Vermont
Black bears are an asset to Vermont landscapes and public health – The Mountain Times
By Isabella A. Johnson
Editor’s notice: Isabella A. Johnson is working towards her grasp’s diploma in public well being on the College of Vermont.
As a graduate pupil in public well being, it turns into more and more clear how lucky I’m to stay in Vermont and share the panorama with considerable wildlife that contributes enormously to biodiversity.
Many Vermonters get pleasure from wildlife-watching as a approach to merely scale back stress. Simply observing a mom bear are likely to her cubs proper from our kitchen home windows is an prompt dopamine increase. This was particularly wanted in the course of the Covid-19 lockdowns of the not-so-distant previous.
Other than our personal psychological well being, black bears, a keystone species, present public well being advantages associated to our shared surroundings. With bears now exiting their winter dens, it’s an opportune time to lift consciousness about their worth on our landscapes and their largest menace: people.
It’s in our greatest curiosity to undertake a One Well being perspective, that means that well being is transdisciplinary, intertwined with the well being of wildlife and our shared surroundings. We should always preserve this in thoughts as we contemplate why black bears are worthy of improved protections.
As a keystone species, these magnificent animals assist outline ecosystems, benefiting the well being of different wildlife species. A method bears assist promote biodiversity is by seed dispersal: Following meals, bears depart behind droppings that comprise seeds from the berries they eat, dispersing the seeds all through their habitat.
Bears disperse over 200,000 seeds per hour per sq. kilometer whereas foraging for fruits after which excreting them on the panorama. And after they dig for roots and bugs, they aerate the soil. Moreover, with the Covid-19 outbreak, many are paying nearer consideration to rising zoonotic illnesses (illnesses transmissible from animals to people). One in all these contains brucellosis, a micro organism generally present in animal carcasses and their afterbirth that, if uncovered, could cause severe well being circumstances in people and home in addition to different wild animals.
Predator species like coyotes are most useful at scavenging the carcasses, however black bears are opportunistic eaters as properly and can feed on the stays, thus aiding within the discount of unfold of illness.
Regardless of the important position that bears play in our shared surroundings, they’re hunted and killed in astonishingly excessive numbers in Vermont, with 20% of the Vermont bear inhabitants killed off over the past searching season — in lots of circumstances in exceptionally merciless methods. The rationale Vermont Fish & Wildlife permits a searching season might shock you. The bear searching season shouldn’t be primarily based on the “organic carrying capability” — the capability of the land — as an alternative, it’s primarily based on what the general public will tolerate, or the “social carrying capability.”
In response to Vermont Fish & Wildlife knowledge, almost two-thirds of Vermont residents really need the bear inhabitants to stay the identical of their county, that means that Vermonters need bears of their communities. So, why are they being hunted so aggressively?
Vermont has one of many longest bear searching seasons within the nation, from Sept. 1 via the tip of November, together with using hounds. It additionally has an unacceptably lengthy hound “coaching” season that begins on June 1 and runs your entire summer time. Cubs are nonetheless tiny in June, and this exercise locations each the mom bears and their cubs in danger as hounders unleash packs of hounds on them, chasing them for miles via the woods, into roads and onto personal property.
Through the 2021 searching season, nearly half of the 841 bears killed had been feminine. Meaning many cubs are left to die, since they stick with their mom for 16 months, generally longer. Wildlife ecologists see feminine bears as having larger worth to the bear inhabitants than males as a result of they rear the younger. Bears have a low reproductive charge, and subsequently can not maintain this degree of killing 12 months after 12 months.
Looking can be altering bear conduct, comparable to forcing bears to alter their foraging habitats and turn into extra lively at night time, although they don’t seem to be nocturnal, impeding their capacity to forage efficiently.
Some “sportsmen” have argued — incorrectly — that bear populations and human-bear conflicts are positively correlated and that searching bears prevents future human-bear conflicts. Nonetheless, research show that “human-bear battle was not correlated with prior harvests, offering no proof that bigger harvests diminished subsequent human-bear battle.”
One of the simplest ways to cut back conflicts with bears is by altering our conduct, comparable to utilizing electrical fencing to safe rooster coops and beehives. Regardless of what some might imagine, roughly 88% of all bear “incidents’’ recorded by Vermont Fish & Wildlife throughout 2021 had been merely {that a} bear was seen. That’s hardly a battle and never worthy of being labeled an “incident.”
So what can we do?
For the reason that No. 1 menace to bears is us, crucial factor we are able to do is change our conduct. Take a look at the Get Bear Sensible Society’s ideas for deterring bears and managing attractants.
We should reevaluate Vermont’s bear searching and hounding legal guidelines and do higher by these magnificent animals.
Vermont
Vermont state police seek help locating 60-year-old Enosburg man – Newport Dispatch
ENOSBURG — Vermont State Police are seeking assistance in locating John Reynolds, 60, who has not been seen since Nov. 13.
Reynolds is believed to be in the Enosburg/Berkshire area.
While there are no signs that he is in immediate danger or that his absence is under suspicious circumstances, concerns have been raised regarding his welfare.
Authorities are urging anyone who might have information about Reynolds’ whereabouts to reach out to the VSP St. Albans at (802) 524-5993.
Vermont
US Chamber, oil industry sue Vermont over law requiring companies to pay for climate change damage
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce and a top oil and gas industry trade group are suing Vermont over its new law requiring that fossil fuel companies pay a share of the damage caused over several decades by climate change.
The federal lawsuit filed Monday asks a state court to prevent Vermont from enforcing the law, which was passed last year. Vermont became the first state in the country to enact the law after it suffered catastrophic summer flooding and damage from other extreme weather. The state is working to estimate the cost of climate change dating back to Jan. 1, 1995.
The lawsuit argues the U.S. Constitution precludes the act and that the state law is preempted by the federal Clean Air Act. It also argues that the law violates domestic and foreign commerce clauses by discriminating “against the important interest of other states by targeting large energy companies located outside of Vermont.”
The Chamber and the other plaintiff in the lawsuit, the American Petroleum Institute, argue that the federal government is already addressing climate change. And because greenhouse gases come from billions of individual sources, they argue it is impossible to measure “accurately and fairly” the impact of emissions from a particular entity in a particular location over decades.
“Vermont wants to impose massive retroactive penalties going back 30 years for lawful, out-of-state conduct that was regulated by Congress under the Clean Air Act,” said Tara Morrissey, senior vice president and deputy chief counsel of the Chamber’s litigation center. “That is unlawful and violates the structure of the U.S. Constitution — one state can’t try to regulate a global issue best left to the federal government. Vermont’s penalties will ultimately raise costs for consumers in Vermont and across the country.”
A spokesman for the state’s Agency of Natural Resources said it had not been formally served with this lawsuit.
Anthony Iarrapino, a Vermont-based lobbyist with the Conservation Law Foundation, said the lawsuit was the fossil fuel industry’s way of “trying to avoid accountability for the damage their products have caused in Vermont and beyond.”
“More states are following Vermont’s lead holding Big Oil accountable for the disaster recovery and cleanup costs from severe storms fueled by climate change, ensuring that families and businesses no longer have to foot the entire bill time and time again,” Iarrapino added.
Under the law, the Vermont state treasurer, in consultation with the Agency of Natural Resources, is to issue a report by Jan. 15, 2026, on the total cost to Vermonters and the state from the emission of greenhouse gases from Jan. 1, 1995, to Dec. 31, 2024. The assessment would look at the effects on public health, natural resources, agriculture, economic development, housing and other areas. The state would use federal data to determine the amount of covered greenhouse gas emissions attributed to a fossil fuel company.
It’s a polluter-pays model affecting companies engaged in the trade or business of extracting fossil fuel or refining crude oil attributable to more than 1 billion metric tons of greenhouse gas emissions during the time period. The funds could be used by the state for such things as improving stormwater drainage systems; upgrading roads, bridges and railroads; relocating, elevating or retrofitting sewage treatment plants; and making energy efficient weatherization upgrades to public and private buildings. It’s modeled after the federal Superfund pollution cleanup program.
The approach taken by Vermont has drawn interest from other states, including New York, where Gov. Kathy Hochul signed into law a similar bill in December.
The New York law requires companies responsible for substantial greenhouse gas emissions to pay into a state fund for infrastructure projects meant to repair or avoid future damage from climate change. The biggest emitters of greenhouse gases between 2000 and 2018 would be subjected to the fines.
Vermont
With major changes to Act 250 underway, a new board takes the reins
This story, by Report for America corps member Carly Berlin, was produced through a partnership between VTDigger and Vermont Public.
Gov. Phil Scott has appointed the members of a new board that will administer Act 250, Vermont’s statewide development review law.
The new Land Use Review Board replaces the old Natural Resources Board, a shift mandated under Act 181, a major land-use reform law passed last year. That law takes steps to relax Act 250’s reach in existing downtowns and village centers across the state, and also lays the groundwork for extending Act 250’s protections in areas deemed ecologically sensitive.
But the new law also changes how Act 250 is administered. The Land Use Review Board is made up of five full-time members with relevant professional experience — a significant change from the former citizen-board structure. The new members have backgrounds in municipal and regional planning, environmental law, and civil engineering. The review board will also play a key role in overseeing a years-long mapping process that will cement Act 250’s jurisdiction in the future. (Regional district offices still make permitting decisions on individual projects, however).
“Vermont faces a significant housing crisis and the work of this board will play a very important role in helping us address it, while protecting our beautiful landscape and environment,” Scott said in a statement announcing the appointments earlier this week. “I’m confident this board has the diverse expertise, work ethic, and passion to tackle the work that’s required in Act 181 while also forwarding common sense improvements to the law to further our shared goals.”
The new board chair, Janet Hurley, currently serves as the assistant director and planning program manager for the Bennington County Regional Commission. Before that, she worked as a local planner throughout the state, in Manchester, South Burlington, Milton, and Westford, according to a press release from Scott’s office.
Since Act 250 was enacted in 1970, “it can certainly be credited with saving Vermont from rampant development,” Hurley said in an interview. “But it can also certainly be responsible for the depth of our housing crisis, because the burden of Act 250 permitting — often duplicative, especially in our town and village centers — just made housing development that’s affordable much more difficult to achieve for so many years.”
In the past, new housing projects would trigger Act 250 review based on how large they were, and how many homes a developer had already built in a given area during a given timeframe. That system could in fact lead to the sprawl it was trying to prevent, prompting developers to avoid bumping up against Act 250 permitting by building “smaller scale, single family home development dispersed around our towns and villages,” Hurley said.
Act 181 shifts the permitting program toward “location-based jurisdiction,” meaning some areas of the state that already have robust local zoning review and water and wastewater infrastructure could be exempt from Act 250 altogether. That new system will take years to implement, though, and the transition will be one of the board’s primary tasks.
As that longer process plays out, lawmakers made temporary exemptions to Act 250 last year. They were designed to encourage dense housing in already-developed areas, and so far, the carve-outs appear to be working as intended. Hurley thinks loosening Act 250’s rules around housing will make a big difference.
“The market just can’t bear the cost of construction at this point, and so any relief to the financing of new housing development is going to be meaningful,” Hurley said.
More from Vermont Public: Vermont loosened Act 250 rules for housing. Here’s where developers are responding
Still, members of the board think Act 250 will continue to play an important role in years to come.
“The housing crisis requires us to act swiftly, and that means a lot more housing, period,” said Alex Weinhagen, current director of planning and zoning in Hinesburg and another new board member. “But larger projects have impacts, and the whole point of having a development review process is to make sure that we acknowledge those and that the projects, you know, do what they can to minimize them.”
To Weinhagen, Act 181’s goals were to reform statewide development review so that “it’s smarter, it works better, it’s applied consistently across the state, and it’s only used when it’s needed — and not used in places where there’s adequate local level development review happening,” he said.
The board will study whether appeals of Act 250 permits should be heard by the board itself — or continue to be heard in state environmental court. Legislators and administration officials hotly debated the issue last session, arguing over which option would in fact speed up lengthy appeal timelines, and ultimately directed the new board to assess it further.
The other members of the new board include L. Brooke Dingledine, an environmental attorney in Randolph; Kirsten Sultan, an Act 250 district coordinator in the Northeast Kingdom with a background in engineering; and Sarah Hadd, a former local planner and current town manager for Fairfax, according to the press release.
The new board appointments took effect on Jan. 1, and the board will begin its work on Jan. 27.
Have questions, comments or tips? Send us a message.
-
Business1 week ago
On a quest for global domination, Chinese EV makers are upending Thailand's auto industry
-
Health6 days ago
New Year life lessons from country star: 'Never forget where you came from'
-
Technology6 days ago
Meta’s ‘software update issue’ has been breaking Quest headsets for weeks
-
World1 week ago
Passenger plane crashes in Kazakhstan: Emergencies ministry
-
Politics1 week ago
It's official: Biden signs new law, designates bald eagle as 'national bird'
-
Business3 days ago
These are the top 7 issues facing the struggling restaurant industry in 2025
-
Politics1 week ago
'Politics is bad for business.' Why Disney's Bob Iger is trying to avoid hot buttons
-
Culture3 days ago
The 25 worst losses in college football history, including Baylor’s 2024 entry at Colorado