Rep. Heidi Scheuermann (standing) addresses House lawmakers Credit: Taylor Dobbs

House lawmakers passed a bill Thursday that would provide a deadline extension for some school districts that have been ordered to merge by Vermont’s Board of Education.

The legislation is a scaled-back version of a proposal that would have provided a one-year extension for all of the districts that were required to merge by July 1, 2019. That measure, which had support from a tripartisan coalition of House lawmakers, failed Wednesday.

Dozens of the districts ordered to merge have sued the state board, arguing that the order was unconstitutional. At the same time, parents, board members and administrators in some of the districts are urging lawmakers to step in and provide a delay of at least one year — or until the court case is finished.

The proposed legislation, which cleared the House in a 134 to 10 vote, gives an extension to some districts that haven’t presented a merger plan to voters. The bill, H.39, gives no extension to communities in which voters have rejected merger proposals. Those districts must still merge by July .

Rep. Heidi Scheuermann (R-Stowe) was the lead sponsor of the blanket one-year delay proposal that lawmakers voted down Wednesday. She voted in favor of the competing proposal Thursday, she said, because she sees any delay as an improvement on the current situation — even if it doesn’t apply to as many districts as she’d like.

The bill that passed Thursday would provide a one-year extension for Scheuermann’s district of Stowe, but not for other areas, including Enosburgh and Richford; Barre City and Barre Town; and four other consolidated districts made up of three or more existing jurisdictions.

The legislation will now move to the Senate.

See below for a detailed list of the district merger deadlines proposed by the House bill, H.39:

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2 replies on “House Passes Plan to Delay Some Forced School District Mergers”

  1. As long as Vermonters continue to fight against any and all efforts to control school spending they really need to stop their incessant whining about property taxes. Having all of these teeny tiny schools with teeny tiny graduating classes is just really, really expensive, stupid and self indulgent.

  2. The simple solution is to require those small schools to fund themselves in their own district. Why should I pay high school taxes for another school district. Once they realize their taxes cannot afford their schools they will do a turn around really fast. It is either that or the House needs to grow a pair and make these mergers happen.

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