes shape.
The 12-story tower, built more than 60 years ago at 550 S. Vermont Avenue, originally consisted of approximately 155,000 square feet of offices. The ongoing project, in addition to remodeling the look of the existing building, is adding an additional 88,000 square feet of space at the rear of the building, expanding its total office space to more than 240,000 square feet of space. The makeover also involves the construction of 2,000 square feet of commercial space at street level.
View looking southeast from Vermont AvenueUrbanize LA
Gensler is designing the makeover, which includes matching design motif’s to the Department of Mental Health’s new headquarters – a 21-story tower which stands directly north on Vermont.
Trammell Crow Company is leading the development of the project, while Snyder Langston is serving as general contractor.
View looking northwest from 6th StreetLos Angeles County
According to a June 2024 report to the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors, potential occupants for the department’s former headquarters could include the County’s Human resources Division, the Executive office of the Board of Supervisors, the Department of Public Social Services, the Department of Children and Family Services, and the Department of Public Health.
The project is considered the final component of the Vermont Corridor redevelopment, which included the construction of the neighboring office tower and an affordable housing complex across the street.
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Vermont
Regulators think few contractors are registered with the state — and they want to reel them in – VTDigger
“We can’t help you.”
That’s what regulators often have to say when people complain about getting shoddy construction in an expensive home improvement project, said Lauren Hibbert, deputy secretary of state, whose office oversees professional regulation in Vermont.
“And that’s very unsatisfying to homeowners,” Hibbert told the Senate Natural Resources and Energy Committee on Thursday. The only real alternative is to take their contractor to court, she said.
That limitation stems from the fact that contractors in the state aren’t required to be licensed, Hibbert said. Instead, contractors are merely required to be registered if they’re entering into a contract worth $10,000 or more with a homeowner.
To get registered with the state, contractors pay a fee, provide proof of insurance and have to disclose any criminal records. A licensure requirement could set a higher bar, requiring contractors to have a certain level of education and training.
And if contractors were licensed, it could give the state more control over enforcing a professional standard, potentially offering more remedies for people who feel they’ve been wronged, Hibbert said.
A bill the committee is considering, H.718, doesn’t go so far as to require contractors to be licensed. Instead, it creates a task force to improve the state’s contractor registry.
The state has a total of 1,400 registered residential contractors, including individuals and businesses, Hibbert said. But she thinks that number is very low and that despite the requirement, many contractors are not registered.
The Vermont Office of Professional Regulation generates its money from registration and licensure fees, according to Jennifer Colin, director of the office. But the contractor registration hasn’t generated enough revenue, meaning the office doesn’t have the money to do more outreach and get more contractors to register, Colin said.
The task force proposed by the bill would, among other measures, seek to address those issues with the registry, Colin explained.
The bill was hotly debated on the House floor before lawmakers there passed it last month. Some representatives said they were concerned the registry was difficult for contractors to navigate and created barriers into the profession.
In 2022, Gov. Phil Scott vetoed a bill that sought to create a registry for all contractors in the state, saying he didn’t think the registry was needed. Scott cited concerns that the bill would harm small-scale operations. Lawmakers compromised with the governor following his veto and amended the bill to set the current $10,000 contract threshold for registry.
On Thursday, the committee’s chair, Sen. Anne Watson, D/P-Washington, said the committee would continue hearing expert input on this year’s bill.
In the know
The House Ways and Means Committee heard sharply divided testimony Thursday morning on a bill that would increase taxes on some wealthier Vermonters’ investment income and create a new top tax bracket for the highest 1% of earners.
Stephanie Yu, who leads the policy research nonprofit Public Assets Institute, expressed strong support for the bill. She told lawmakers that income inequality has increased steadily in Vermont over the last century, leaving many without the ability to meet basic needs. The state’s top tax rate has decreased substantially in the last 60 years, she added, from a height of roughly 20% in the late 1960s to the current rate of 8.75%.
“Vermont’s tax system, while it’s better than many other states, is still regressive at the top,” Yu said.
Amy Spear, president of the Vermont Chamber of Commerce, told lawmakers the bill would likely have “hidden economic consequences.” A new tax on capital gains, she said, would make selling a company in preparation for retirement and passing ownership along more costly for the state’s business owners. And the proposed top-level income tax hike “reaches deeply into active business income,” Spear said, since smaller businesses’ earnings often count as taxable income for owners.
Andrew Wilford, director of state tax policy at the National Taxpayers Union Foundation, raised broader concerns, saying the change would make Vermont less competitive with neighboring states and could drive tax-related outmigration.
“Targeting investment with high tax rates is a problem for Vermont’s tax base in the future,” he said.
“It’s difficult for the committee when we hear one thing and then hear completely opposite testimony,” said Rep. Carolyn Branagan, R-Georgia. “We have to dig in and look what the facts are.”
— Theo Wells-Spackman
On the move — slowly
Debate over H.955, the House’s sweeping education reform bill, continued through the afternoon Thursday as lawmakers debated a number of amendments to the legislation.
Two amendments would have set additional parameters around a school district’s ability to close a school and would have required voter approval to close a school. Those amendments failed.
Another amendment that failed would have suspended the state’s excess spending threshold, which financially penalizes districts for spending above certain amounts, for fiscal years 2028 and 2029.
Yet another, which lawmakers continued to debate at around 5 p.m. Thursday, would have required all approved independent schools to follow the same education quality standards set for the state’s public schools. That amendment failed via a roll call.
It was unclear when the bill would come to a full vote. Lawmakers will need to approve the bill twice before advancing it to the Senate. The House had not yet voted on the bill before this newsletter’s deadline.
Check back tomorrow for the full story.
— Corey McDonald
Vermont
No cell service? This retro solution is helping rural areas of Vermont
WORCESTER, Vt. (InvestigateTV) – In rural Vermont, where cell service can be nonexistent, residents are finding an unexpected solution to communication challenges: old-school pay phones.
Patrick Schlott, an electrical engineer and native of Vermont, has begun installing modified vintage pay phones in public spaces like libraries and town halls. These phones, part of his “Ran-tel” cooperative—short for the Randolph public telephone operating company—allow users to make free calls anywhere in the U.S. or Canada, with no coins or cards required.
“It’s just for anyone who needs to make a phone call,” Schlott said.
The idea was inspired by similar projects in cities like Philadelphia and Portland, Oregon.
Schlott, who has a passion for old technology, realized he could give back to his community by repurposing the equipment.
The phones are wired to run on free public Wi-Fi, which is why they are free to use.
For residents like Roger Strobridge in Worcester, the phones are a critical safety measure in an area where cell service is unreliable, particularly during harsh winters.
“I personally look at this pay phone that’s being installed as our answer to cell service and cell towers,” Strobridge said.
While the project started as a hobby, Schlott is already expanding, with a goal to have at least one Ran-tel phone in each of Vermont’s 14 counties.
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