Steve May, a clinical social worker from Richmond, announced Monday that he will run this November as a Democrat for a seat representing Chittenden County in the Vermont Senate.
May, who owns a private practice in Montpelier, previously served on the Richmond selectboard and ran for Senate in 2018. He said in a press release that he believes Vermont needs to create a “network of policy” that puts the needs of families first.
“Affordability has become a buzzword somehow,” he wrote. “We need more than empty platitudes.”
May’s campaign announcement outlines a handful of campaign issues, starting with changes to Vermont’s health care system that he believes would increase access to addiction treatment.
Vermont must also enact a paid family leave program, a “meaningful” minimum wage increase and provide subsidized child care, May said. Citing the county’s housing crisis, he called for a comprehensive plan that “puts the breaks” on double-digit rent increases.
“Finally, we need a Universal Basic Income to address the changes that Vermonters are confronting all too often in this economy,” May wrote, referring to an idea that has recently been thrust into the spotlight by Democratic presidential candidate Andrew Yang.
May said his version of the initiative would draw on revenues from a “multitude of sources” to give Vermonters a supplemental income while not compromising any other existing benefit programs. He called the idea a “far better” one than “trying to attract a handful of mercenary remote workers.”
The six-seat Chittenden County Senate district will have at least two vacancies this November. Senate President Pro Tempore Tim Ashe (D/P-Chittenden) and Sen. Debbie Ingram (D-Chittenden) have announced campaigns for lieutenant governor to replace David Zuckerman, who is running for governor.
Two candidates have already entered the Senate race: former Vermont legislator Kesha Ram and state Rep. Dylan Giambatista (D-Essex), who separately announced their runs last week. A fourth candidate, Louis Meyers, an internal medicine physician at Rutland Regional Medical Center and a past Senate candidate, also told Seven Days that he would run.
Disclosure: Tim Ashe is the domestic partner of Seven Days publisher and coeditor Paula Routly. Find our conflict-of-interest policy here: sevendaysvt.com/disclosure.



“ Affordability has become a buzzword somehow,” he wrote. “We need more than empty platitudes.”
That’s code for – I’m a progressive, and Im going to tax the hell out you.
The same people who whine about taxes — taxes that directly benefit residents and local businesses — be er complain about the biggest tax quagmire of all, the military, especially the F-35s. https://nationalinterest.org/blog/the-buzz…
Universal Basic Income is code for socialism (vs. capitalism).
Besides, the “minimum wage” is already in place. Anything else is government overreach.
I wish people identifying things as “this is socialism” or “this is capitalism” had taken even high school econ or political science 01.