HomeMy WebLinkAboutAgenda - City Council - 04/18/2022AGENDA
SOUTH BURLINGTON CITY COUNCIL South Burlington City Hall 180 Market Street SOUTH BURLINGTON, VERMONT
Participation Options In Person: 180 Market Street - Auditorium - Main Floor Assistive Listening Service Devices Available upon request Electronically: https://meet.goto.com/SouthBurlingtonVT/city-council-meeting04-18-2022 You can also dial in using your phone. +1 (408) 650-3123 Access Code: 176-541-389
Regular Session 6:30 P.M. Monday, April 18, 2022
1.Pledge of Allegiance (6:30 PM)
2.Instructions on exiting building in case of emergency and review of technology options –
Jessie Baker, City Manager (6:31 – 6:32 PM)
3.Agenda Review: Additions, deletions or changes in order of agenda items (6:33 – 6:34 PM)
4.Comments and questions from the public not related to the agenda (6:35 – 6:45 PM)
5.Announcements and City Manager’s Report (6:45 – 6:55 PM)
6.Consent Agenda: (6:55 – 7:00 PM)
A.*** Consider and Sign Disbursements
B.*** Annual Approval of the City's Local Emergency Management PlanC.*** Authorize the survey of Phase I and Phase II of the Garden Street Project asoutlined and authorize the City to provide notice of intent to survey to all known
abutting landowners pursuant to 19 V.S.A. Section 33D.*** Approve a Resolution amending the Public Art Committee composition andappoint Sophia Babbitt to the Committee
E.*** Resolution to amend the Climate Action Plan Task Force
7.Pick the City's Top Dog and First Feline – Donna Kinville, City Clerk (7:00 – 7:15PM)
8.Interviews with applicants for a mid-term appointment to the Development Review Board(7:15 – 7:35PM)
9.*** Receive Common Roots' Annual Update – Andrew Bolduc, Deputy City Manager (7:35 –8:05 PM)
10.Opportunity for Councilors and the public to share information and resources on ClimateChange (8:05 -8:20PM)
11.*** Receive a proposed amendment to the Official Map #OM-22-01 and possible warning ofa public hearing for June 6, 2022 at 7:00 pm of same – Paul Connor, Director of Planning
and Zoning (8:20 – 8:30 PM)
12.*** Consider submittals for Congressional Directed Spending requests – Andrew Bolduc,Deputy City Manager (8:30 – 8:45 PM)
13.*** Per City’s Motor Vehicle and Traffic Ordinance consider adopting a Resolutionestablishing speed limits and sign placements throughout the City requests – AndrewBolduc, Deputy City Manager (8:45 – 9:00 PM)
14.*** Discuss a set of proposed Bylaws for the City’s Statutory and Policy AdvisingCommittees – Jessie Baker, City Manager (9:00 – 9:20 PM)
15.*** Discussion and possible adoption of the FY23 Policy Priorities and Strategies Process –Jessie Baker, City Manager (9:20 – 9:40 PM)
16.*** Convene as the South Burlington Liquor Control Commission to consider the following:Eco Bean and Greens, First Class Restaurant/Bar License; Higher Ground, First
Class & Third-Class Restaurant/Bar License and Entertainment License; Parkway
Diner; First Class & Third-Class Restaurant/Bar License and Outside ConsumptionPermit – (9:40 – 9:50 PM)
17.Consider entering executive session for the purposes of discussing applicants forappointments to South Burlington Committees (9:50 – 10:20 PM)
18.Reports from Councilors on Committee assignments (10:20 – 10:30 PM)
19.Other Business (10:30 – 10:40 PM)
20. Adjourn (10:40 PM)
Respectfully Submitted:
Jessie Baker City Manager
*** Attachments Included
Local Emergency Management Plan Municipal Adoption Form
City of South Burlington
575 Dorset Street
South Burlington , VT 05403
The Local Emergency Management Plan (LEMP)
must be (re)adopted annually, after town meeting day, and submitted to the appropriate Regional Planning Commission (RPC) by May 1st.
At a warned public meeting (regular selectboard/city
council meeting), the municipality adopted the Local
Emergency Management Plan (LEMP) on the date shown at rig ht.
At a warned public meeting (regular selectboard/city
council meeting), the municipality adopted the National Incident Management System (NIMS) on
the date shown at right.
If Vermont Emergency Management needs to
contact municipal leaders to determine status and support requirements during an emergency, the
Emergency Management Director (EMO) and two other local Points Of Contact (POCs) who should
have authoritative local information are listed at right.
Municipality
LEMP Adoption Date
NIMS Adoption Date
EMO Name
Position
Primary Phone
Alternate Phone
Email
POC 2 Name
Position
Primary Phone
Alternate Phone
Email
POC 3 Name
Position
Primary Phone
Alternate Phone
Email
City of South Burlington
April 18, 2022
May 1, 2014
·Terence Francis
EMO
W: 802-846-4134
C: 802-343-4656
Tfrancis@sburl.com
Capt Sasha Lascala
FD Shift Commander
W: 802-846-4110
C: 802-238-6116
Slascal@sburl.com
Capt Chris Corbin
FD Shift Commander
W: 802-846-4110
C: 802-557-7402
CCorbin@sburl.com
�--� Mark this block if a readopted plan has no changes since the previous year.
I hereby certify that the LEMP meets Vermont National Incident Management System (NIMS)
requirements and current LEMP lmplementati nee as on page 2:
Signed* __ ___,,..
Printed Name; certifying individual must have taken, at a minimum, ICS402 or ICS100/IS-100 training
I hereby attest that the municipality has adopted NIMS and the LEMP as stated above:
Helen S.Riehle Council Chair
Printed Name, Selectboard / council member
Once completed, send adoption form and copy of Local Emergency Management Plan to Regional
Planning Commission.
*A typed name is acceptable as an electronic signature if it represents an act of that person in accordance with 9 V.S.A. § 278.
1
2018 Version (Word): this form is used to report LEMP adoption beginning in 2018. There are no previous versions.
Municipality: __South Burlington ______ Date Updated: __April 4, 2022______
2022 Local Emergency Management Plan
1. Emergency Management (EM) planners
2. Municipal Emergency Operations Center (EOC)
The EOC is an organization that coordinates information, support, and response across the
municipality for Incident Commanders and town officials. Its main functions are to maintain situational
awareness for municipal leaders, coordinate resource and information requests, and provide public
information.
Who, by position, can activate the EOC? Director
Preferred EOC Positions and Duties
EOC Director Supervises and directs all EOC activities coordinating municipal support and response (reports to City Manager & Council) EOC Coordinator Assists EOC Director with all activities; Tracks and coordinates any Requests For Support (RFS) for non-municipal resources
Produces and posts public information and press releases; Tracks and answers any Requests For Information (RFI) from media. Oversee any Rumor Control.
Tracks staffs and volunteers responding to emergency; ensures safety
of EOC and controls access of EOC staff, volunteers & visitors to EOC
EOC Call Taker Assists EOC Coordinator; Staffs phones and radio
Potential EOC Staff Members
Name Notes / Contact Information Terence Francis EOC Director Cell-(802) 363-4656, H-(802) 482-2732
Ed Spooner EOC Call Taker Cell (802) 598-2032 H-(802) 503-9003
Sasha LaScala EOC Coordinator Cell- 802-238-6116 W-(802) 846-4110
Primary EOC Location Facility / Address: SB- EOC Landfill Rd.
Phone Numbers: 802-658-7961
Equipment/Notes: Co-located with SB-DPW
Alternate EOC Location Facility / Address: SBPD 19 Gregory Dr.
Phone Numbers: 802-846-4110
Equipment/Notes: Co-located with SBPD
These are the people who wrote and/or maintain this plan. Terence J. Francis, Chief Engineer
2
3. Resources
Use municipal resources, mutual aid agreements, and local purchases first to get resources for response as needed and available.
Purchasing agents for emergencies: Andrew Bolduc 598-3024
Emergency spending limits: Permission needed if over $10,000
Businesses with Standing Municipal Contracts
Type of Contract Name Contact Info Numerous accounts Contact SB Finance Dept for list of vendors 846-4104
Other Local Resources
Type of Resources/Skills Name Contact Info
State support that is usually at no cost to the municipality: • Vermont Hazardous Material (HAZMAT) Response Team (VHMRT)• Vermont Urban Search and Rescue (USAR, VT-TF1)• Vermont State Police and Special Teams• Community Emergency Response Teams (CERTs)• Swiftwater Rescue Teams• Regional Shelter Support• State government agency expertise / services• Federal response agency expertiseState support the municipality will normally eventually have to pay for:• Supplies and equipment (including sandbags)• VTrans Equipment and Personnel• Vermont National Guard Support
The State Emergency Operations Center (SEOC, 800-347-0488) will help coordinate any state support
teams or other external resources that local responders may need.
3
National Incident Management System (NIMS) Typed Resources
Type I II III IV Other Type I II III IV Other
Critical Incident Stress Management
Team 1 N/A Hydraulic Excavator, Large Mass
Excavation N/A
Mobile Communications Center 1 Hydraulic Excavator, Medium Mass
Excavation 1
Mobile Communications Unit N/A N/A Hydraulic Excavator, Compact
All-Terrain Vehicles N/A N/A N/A N/A Road Sweeper 2
Marine Vessels N/A N/A N/A N/A Snow Blower, Loader Mounted 1
Snowmobile N/A N/A N/A N/A Track Dozer 1
Public Safety Dive Team Track Loader
SWAT/Tactical Team Trailer, Equipment Tag-Trailer 1
Firefighting Brush Patrol Engine N/A N/A N/A Trailer, Dump 1
Fire Engine (Pumper) Trailer, Small Equipment 4 N/A N/A
Firefighting Crew Transport N/A Truck, On-Road Dump 7 10
Aerial Fire Truck N/A N/A Truck, Plow
Foam Tender N/A N/A Truck, Sewer Flusher 2
Hand Crew Truck, Tractor Trailer N/A
HAZMAT Entry Team N/A Water Pumps, De-Watering 4
Engine Strike Team Water Pumps, Drinking Water Supply
-Auxiliary Pump
Water Tender (Tanker) N/A Water Pumps, Water Distribution
Fire Boat N/A Water Pumps, Wastewater 1
Aerial Lift - Articulating Boom 1 Water Truck N/A N/A N/A
Aerial Lift - Self Propelled, Scissor,
Rough Terrain Wheel Dozer N/A N/A
Aerial Lift - Telescopic Boom Wheel Loader Backhoe 1
Aerial Lift - Truck Mounted 2 Wheel Loader, Large 1
Air Compressor 1 Wheel Loader, Medium
Concrete Cutter/Multi-Processor for
Hydraulic Excavator Wheel Loader, Small N/A
Electronic Boards, Arrow Wheel Loader, Skid Steer N/A
Electronic Boards, Variable Message
Signs Wheel Loader, Telescopic Handler
Floodlights N/A Wood Chipper 1 N/A N/A N/A
Generator 4 Wood Tub Grinder N/A
Grader N/A
Information about the NIMS Typed resources can be found at: https://rtlt.preptoolkit.org
3
1 9 7 1
4
4. Public Information and Warning
During a significant emergency, the Emergency Operations Center (EOC) and Incident Command
Posts (ICPs) will coordinate and manage public information, both by producing accurate, timely reports
and by tracking what is publicly reported to minimize confusion and help ensure a positive public
response. VT-Alert message - State: Other VT-Alert managers: Vermont Emergency Management: 800-347-0488
Important Local Websites /
Social Media channels:
Front page forum, School Dept cancellation call down system, City web site (SBVT.gov)
Local Newspaper, Radio, TV: City media distribution grp – e-mail
Public Notice locations: Sign boards at: Williston and Dorset
Kennedy Dr & Rt 116
Vermont 2-1-1 is a United Ways of Vermont system that provides 24x7x365 information and referral
services in cooperation with a large number of state and local government and community based
entities. 2-1-1 collects and maintains a database of local resource information and is available to take
calls from the general public to inform and instruct them in relation to emergency events, and to refer
them to the appropriate response and recovery resource, if necessary. To provide information Dial 211 or (802) 652-4636
5. Vulnerable Populations
If necessary, the EOC may contact organizations and facilities, below, that serve vulnerable populations to
identify residents who are at risk based on the emergency. If there are residents at risk or in danger, the
EOC should monitor their status and if required coordinate support for them until their situation stabilizes.
Name / Notes Contact Info
CARE (Citizen Assistance Registration for Emergencies) https://e911.vermont.gov/care (Supporting PSAP)
Daycares, Nursing homes and Assisted living facilities See attached lists.
Daycares - See attached List
Residential Care Homes:
Allenwood – 90 Allen Rd 35 - occ.
Gazebo Apts. – 1510 Williston Rd. 40 - occ.
802-863-3926
802-865-4461
5
Residential Care Homes: Continued
Gazebo Sr. Living – 1530 Williston Rd. 35 – occ.
East Terrace - 71 East Terr. 6 - occ.
Pillsbury Manor South – 20 Harborview Rd. 70 – occ.
802-863-2386
802-660-7500
802-863-7897
Assisted Living: The Residences @ Quarry Hill 802-652-4114 465 Quarry Hill Rd.
Population: 125 + 26 in Memory Care
Total = 131 occ. 6. Shelters
Determine the approximate number of people who need sheltering
Call the State EOC / Watch Officer at 800-347-0488 and request support
Track the status of residents who need shelter until their situation stabilizes
Regional Shelter
Location / Address:
Opening Contact: State EOC, 800-347-0488; American Red Cross, 802-660-9130
Phone Numbers:
Primary Local Shelter
Location / Address: Tuttle Middle School @ 500 Dorset St
Facility Contact(s): Bart Marcelli Alternate: David Young
Phone Numbers: 802-338-8698 802-316-0530
Shelter Manager: Same
Staff Requirements:
Services: X - Warm/Cool X- Overnight X - Food Prep X - Showers X -Healthcare
Notes: ARC Agreement - YES Capacity: 400 Generator - YES Pets Allowed -YES
Alternate Local Shelter
Location / Address: Chamberlin School – 262 White St
Facility Contact(s): Bart Marcelli Alternate: David Young
Phone Numbers: 802-338-8698 802-316-0530
Shelter Manager: Same
Staff Requirements: Varies
Services: X - Warm/Cool X - Overnight X- Food Prep X- Showers X - Healthcare
Notes: ARC Agreement - YES Capacity: 400 Generator - NO Pets Allowed: YES
6
Annexes (Alternate Local Shelter)
Location / Address: Orchard School – 2 Baldwin Ave. Facility Contact(s): Bart Marcelli Alternate: David Young
Phone Numbers: 802-338-8698 802-316-0530
Shelter Manager: Same
Staff Requirements: Varies
Services: X - Warm/Cool X - Overnight X- Food Prep X- Showers X - Healthcare
Notes: ARC Agreement - YES Capacity: 200 Generator - NO Pets Allowed: YES
Alternate Local Shelter
Location / Address: MarcotteSchool – Market St
Facility Contact(s): Bart Marcelli Alternate: David Young Phone Numbers: 802-338-8698 802-316-0530
Shelter Manager: Same
Staff Requirements: Varies Services: X - Warm/Cool X - Overnight X- Food Prep X- Showers X - Healthcare
Notes: ARC Agreement - YES Capacity: 200 Generator - NO Pets Allowed: YES
See maps created by CCRPC for municipality’s All-Hazards Mitigation Plan here as example of types of maps CCRPC could provide as an Annex
See the Vermont Emergency Management (VEM) web site at http://vem.vermont.gov for samples and
examples of annexes, such as: forms; delegations of authority; debris plans; incident-specific plans,
checklists, and matrices; animal disaster references; etc.
Contact Information
7
Position Name
Phone numbers
E-mailOffice Cell Home
Local Emergency Management Team
EMD Terence Francis 802-363-4656 802-482-2732 tfrancis@sburl.com
EM Coordinator Capt Sasha LaScala 802-846-4110 802-238-6116 slascala@sburl.com
Local Response Organization Contacts
Fire Chief Terence Francis 802-846-4134 802-363-4656 802-482-2732
EMS Chief Same as Fire Chief
Chief of Police Shawn Burke 802-846-4179 802-316-0469
Asst to Chief Burke Lt. Jager 802-846-4111
State Police or County Sheriff VSP Williston 878-7111
Local Dispatch Center SBPD 802-846-4111
Local Public Works Contacts
Director DPW Tom DiPiettro 802-6587961 802-3324-2976 tdipietro@sburl.com
Dep Director DPW Adam Cate 802-878-5008 802-999-7826 acate@sburl.com
Town Garage
Drinking Water Utility Champlain Water District 802-864-7454
Wastewater Utility SB DPW- Water Dept. 802-658-7964
Electrical Company Green Mt Power 888-835-4672
Municipal Government Contacts
City Manager Jessie Baker 802-846-4107 802-578-8264 jbaker@sburl.com
Dep. City Manager/CFO Andrew Bolduc 802-846-4112 802-598-3024 802-857-5570 abolduc@sburl.com
Selectboard Chair Helen Riehle 802-318-3425 Hriehle@sburl.com
Selectboard Alt Meaghan Emery 802-264-9636 memery@sburl.com
Selectboard Alt
Town Clerk Donna Kinville 802-847-4119
Contact Information
8
Position Name
Phone numbers
E-mailOffice Cell Home
Town Treasurer / Finance Andrew Bolduc 802-846-4112 802-598-3024 abolduc@sburl.com
Town Health Officer Terry Francis 802-846-4134 802-363-4656 tfrancis@sburl.com
Forest Fire Warden SBFD 802-846-4110
Animal Control Officer SBPD 802-847-4111
School Contact #1 David Young – Superinten. 802-652-7250 802-316-0530 jyoung@sbschools.net
School Contact #2 Bart Micelil 802-652-7250 802-338-8698 bmicelli@sbschools.net
School District Office SB school district 802-652-7250
Other Contacts
180 Market Street South Burlington, VT 05403 tel 802.846.4107 fax 802.846.4101 www.SouthBurlingtonVT.gov
To: Jessie Baker, City Manager
From: Ilona Blanchard, Community Development Director
Subject: Authorize Survey and Notice of Intent to Survey for Phase I and Phase II of the Garden
Street Project, per 19 V.S.A. § 33 Notice of Intent to Survey, via certified mail to abutting
landowners
Date: April 14, 2022
Background: Since 2016, City has been working on completing the Garden Street project. This project is
broken into two phases:
Phase I
•segment between Dorset and the South Burlington City Center, LLC property
(located between Healthy Living and Trader Joes),
•segment between the South Burlington City Center, LLC property (by Dover Place)
and through Midas Drive to Al’s French Fries,
Phase II
•the realignment of the Midas Dr./White St. intersection and improvements east
along Williston Road and to the Hinesburg Rd./Patchen Rd. intersection.
These improvements add capacity with thru-streets, new crosswalks, and connections,
facilities for bikes and pedestrians, landscaping, better lighting, and safer intersections for
cars, bikes and pedestrians. Throughout the design, we have been coordinating with
adjoining property owners and the utilities adjacent to the project so that they are aware of
the proposed improvements and how those might affect their property.
Design is advanced sufficiently to begin Right-of-Way (ROW) acquisition for both Phase I
and Phase II. The State ROW process, by statute, requires the City to send out a Notice of
Survey via certified mail to all abutting landowners. This has occurred once for the
Williston Rd section, but as so much time has passed, staff recommends that these be
resent.
The recommended motion authorizes the City to send out a formal 19 V.S.A. § 33 Notice
of Survey via certified mail to all abutting landowners of the Garden Street project. The
recommended motion will officially move the project into the right of way acquisition
phase.
The Garden Street Project is 100% eligible for TIF District Funding. Phase I has voter
approval for TIF District Financing. Phase I and II also have impact fee funding. Clearing
right-of-way for Phase II may also improve the eligibility of Phase II for infrastructure
grant funding.
Project Location: Garden Street Project Location shown in yellow on the 2017 Town Highway Map
(2017 is the most up to date map of Town Highways)
Recommendation: Authorize the survey of Phase I and Phase II of the Garden Street Project (existing
private road and future public town highway Garden Street at Dorset Street, the unbuilt
Garden Street town highway segment west and south of Midas Dr; portions of T.H. #1,
Williston Road, T.H. #176, Midas Drive, T.H. #4, White Street, T.H. #2, Patchen Road,
and State Route 116, Hinesburg Road) and authorize the City to provide notice of intent
to survey to all known abutting landowners by certified mail pursuant to 19 V.S.A.
Section 33.
180 Market Street South Burlington, VT 05403 tel 802.846.4107 fax 802.846.4101 www.SouthBurligntonVT.gov
To: Jessie Baker, City Manager
From: Ilona Blanchard, Community Development Director
Subject: Resolution to amend membership of the Public Art Committee and appoint a
member
Date: April 15, 2022
Background: In 2015, the City Council approved a resolution creating a Public Art Selection
Committee, now call the Public Art Committee (Committee).
The Committee composition was updated by resolution in 2016 to streamline
the membership. The committee membership now stands at six: five members
appointed by the Council and one by the Vermont Arts Council.
Because the membership is six, four members are always required to make a
quorum. Recently the Committee has struggled with making the required
quorum. If the membership were to be increased to seven, this would not
increase the quorum. It would also provide an additional voice and energy to
complete the work of the Committee.
The resolution attached for consideration would amend the Committee size to
seven and directly appoint an applicant to the Committee. This applicant has
been recently interviewed by the City Council for this committee.
A quick poll of committee members was conducted by staff. All members that
responded were positive towards the possibility of adding a seat to the
Committee.
Attachments: •Resolution Amending the Public Art Selection Committee Composition
and Appointing One Member.
Recommendation: Approve the resolution that amends the Committee composition and appoints
Sophia Babbitt to the Committee.
R-2022-
RESOLUTION
A RESOLUTION AMENDING THE PUBLIC ART COMMITTEE COMPOSITION AND
APPOINTING ONE MEMBER
WHEREAS the City of South Burlington, Vermont recognizes the transformative power of art and
importance of public art in establishing identity; and,
WHEREAS the City Council established a Public Art Committee (as the Public Art Selection
Committee) in 2015 to make recommendations regarding permanent art and expanding this charge
in 2021; and,
WHEREAS the Public Art Committee composition has need of a member to carry out the committee
charge and to facilitate regularly meeting a quorum; and,
WHEREAS of the existing seats on the Public Art Selection Committee, five are appointed by the
Council and one by the Vermont Arts Council for a total of six and requiring a quorum of four; and,
WHEREAS recently the Council interviewed a qualified committee member candidate with a
strong interest on public art.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the South Burlington City Council hereby
amends the Committee Composition of the Public Art Selection Committee as follows:
2.Committee Composition. The Committee shall consist of seven voting members:
a)Six members appointed by the City Council, of whom one is a
recognized art professional working in the fields of museum curation,
art history, conservation, arts organization administration, or gallery
direction and of whom one is a professional artist in any medium, and
all of whom shall serve staggered terms of three years;
b)One member or designee appointed annually by the Vermont Arts
Council;
and two non-voting members:
1)the Director of Public Works or designee; and
2)the City Manager or designee who shall also staff the committee.
Members of the Committee shall be subject to the City of South Burlington
Conflicts of Interest and Ethics Policy.
FURTHERMORE, BE IT RESOLVED that Sophia Babbitt is appointed for a term which expires June
30, 2025, as well as for the time between now and the beginning of this term.
A Resolution Establishing a Public Art Selection Committee | Page 2
APPROVED this _____ day of ___________________________
SOUTH BURLINGTON CITY COUNCIL
__________________________________ ________________________________
Helen Riehle, Chair Meaghan Emery, Vice-Chair
__________________________________ ________________________________
Tim Barritt, Clerk Tom Chittenden
__________________________________
Matt Cota
180 Market Street, South Burlington, Vermont 05403 | 802-846-4107 | www.southburlingtonvt.gov
Climate Action Plan Task Force
Charter
Adopted: August 17, 2021
Amended: April 18, 2022
The City of South Burlington, under its Charter authority in § 13-307(4) and aligned to Resolution #2017-
14A “City Council Resolution on Climate Change” and Resolution #2021-10 “Resolution for Policymaking
to Reduce Carbon Emissions and Counteract Climate Change,” hereby establishes the Climate Action
Plan Task Force. This Task Force is a task-oriented body stood up for the sole purpose of working with
the CCRPC and the Vermont Climate Council to develop a Climate Action Plan for the City of South
Burlington that addresses the targets previously set by the Council through resolution and by the State
of Vermont through state statute. The objective of this Task Force is to recommend to the Council within
a year of the approval of this charter the adoption of a Climate Action Plan that identifies a series of
strategic pathways that most realistically achieve the State and City’s climate goals for South Burlington.
This body operates within the laws of the State of Vermont, the South Burlington City Charter, and
observes Vermont’s Open Meeting Laws. The Task Force has no supervisory authority over City staff,
budgetary authority, or authority to give permission on behalf of the City to outside groups. Consultants
and City staff will bring State guidance and best practices to the Task Force for consideration. With this
Charter, the Task Force is authorized to assign work to the following City Committees to the ends of
completing the Climate Action Plan: the Affordable Housing Committee, the Bicycle and Pedestrian
Committee, the Economic Development Committee, the Energy Committee, and the Natural Resources
and Conservation Committee; and to coordinate with the Planning Commission on the Plan’s
completion. City Committees included in this Charter are asked to prepare for this work in their
workplans throughout the duration. Following the adoption of the Climate Action Plan, the Council will
further task staff and committees with implementing the strategies outlined in the Plan.
Membership shall be comprised of seven voting members appointed by the City Council. The
Committees shall recommend members and the Council shall appoint members according to this
formula:
•1 current member of the Affordable Housing Committee
•1 current member of the Bicycle and Pedestrian Committee
•1 current member of the Economic Development Committee
•1 current member of the Energy Committee (4/18/22 changed from 2)
•1 current member of the Natural Resources and Conservation Committee
•2 current members of the Planning Commission (4/18/22 changed from 1)
Members shall serve for a two-year term or until the Council adopts a Climate Action Plan, whichever
comes first. The Task Force’s work focuses on policy planning around addressing climate change at the
local level. To that end, Task Force members will demonstrate some familiarity with climate change
principles and local governance structures. Given the policy role in advising the Council, a commitment
to principles of equity and inclusion are paramount.
This Task Force will be co-supported by a Council Liaison, appointed on an annual basis from the City
Council, and a Staff Liaison appointed on an annual basis by the City Manager. These individuals are non-
voting members of the Task Force.
Amended this 18th day of April, 2022.
South Burlington City Council South Burlington City Manager
______________________________________ _____________________________
Helen Riehle, Chair Jessie Baker, City Manager
______________________________________
Meaghan Emery, Vice-Chair
______________________________________
Tim Barritt, Clerk
______________________________________
Thomas Chittenden, Councilor
______________________________________
Matt Cota, Councilor
Nouri s h t o Flo urishStrategic Plan 2022 – 2025
Common Roots, Inc.
Homestead at Wheeler Nature Park • PO Box 9335 • South Burlington VT 05407
(802) 652–0188 • info@commonroots.org • www.commonroots.org
Our Mission
Common Roots connects farmers, educators, youth, college interns, and community members
to build a sustainable future through food and land stewardship. By collectively educating and
growing vibrant organic food for our Farmstand, programs, and food shelves, we celebrate the soil
and soul of our community. Our certified organic regenerative farming practices provide food and
soil security, nurturing our common roots.
Our Core Beliefs
The way we farm and teach land stewardship fuels community impact for future generations. We
take this responsibility to heart. Common Roots values land stewardship, applies regenerative soil
practices on our farms, provides our community access to nourishing foods, and educates learners
of all ages to promote the perpetuation of the cycle of life.
Common Roots offers programs that deepen our understanding that the land is our ancestor and
the soil that feeds us requires deep respect. We are upholding an intimate relationship with the
land here in Vermont that began with the Native Abenaki people. We are taking a stand for our
future while gratefully acknowledging the roots of past wisdom and protecting the power of our
soils and our community.
Dear Friends,
What stand are we willing to take to steward the land that sustains us, building healthier soils to both
nourish and educate children, families, and communities?
For over 13 years, Common Roots has been making food education and access come to life through its
Farm to School and Food Pantry programs in our Greater Burlington community, with an emphasis on
land stewardship. I am proud that, as partners in community wellness, our educators are welcomed
each year into every preschool through grade 5 classroom across the South Burlington School District,
delivering over 140,000 individual lessons to date, including food prep and taste tests. You can see
eyes light up—and hear bellies rumble—as children and faculty learn about nourishing foods, how
they support us, and how we care for the land we farm.
As part of our mission, we also believe it is essential to offer high-quality organic produce to folks
in need at food pantries, matching the standard we use in our classroom lessons. In the beginning,
skeptics doubted that we could sustainably give away thousands of pounds of organic food without
going under. But each year we have committed to growing, increasing the volume of certified organic
food grown on our South Burlington farmland for participants to choose from at two local food shelves,
proving that sharing is what truly sustains us. We feel the urgency of this program today as one in five
children suffers food insecurity.
Woven into every program, lesson, gathering, and enterprise is an emphasis on natural resource
stewardship. We know—and teach!—that there can be no food security without recognizing our
responsibility to safeguard the vital relationship between land, food, and people. We strive to sustain
the health of our community and our natural resources, cared for by the displaced original inhabitants,
the Abenaki. Last year, we jumped at the chance to join the Real Organic Project, the world’s highest
standard in restorative agriculture—becoming leaders here in Vermont of this growing new movement.
Our approach is unique, restorative, and vibrant, following the mantra…
“If you believe it, you can achieve it! Your dreams will take you far.”
We invite you to partner with us as we communicate a successful model to serve schools and
communities across Vermont and eventually the United States and beyond—and make real our vision
for healthy, flourishing communities.
Joyfully,
Carol McQuillen
Executive Director
Who We Are—Busy Bees
Let us tell you the story of how a seed grew into a garden, which grew into a farm, then two farms,
then added a striking outdoor kitchen to the historic Wheeler Homestead and tended the dynamic
Larkin Heirloom Orchard. Why did we start this journey? Simply to become a movement of people
working with each other to steward the land that nurtures the soil and soul of our community.
That very first seed was sown in 2005 at a gathering of parents, teachers, school nurses, and
farmers in South Burlington, Vermont, looking for a healthier way to nourish and educate kids and
their families. The time was ripe for a shift in thinking about food in our community. Over time, we
linked up with partners at our five schools as well as with the city, other nonprofits, businesses,
and individuals who shared our vision. Our core group decided to incorporate as Common Roots, a
501(c)3 nonprofit organization with a mission to help remedy ongoing pressing issues: soil health,
nourishing food education, and food insecurity.
Common Roots offers programs for people of all ages to engage in our local food system—
including a dynamic Farm to School program that is integrated into classrooms, cafeterias, kitchens,
and outdoor spaces and is a model for other schools to consider. We provide several avenues for
children, parents, and the community to participate in food education and build their capacity to
grow fresh organic produce for themselves and neighbors. We operate several enterprises to support
that mission, while running two farms growing over 40 varieties of the highest-quality organic
produce that meets Vermont Certified Organic and Real Organic Project standards.
By growing nutritious food locally, we expand our community table where everyone is welcome
and the land is healed.
2005
A few dozen community members
meet to discuss healthy kids,
healthy food, and healthy farms.
2006
They develop a Strategic
Plan for supporting a local,
sustainable food system.
2007
Plans for a Farm to School
program are underway.
People
Places
2008
Common Roots launches Community
Food Shares, providing CSA shares to
families facing food insecurity…
2009
…then implements Farm to
School (grades K–5) and Growing
Gardens at Bread & Butter Farm.
2010
Farm to Go starts up in grades 6–8,
and Community Food Shares doubles
the number of families served.
Common Roots is governed by a nine-person board of directors composed of a diverse cross-
section of community members. We employ a staff of full-time, part-time, and contracted workers,
including a Lead Farmer-Land Manager, Executive Chef, Farmstand Coordinator, Internship
Coordinator, Land and Food Educators, and a volunteer Executive Director. Our mission is equally
powered by our dedicated interns and community volunteers.
Common Roots stewards seven acres of farmland at two locations in South Burlington: the
Thomas H. Hubbard Park in collaboration with the City of South Burlington, and the Farm at South
Village, supported by the South Village Stewardship Board. We have access to two greenhouses,
one propagation house, three high tunnels, and a Farmstand.
We hold 25-year leases on four acres at Hubbard Park and the Wheeler Homestead, where we
joined with 14 community businesses and partnerships in 2020 to build a licensed indoor kitchen
and an outdoor kitchen featuring a clay oven.
Program Highlights
Farmstand at the Food Shelf +
“ When I lived in Mexico, we had plenty of fruits
and vegetables that I could afford. When I
moved to Vermont, it was very expensive to eat
healthy. Having fresh vegetables from Common
Roots has made a big difference for my daughter
and me.” — Marcella
For over 13 years, Common Roots has focused on
growing increasing volumes of certified organic food
for folks facing food insecurity in South Burlington.
Through a new model developed in 2020, our
Farmstand at the Food Shelf enables families and
households to select nourishing organic foods grown and
prepared year-round at our farm and licensed kitchen. We set up a
Common Roots Farmstand each time the Food Shelf is open, from
early May to Thanksgiving.
Over the winter, we share produce from our walk-in cooler until
our stock runs out. We also prepare fresh foods for folks in need
year-round in our licensed kitchen. We feed and educate our food-
insecure community by offering seedlings to grow at home in the
early summer, teaching recipients how to prepare seasonal food,
providing recipes that complement these foods, and sharing how
seasonal foods offer our bodies vitality.
2011
With four programs
underway, Common Roots
makes plans for number 5…
2012
…and takes over
management of the South
Burlington Farmers Market.
2013
Common Roots brings nationally
recognized POP Club (Power of
Produce) to the Farmers Market,
empowering youth to make
healthy food choices.
Program Highlights
Through lessons taught by Common Roots educators,
preschool through grade 5 students in the South Burlington
School District build healthy lifelong eating habits while
learning about our local food system and the value of land
stewardship. We provide taste tests of recipes created by students
themselves using fresh organic produce harvested from our farms and
the Larkin Orchard. Students go to the middle school having received
54 explicit lessons and taste tests from Common Roots.
To date, we have taught over 140,000 individual lessons. This model has
an important multiplier effect: our lessons reach students and teachers
and, through them, families, neighbors, and communities. During the
COVID-19 pandemic, we moved to a hybrid in-person and online model
for children in preschool to grade 2 and produced a six-episode film series
(available on YouTube and our website) for students in grades 3 though 8.
While Farm to School lessons direct attention to food, land, and soil-
based knowledge, our full multidiscipline curriculum integrates science,
stories, yoga, mindfulness, cultural and historical background, and a
social justice perspective for learners age 4 through elders and support
prenatal dietary information.
Farm to School
“ Since its inception, Common Roots has had a
profound impact on our local communities’
food culture. Their explicit monthly lessons
impact how our local youth will view
nourishment for the rest of their lives.”
— Community Bank N.A. ice President Erika Baldasaro
2014
With six core programs in place,
Common Roots welcomes its
first Program Director…
2015
…and moves into its first
home, the Homestead at
Wheeler Nature Park.
2016
Lease the Wheeler House,
the Farm at South Village,
and Hubbard Park.
Illustration will go here
Illustration will go here
Program Highlights
Our after-school culinary and nutrition program for children in
grades 6 through 8 often has a waiting list. Students work
alongside their classmates learning how to prepare
six balanced dinners, which they take home for their
families to enjoy. These young chefs learn how to
follow recipes and cook nourishing, balanced meals.
We empower student chefs to expand their palates.
They visit our farm in the fall and spring sessions to
learn the value of nutrient-dense soils. To date, students
have prepared over 13,000 meals!
Farm to Go
Gatherings on the Land
“ I like that we get to learn how to make so many
recipes with really fresh foods.” — Sam, 7th grader
“ Local biz and local food meet here… Along with everyone you
know and miss. It’s real community.” — Hannah Kirkpatrick
Our talented educators collaboratively nurture the inner life of people of
all ages on the lands and property we steward in South Burlington, which
include our two farms, the Seven Sisters Abenaki Gateway Garden, and the
Wheeler Homestead. Throughout the year, we facilitate opportunities for
children, families, and the community to reconnect with the earth and each
other, helping to complete the Circle of Recovery and Healing. Gatherings on
the Land can take many forms, from camps and field trips that include New
American community members to public celebration and seasonal Nourish
to Flourish educational events. Each visit that we co-plan with a wide range
of hosts features seasonal foods full of vitality, healthy eating, environmental
awareness, and land stewardship. In recent years, 700 to 1,200 students
have participated in field trips annually. Gatherings usually include storytelling
crafted from nature, a lesson on land stewardship, and nutrition education.
Program Highlights
An extension of Common Roots, the Seven Sisters Abenaki Gateway
Garden is in its second year of joining with other growers to support
the Abenaki Land Link Project. We seed food with heritage seed
inventory for our Abenaki community, who have limited land
access. Many indigenous people struggle with health issues
because they do not have access to a diet of their native foods.
The Seven Sisters Abenaki Gateway Garden acknowledges Abenaki
heritage and grows food to help restore a missing connection
between native ancestral and current Abenaki gardeners and farmers
who have stewarded the land we now caretake. In 2022, the Hubbard
Park site will expand our capacity to grow native heritage foods with
the hope of partnering with local Abenaki families.
Our college internships are a continued success, drawing students from UVM along with other colleges
and universities across Vermont and beyond. Over the years we have engaged a growing number of
students in our programs and enterprises, with 140 interns in 2021. Each learning
opportunity expands student knowledge and informs them about their
current and future choices. Students build marketable skills in agriculture,
environmental advocacy, dietetics, and food systems while gaining valuable
firsthand, life-changing knowledge in education, ecology, and public policy.
One recently said, “This is the real deal how-to-be-in-the-world, an opportunity
like no other.”
Partnering with the Abenaki Community
Internships
“ Getting hands-on experience that you can’t find sitting in a classroom. I was allowed to
make mistakes and learn how to come back from them. I was allowed to see with my
own eyes how excited people were to havve conversations about nutrition-based education
and how open they were to purchasing local organic food. This internship was good for
the soul. I was able to make a difference for the community, all the while learning and
growing each step of the way.” — A recent intern
2017
Renovate and improve the
infrastructures at each of
these locations.
2018
Install an indoor commercial
kitchen and launch Farm to Fork.
2019
Build a collaborative plan with
the city, with mutual benefits.
Enterprises to Achieve Our Mission
Farmstand at South Village
Events at the Wheeler Homestead
Community members become partners in wellness at our Farmstand at
South Village, where they load up on over 40 varieties of certified ROP
(Real Organic Project) produce grown by Common Roots on our two
local farms. Located off Spear Street in the heart of a residential
neighborhood, the Farmstand operates just like a small grocery
store. The produce grown on the farm is supplemented by local
artisan products like O Bread, Stratford ice cream, LeBlanc Family
Farm frozen meats, Shelburne Farms cheeses, Common Roots
honey, and handmade foods from our own licensed kitchen.
Patrons always find the freshest organic vegetables and herbs as
well as seasonal flower bouquets and herbal self-care products.
The Farmstand is open for business from May to November.
Common Roots rents out the historic Wheeler Homestead for special
events, where clients can wed their commitment to social
responsibility with their own memorable occasion. The
site offers expansive views of the majestic Green
Mountains. We accommodate parties of up to
60 catered by our Executive Chef, or events can
be planned for 60 to 250 guests with one of our
talented catering partners.
“ xxxQuote from Jeremy — a Gathering the night before his
wedding.xxx” — Jeremy
2020
Construct the outdoor kitchen
and facilitate events.
2021
Launch Flatbread Fridays and
events at the Wheeler Homestead.
Enterprises to Achieve Our Mission
Flatbread Fridays
Farm to Fork
Every Friday our team welcomes our community to the Wheeler
Homestead to enjoy one of our famous house-made flatbread pizzas.
The flatbreads feature many organic ingredients grown on our own
farm and are baked in our outdoor wood-burning clay oven. Our
Executive Chef trains interns in food preparation, including the
fermentation process required for our signature flatbread dough. In
summer, local musicians offer their talents, adding to the
wonderful ambiance of these nights! Revenues from
Flatbread Fridays sales benefit the Common Roots
Farmstand at the South Burlington Food Shelf.
In our Farm to Fork dinner program, college interns work alongside
our Executive Chef and staff, and occasionally a special guest chef,
to create a changing menu of healthy gourmet dinners for local
families in our licensed industrial-grade kitchen at the Wheeler
Homestead. Delicious meals like Chicken Piccata and Grilled
Chicken Margherita are made and served with local Common
Roots produce. Customers enjoy a true farm-to-table
experience, drawing inspiration from our roots and our
farm-fresh ingredients. All revenues from Farm to Fork
sales benefit our education programs in schools.
“ The Lattner Family Foundation has been funding Common Roots for
thirteen years. Over that time, they have continued to grow in scope as an
organization while remaining true to their mission. They are an organization
that has really accomplished what they set out to do with very little in the
way of financial support; they are a true grassroots organization.
The Margaret Mead quote “never doubt that a small group of thoughtful,
committed citizens can change the world; indeed, it is the only thing that
ever has” comes to mind when thinking of all that Common Roots has done.
My grandfather, Forrest C. Lattner, who created this foundation, believed
that persistence and determination are omnipotent: Common Roots is the
embodiment of that ethic. They have leveraged the funding that
I have provided them to make a change in the health and well-being
of our community and beyond. I am inspired by all that this organization
has accomplished.”
—David Hollenbeck, The Lattner Family Foundation
Production: Foundations and Trusts
$20,000-$40,000
The Forrest and Frances
Lattner Foundation
Patagonia Burlington
Serena Foundation
WaterWheel Foundation
Harvest: Foundations and Businesses
$5,000–$19,000 in the past 3 years
Allen Foundation
Commando, LLC
Community Bank N.A.
Dealer.com – Cox Automotive
Gibbs Foundation
Golub Foundation
Hoehl Family Foundation
International Paper Foundation
Merinoff Charitable Trust
Oakland Foundation
Union Bank
Vermont Children’s Trust Fund
Vermont State Employees Credit Union
Wilmot Wheeler Foundation
Field: Foundations and Businesses
$3,000–$4,999 in the past 3 years
Ben & Jerry’s Foundation
City of South Burlington
Mascoma Bank
Members Advantage Community Credit Union
National Life
Northfield Savings Bank
People’s United Bank
The Putnam Foundation
SeaComm Credit Union
Vermont Federal Credit Union
Sustainers: Individual Gifts
$5,000–$40,000 in the past 3 years
Peggy Ireland
Marilyn Larkin
Molly & Andrew Lovedale
Kevin & Carol McQuillen
Deborah Parente
Will & Lynette Raap
Jodi & Dario Roque
Amy Wright
Common Roots, Inc.
Homestead at Wheeler Nature Park • PO Box 9335 • South Burlington VT 05407
(802) 652–0188 • info@commonroots.org • www.commonroots.org
180 Market Street South Burlington, VT 05403 tel 802.846.4106 fax 802.846.4101 www.sbvt.gov
MEMORANDUM
TO: Jessie Baker, City Manager & South Burlington City Council
FROM: Paul Conner, Director of Planning & Zoning
SUBJECT: Proposed Official Map Amendment #OM-22-01; Consideration of Public Hearing
DATE: April 18, 2022 Council meeting
Enclosed please find a proposed amendment to the City’s Official Map, as approved by the Planning
Commission, for your consideration and possible warning of a public hearing.
The amendment is to add bike/pedestrian connections between the planned I-89 bike/pedestrian
bridge and Dorset Street, Williston Road, and Quarry Hill Road.
These additions to the Official Map would hold the locations of these connections and prevent
development that would impede these connections, until the actual location, size, and layout of the
path connections is determined. The City has submitted a funding request to the Chittenden County
Regional Planning Commission to develop a design and plan for the specific location of these
connections; this is anticipated to be undertaken in FY ’23.
The Planning Commission had an initial discussion of adding bike/pedestrian connections to the Official
Map in the location of the proposed I-89 bike/pedestrian bridge in December 2021. In March 2022, the
Commission approved the required Planning Commission Report and voted to hold a public hearing. On
April 12, the Commission held its public hearing. The Commission received one letter expressing support
and one request for a minor technical correction. The Commission agreed to the technical correction
and subsequently voted 6-0 to approve the
amendment and submit to the City Council.
Recommended Motion: “I move to warn a
public hearing for Official Map amendment
#OM-22-01 on ______ [date], 2022, at 7:30
pm.”
Resources:
•Interactive map of the proposed
change
•Draft Official Map [enclosed]
•Planning Commission
Report [enclosed]
DETAIL OF PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO OFFICIAL MAP
§¨¦89
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Jaycee
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City
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Veterans
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ParkRed Rocks
Park Farrell Park
Wheeler
Nature Park
Szymanski
Park
Muddy Brook
Wetland
Reserve
Block StandardApplicabilityNon-Exempt
#2
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#1
#3
#4
#6
#7
#8
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National
Country Club LIMEKILNRDSWIFT ST
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DOL DFARM RDLegend
Commuter Rail Station
Planned Street Right of Way
Proposed Road
New/Changed Road Network
Common Open Land
Golf Course
Institutional & Agricultural Lands
Proposed Park & Open Space
Existing Park and Open Space
Tax Parcel Boundary-2021
Form Based Code Area (346 acres)
Municipal Boundary
Recreation Paths
Easement
Existing Trail
Existing Recreation Path
Planned Rec Path or Trail
New or new location of rec path
Rec path to be moved
The following notations are hereby incorporated into the Official Map:
1. Blue circle #1 refers to the proposed realignment and reconstructionof Airport Parkway to facilitate circulation between Lime Kiln Road and the
Airport.
2. Blue circle #2 refers to provision of a northbound on-ramp at Exit 13.
3. Blue circle #3 refers to creation of an appropriate internal roadwaynetwork for development of the O’Brien farm property and provision of
between five and ten acres of public parkland within the property or an
immediately adjacent area.
4. Blue circle #4 refers to development of Exit 12B at Hinesburg Road anda dead-end at Old Farm Road.
5. Blue circle #5, along with blue circle #4, refers to the development of
an appropriate roadway network to service Exit 12B and facilitate
connections to Williston Road, Kennedy Drive and Kimball Avenue.
6. Blue circle #6 refers to development of an internal roadway networklinking Queen City Park Road with Fayette Drive through the Martin’sFoods and Southland properties.
7. Blue circle #7 refers to development of an appropriate roadway system
between Hinesburg Road and Dorset Street through the Marceau andChittenden properties.
8. Blue circle #8 refers to acquisition of right-of-way and completion of areconfigured intersection at Spear Street and Swift Street.
9. Blue circle #9 refers to proposed recreation paths within 20’ planned
City rights of way.
0 0.5 10.25
Miles F
City of South Burlington
Official Map (Citywide)
Map Prepared by: M.Needle, CCRPC, using ArcGIS Pro
Approved by Planning Commission April 12, 2022
Block StandardApplicability
Non-Exempt
180 Market Street South Burlington, VT 05403 tel 802.846.4106 fax 802.846.4101 www.sbvt.gov
South Burlington Planning Commission
Proposed Official Map
Amendment & Adoption Report
Planning Commission Public Hearing April 12, 2022, 7:00 PM
In accordance with 24 V.S.A. §4441, the South Burlington Planning Commission has prepared the
following report regarding the proposed amendments and adoption of the City’s Official Map.
Outline of the Proposed Overall Amendments
The South Burlington Planning Commission will hold a public hearing on Tuesday, April 12th at 7:00 pm,
in person and via electronic platform, to consider the following amendments to the South Burlington
Official Map:
A.OM-22-01: Add bike/pedestrian connections between planned I-89 bike/pedestrian bridge and
Dorset Street, Williston Road, and Quarry Hill Road
Brief Description and Findings Concerning the Proposed Amendments
The proposed amendments have been considered by the Planning Commission for their consistency
with the text, goals, and objectives of the City of South Burlington’s Comprehensive Plan, adopted
February 1, 2016. For each of the amendments, the Commission has addressed the following as
enumerated under 24 VSA 4441(c):
“…The report shall provide a brief explanation of the proposed bylaw, amendment, or repeal and shall
include a statement of purpose as required for notice under section 4444 of this title, and shall include
findings regarding how the proposal:
(1)Conforms with or furthers the goals and policies contained in the municipal plan, including the
effect of the proposal on the availability of safe and affordable housing.
(2)Is compatible with the proposed future land uses and densities of the municipal plan.
(3)Carries out, as applicable, any specific proposals for any planned community facilities.”
2
A.OM-22-01: Add bike/pedestrian connections between planned I-89 bike/pedestrian bridge and
Dorset Street, Williston Road, and Quarry Hill Road
Brief explanation of the proposed amendment:
On the east side of I-89, this amendment would establish a connection from the planned
bicycle/pedestrian bridge across I-89, south of Exit 14, to Dorset Street and to Williston Road.
On the west side of I-89, this amendment would relocate the planned recreation path south of Exit
14, from within the I-89 right-of-way to adjacent private property. A 20’ recreation path easement
has previously been provided by the involved landowners for portions of this area. In addition, the
planned street connection from Quarry Hill Road to Williston Road is clarified to include a planned
recreation path as a continuation of the path along Quarry Hill Road and the adjacent stub road.
(1)Conforms with or furthers the goals and policies contained in the municipal plan, including the
effect of the proposal on the availability of safe and affordable housing.
The 2016 Comprehensive Plan includes several goals and policies that relate to transportation
infrastructure in this area:
Maps & Analysis
Map 10, Planned Infrastructure Improvements, and Map 6, Planned Rec Lanes and Paths, shows
a planned bicycle and pedestrian bridge crossing I-89 south of Exit 14. The project purpose is
described as “To provide safe and efficient connectivity for walkers and cyclists between the City
Center are and housing, University of Vermont, and City of Burlington on the west side of the
Interstate” (p. 2-68).
The proposed improvements are also directly and indirectly supported by several objectives and
strategies within the 2016 Comprehensive Plan:
Comprehensive Plan Goals:
•Develop a safe and efficient transportation system that supports pedestrian, bicycle, and transit
options while accommodating the automobile;
•Promote conservation of identified important natural areas, open spaces, aquatic resources, air
quality, arable land and other agricultural resources, historic sites and structures, and recreational
assets;
Comprehensive Plan Objectives:
•Objective 18. Connect neighborhoods with one another via road segments and with commercial
areas for local, slow speed circulation.
•Objective 20. Reduce the percentage of trips taken by single-occupancy vehicles in the City.
•Objective 47. Promote interconnectivity and integration of public facilities including schools and
school facilities open to the public with surrounding neighborhoods, to include safe routes for
children and neighborhood residents to walk and bicycle to school, a public library, recreation
services, and other city services.
3
Comprehensive Plan Strategies:
•Strategy 45. Develop and build a city-wide sidewalk and recreation path plan that identifies and
prioritizes gaps, to link various neighborhood and community focal points.
•Strategy 103. Regularly update the City’s Official Map to include the most up-to-date plans for
streets, parks, recreation paths, other civic spaces and utility infrastructure, including public paths,
greenways and civic spaces planned for public acquisition and development within the City Center.
Pursue public acquisition of mapped facilities through public dedication, and as available funding
allows.
•Strategy 105. Develop an efficient, convenient and attractive transportation and parking plan to
serve the center area and fund and maintain public parking facilities and walking, biking, and transit
amenities.
(2)Is compatible with the proposed future land uses and densities of the municipal plan.
The proposed facility will support the development of infrastructure to serve a compact, mixed
use, higher density City Center area.
(3)Carries out, as applicable, any specific proposals for any planned community facilities.
The proposed facility will support the City’s plans to construct a bicycle/pedestrian bridge over I-
89 that would serve and connect neighborhoods and mixed use areas to the east and west of
the Interstate in the vicinity of Exit 14..
MEMORANDUM
TO: South Burlington City Council
FROM: Andrew Bolduc, Deputy City Manager
Ilona Blanchard, Community Development Director
Tom Dipietro, Director of Public Works
DATE: April 14, 2022
RE: South Burlington’s Annual Congressionally Directed Spending Requests
______________________________________________________________________________
Background
Within the last month, the City received notice from each member of our Vermont congressional
delegation that they have opened up their annual application process for congressionally directed
spending requests. Every year, each member of congress is given the authority to nominate
community projects for possible inclusion in FY 2023 appropriations bills. Last year, the City
submitted requests for the City Center Park Connection, the Indoor Recreation Facility, and the I-89
pedestrian bicycle bridge, and (through CCPSA) for Regional Dispatch. The Regional Dispatch
request was just approved with the Federal Omnibus budget bill for $750,000.
In reviewing applications approved for funding, the delegation is looking for high-impact projects
that can reach completion with the assistance of these federal earmarks. When staff was reviewing
its project lists for possible submission, it considered the following criteria: 1) project readiness; 2)
regional impacts; 3) alignment with delegation political priorities; and, 4) availability of matching
funds. The application deadlines for each member of the State’s delegation are all during the week
of April 18.
Recommendation
In weighing these criteria with the City’s projects identified in the CIP and in the Policy, Priorities
& Strategies, staff recommends the City submit applications for funding the following projects.
City Center Park Connection (ask: $400k - $1m)
•Creates a short, direct path connection between a dense downtown development area and the
public middle school and high school (1,300 students).
•Creates urban accessibility to a natural area and educational opportunity to learn about a
wetland/tributary to Lake Champlain.
•Minimizes wetland impacts through a railed boardwalk design that will keep people and pets
on the path.
•Encourages walking and biking as a mode of transportation with a short, scenic path
connecting multiple important community destinations.
•ROW acquired, design underway, construction ready.
•TIF eligible project, so may use TIF Funding to match any allocation.
Garden Street Phase II: Williston Road Intersection Project (ask: $3m – $4m)
•Regional traffic flow benefit of improving the White St./Midas Dr. intersection and vastly
improve vehicle safety at a high crash location
•Would add significant pedestrian and bicycle capacity
•City is in process of ROW acquisition, completed 60% design, close to construction ready.
•TIF Eligible project, so may use TIF Funding to match any allocation.
Bartlett Bay Wastewater Treatment Facility Upgrades (ask: $700,000)
•The current Bartlett Bay WWTF upgrade design includes a number of energy efficiency
elements, such as heat pump and energy efficient HVAC systems that are currently
estimated to cost roughly $700,000.
•Installation of these heat pumps may reduce total electricity used for heating by nearly 50%
and reduce overall carbon footprint by around 25%.
Possible Action
Staff recommends Council review and consider authorizing staff to submit Congressionally directed
spending request applications for these three, or a subset of these three, City projects this week.
MEMORANDUM
TO: South Burlington City Council FROM: Andrew Bolduc, Deputy City Manager Colin McNeil, City Attorney DATE: April 14, 2022 RE: Ordinance Codification Project: Motor Vehicle & Traffic Ordinance Resolutions
______________________________________________________________________________
Background
Since 2015, the City of South Burlington has been re-organizing and re-formatting its entire catalog
of ordinances to provide a clearer, more user-friendly and searchable set of regulations. One of the
most challenging ordinances to reformat was the South Burlington Motor Vehicle and Traffic Regulation Ordinance. This Ordinance was originally adopted on April 28, 1958 and was amended at least 18 times over the years. When this ordinance was amended, the amendments were recorded in the land records without restating any prior ordinances. This created a real challenge for staff
and members of the public to clearly identify where the regulations stood at a given time, let alone
find them in the land records.
In summer 2019, the South Burlington City Council considered and adopted an updated Motor Vehicle and Traffic Ordinance, now available on the City’s website, that resolved this piecemeal
amendment issue. The new Ordinance now allows for amendment by council resolution only and
does not require going through the more time-consuming and onerous process of a full ordinance amendment. When Council approved the Ordinance in June 2019, the intent was that it would become effective upon the later adoption of resolutions that fully inventory each traffic control regulation: speed limits, stop signs, etc. currently in effect in the city.
The city subsequently engaged with the CCRPC to inventory all current traffic regulations and provide a GIS mapping tool showing the same. This project was completed the end of 2020. Staff has since compiled that data into the attached resolutions for Council’s consideration and adoption.
Recommendation
Staff recommends that Council consider and adopt the proposed resolutions that restate and centralize the City’s traffic control regulations already in place.
Page 1 of 3
A RESOLUTION ESTABLISHING SPEED LIMITS ON PUBLIC STREETS AND
HIGHWAYS IN THE CITY OF SOUTH BURLINGTON
WHEREAS, Section 3 of the City of South Burlington Motor Vehicle and Traffic Ordinance
authorizes the City Council to establish, by appropriate resolution, speed limits on public
roads and highways in the City.
NOW THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, that maximum speed limits are established for
the following public roads and highways:
A.Twenty-five (25) miles per hour
No motor vehicle shall be operated on any public road or highway at a speed that exceeds
twenty-five (25) miles per hour, unless otherwise herein provided.
B.Thirty-five (35) miles per hour
No motor vehicle shall be operated on the following public roads and highways at a speed
that exceeds thirty-five (35) miles per hour:
1.Airport Parkway: north/eastbound from Kirby Road to Lime Kiln Road;
south/westbound from Lime Kiln Road to Kirby Road.
2.Allen Road: eastbound from Shelburne Road to Swift Street; westbound
from Swift Street to Shelburne Road.
3.Cheesefactory Road: eastbound from City boundary to Hinesburg Road;
westbound from Hinesburg Road to City Boundary.
4.Dorset Street: southbound from Williston Road to Nowland Farm Road/Old
Cross Road; northbound from a sign at a point approximately 650 feet south of Swift
Street and just south of 1100 Dorset Street to Williston Road.
5.Hinesburg Road: southbound from Williston Road to the southern terminus
of the bridge over Interstate 89; northbound from the southern terminus of the
bridge over Interstate 89 to Williston Road.
6.National Guard Avenue: eastbound from Shamrock Road to Williston
Town Line; Williston Town Line to Shamrock Road.
7.Shelburne Road: southbound from the Burlington City Line to a sign at a
point approximately 330 feet south of Bartlett Bay Road at 1675 Shelburne Road;
northbound from a sign at a point approximately 170 feet south of Imperial Drive at
approximately 1330 Shelburne Road to the Burlington City Line.
8.Spear Street: southbound from a sign at a point approximately 190 feet
south of Quarry Hill Road to the Shelburne Town line; northbound from the
Page 2 of 3
Shelburne Town Line to a sign at a point approximately 120 feet north of Quarry
Hill Road at approximately 340 Spear Street.
9.Swift Street: eastbound from Shelburne Road to Dorset Street; westbound
from Dorset Street to Shelburne Road.
10.Van Sicklen Road
11.Williston Road: eastbound from the Burlington City Line to a sign at a
point approximately 150 feet east of Millham Court at approximately 2001 Williston
Road; westbound from a sign at a point approximately 150 feet east of Millham
Court at approximately 2002 Williston Road to the Burlington City Line.
C.Forty (40) miles per hour
No motor vehicle shall be operated on the following public roads and highways at a speed
that exceeds forty (40) miles per hour:
1.Dorset Street: southbound from Nowland Farm Road/Old Cross Road to
Shelburne Town Line; northbound from Shelburne Town Line to a sign at a point
approximately 650 feet south of Swift Street and just south of 1100 Dorset Street.
2.Hinesburg Road: southbound from the southern terminus of the bridge over
Interstate 89 to a sign at a point approximately 140 feet south of Fox Run
Lane/Mansfield View Lane; northbound from a sign at a point approximately 140
feet south of Fox Run Lane/Mansfield View Lane to the southern terminus of the
bridge over Interstate 89.
3.Kennedy Drive: eastbound from Dorset Street to Williston Road; westbound
from Williston Road to Dorset Street.
4.Kimball Avenue: eastbound from Kennedy Drive to Williston Town Line;
westbound from Williston Town Line to Kennedy Drive.
5.Shelburne Road: southbound from a sign at a point approximately 330 feet
south of Bartlett Bay Road at 1675 Shelburne Road to the Shelburne Town Line;
northbound from the Shelburne Town Line to a sign at a point approximately 170
feet south of Imperial Drive at approximately 1330 Shelburne Road.
6.Williston Road: eastbound from a sign at a point approximately 150 feet
east of Millham Court at approximately 2001 Williston Road to the Williston Town
Line; westbound from the Williston Town Line to a sign at a point approximately
150 feet east of Millham Court at approximately 2002 Williston Road.
D.Forty-Five (45) miles per hour
Page 3 of 3
No motor vehicle shall be operated on the following public roads and highways at a speed
that exceeds forty-five (45) miles per hour:
1.Hinesburg Road: southbound from a sign at a point approximately 140 feet
south of Fox Run Lane/Mansfield View Lane to a sign at a point approximately 280
feet south of Van Sicklen Road; northbound from a sign at a point approximately 280
feet of Van Sicklen Road to a sign at a point approximately 140 feet south of Fox
Run Lane/Mansfield View Lane.
E.Fifty (50) miles per hour
No motor vehicle shall be operated on the following public roads and highways at a speed
that exceeds fifty (50) miles per hour:
1.Hinesburg Road: southbound from a sign at a point approximately 280 feet
south of Van Sicklen Road to the Williston Town Line; northbound from the
Williston Town Line to a sign at a point approximately 280 feet of Van Sicklen Road.
F.Notwithstanding the maximum speed limits established herein, no individual shalldrive a vehicle on a public road or highway at a speed greater than is reasonable and
prudent under the conditions, having regard for the actual and potential hazards then
existing. In every event, speed shall be controlled as necessary to avoid colliding with an
individual, vehicle, or other object on or adjacent to a public road or highway.
Dated this ______ day of April 2022.
SOUTH BURLINGTON CITY COUNCIL
_____________________________________ ___________________________________
Helen Riehle, Chair Tom Chittenden
_____________________________________ ____________________________________
Meaghan Emery, Vice-Chair Matt Cota
_____________________________________
Tim Barritt, Clerk
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A RESOLUTION ESTABLISHING STOP INTERSECTIONS ON
PUBLIC ROADS AND HIGHWAYS IN THE CITY OF SOUTH
BURLINGTON
WHEREAS, Section 4 of the City of South Burlington Motor Vehicle and Traffic
Ordinance authorizes the City Council to designate, by appropriate resolution, stop
intersections on public roads and highways in the City.
NOW THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, that the following stop intersections are
established:
Adirondack Street (Norththbound) at Butler Drive Adirondack Street (Southbound) at Butler Drive
Adirondack Street at Moss Glen Lane
Air Guard Base at Shamrock Road
Aiken Street at Allen Road East
Aiken Street at Chipman Street
Airport Drive (Southbound) at White Street
Airport Parkway at White Street
Airport Road at Airport Drive
Airport Road at Williston Road
Allen Road East at N Jefferson Road Anderson Parkway at Hayden Parkway Anderson Parkway (Northbound) Anderson Parkway (Westbound)
Arbor Road at Patchen Road
Aviation Avenue at Williston Road
Bacon Street at Shelburne Road
Barber Terrace at White Street
Barrett Street at Hinesburg Road
Bay Court at Baycrest Drive
Bay Court at Keari Lane
Baycrest Drive at Allen Road
Baycrest Drive at Harbor Ridge Road
Baycrest (Westbound) at Irish Farm Road
Berard Drive at Airport Parkway
Black Lantern Lane at Laurel Hill Drive Blackberry Lane at Idx Drive
Bower Street at Midland Avenue (East)
Bower Street at Midland Avenue (West)
Brand Farm Drive at Lupine Lane
Brand Farm Drive at Swift Street Brookwood Drive at Dorset Street Brookwood Drive at Oakwood Drive
Butler Drive at Hinesburg Road (North) Butler Drive at Hinesburg Road (South) Butler Drive at Marcy Street Cabot Court at Bower Street (West) Cabot Court at Bower Street (East) Calkins Court at Williston Road Catkin Drive at Midland Avenue Cedar Glen Drive at Spear Street Central Avenue at Queen City Park Road Charles Street at White Street Cheesefactory Road at Hinesburg Road Chickadee Circle at Songbird Road Chipman Street at S Jefferson Road Churchill Road at N Jefferson Road Churchill Road at Preserve Road
Cider Mill Drive at Dorset Street Circle Drive at Elsom Parkway
Cobblestone Court at Van Sicklen Road (West) Cobblestone Court at Van Sicklen Road (East) Commerce Avenue at Ethan Allen Drive Community Drive at Kimball Avenue (West) Community Drive at Kimball Avenue (East) Cottage Grove Avenue at White Street Cottage Grove Avenue at Williston Road Country Club Drive (Northbound) at Mountain View Boulevard Country Club Drive (Southbound) at Mountain View Boulevard
Country Club Drive at National Guard Avenue
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Crispin Drive at Cider Mill Drive
Dairy Lane at Country Club Drive (West)
Dairy Lane at Country Club Drive (East)
Davis Parkway at Williston Road
Deane Street at Hinesburg Road
Deborah Drive (Northbound) at Sandalwood Road
Deborah Drive (Soutbound) at Sandalwood Road
Deborah Drive (Southbound) at Scotsdale Road
Deborah Drive (Northbound) at Scotsdale Road
Deborah Drive at Andrews Avenue
Deborah Drive at Sebring Road
Deerfield Road at Spear Street
Deerfield Road at Pheasant Way
Delaware Street at Maryland Street
Delaware Street at White Street
Dewey Place at Aiken Street
Dewey Place at Slade Street
Dorey Road at Four Sisters Road
Dorset Heights at Old Cross Road
Dorset Park at Swift Street
Dubois Drive at Hinesburg Road
Dumont Avenue at Airport Parkway
Dumont Avenue at White Street
Duval Street at Hanover Street
Eagle Drive at Aviation Avenue
Eastwood Drive at Farrell Street
Eastwood Drive (Southbound) at Joy Drive
Economou Farm Road at Swift Street
Eldredge Street at Hinesburg Road
Eldredge Street at Kennedy Drive
Eldredge Street at O'Brien Farm Road
Elizabeth Street at Airport Drive
Elizabeth Street at Mills Avenue
Elsom Parkway at Williston Road
Ethan Allen Drive at Shamrock Road
Ethan Allen Drive at Airport Parkway
Fairway Drive at Golf Course Road Fall Street at Landon Road
Farrell Street (Eastbound) at Eastwood Drive Farrell Street (Northbound) at Eastwood Drive
Fayette Road at Hannaford Drive
Fieldstone Drive at Cobblestone Court
Floral Drive at Catkin Drive
Floral Drive at Floral Street
Forest Park at Timber Lane (North)
Forest Park at Timber Lane (South)
Four Sisters Road at Nowland Farm Road Fox Run Lane at Hinesburg Road
Fox Run Lane (Eastbound) at Oak Creek Drive
Frost Street at Chipman Street
Frost Street at S Jefferson Road
Gilbert Street at Pine Tree Terrace
Gilbert Street at Williston Road
Golf Course Road at Old Cross Road
Golf Course Road at Park Road
Grandview Drive at Dorset Street
Gregory Drive at Kimball Avenue
Gregory Drive at Williston Road
Hadley Road (Westbound) at Meadow Road
Hadley Road (Eastbound) at Orchard Road
Hadley Road (Westbound) at Orchard Road
Hadley Road at Shelburne Road
Hanover Street at Airport Parkway Hanover Street at Berkley Street
Harbor Ridge Road at Pheasant Way
Harborview Road at Baycrest Drive
Hayden Parkway at Williston Road
Hayes Avenue at Hinesburg Road
Hayes Avenue at Timber Lane Heath Street at Williston Road
Helen Avenue (Southbound) at Pinetree Terrace
Helen Avenue (Northbound) at Pinetree Terrace
Hermit Thrush Lane at Songbird Road Hickory Lane at Dorset Street
Highland Terrace at Hinesburg Road
Holbrook Road at Dorset Street
Holbrook Road at Old Cross Road Hummingbird Lane at Songbird Road (East) Hummingbird Lane at Songbird Road (West)
Iby Street at Hinesburg Road
Imperial Drive at Green Dolphin Drive
Imperial Drive at Shelburne Road
Irish Cove Road at Harborview Road
3 of 5
Irish Cove Road at Baycrest Drive Irish Farm Road at Baycrest Drive
Joy Drive at Eastwood Drive
Juniper Drive at Patchen Road
Keari Lane at Harbor Ridge Road
Kirby Road at Airport Parkway
Kirby Road Extension at Airport Parkway
Kirby Road at Patchen Road
Landfill Road at Patchen Road Landon Road at Hinesburg Rd
Laurel Hill Drive at Andrews Avenue
Laurel Hill Drive at Black Lantern Lane Laurel Hill Drive Intersection at 264 Laurel Hill Drive
Laurentide Lane at Eldredge Street
Ledoux Terrace at Airport Drive Lime Kiln Bridge Parking Lot at Lime Kiln Road
Lime Rock Road at Ethan Allen Drive
Lindenwood Drive at Shelburne Road Link Road at Dorset Street
Logwood Street at Airport Road
Lyons Avenue at Central Avenue
Pine Street at Maplewood Drive
Maplewood Drive at White Street
Market Street at Hinesburg Road
Mary Street at Williston Road
Maryland Street at Airport Drive
Mayfair Street at Elsom Parkway
Meadow Road at Hadley Road
Meadow Road at Proctor Avenue Meadowland Drive at Hinesburg Road
Meadowwood Drive at Swift Street
Midland Avenue at Bower Street (East) Midland Avenue at Bower Street (West)
Midland Avenue at Catkin Drive (East)
Midland Avenue at Catkin Drive (West)
Midland Avenue at Dorset Street
Mill Pond Lane at Moss Glen Lane
Mill Pond Lane at Oak Creek Drive
Millham Court at Williston Road
Mills Avenue at Williston Road
Mockingbird Lane at Songbird Road Moss Glen Lane (Eastbound) at Moss
Mountain View Boulevard at Country Club Drive Mountain View Boulevard at National Guard Avenue Myers Court at Pine Tree Terrace Myers Court at White Street
Nesti Drive at Shelburne Road
NCO Drive at National Guard Avenue North Jefferson Road (Northbound) at Preserve Road Nowland Farm Road at Dorset Street Nowland Farm Road at Spear Street Oak Creek Drive at Fox Run Lane
O'Brien Farm Road (Northbound) at Two Brothers Drive O'Brien Farm Road (Southbound) at Two Brothers Drive Old Cross Road at Dorset Street Old Farm Road at Hinesburg Road Old Farm Road at Kimball Avenue Old Schoolhouse Road at Nowland Farm Road
Orchard Road at Hadley Road Orchard Road at Proctor Avenue Orchard School at Baldwin Avenue Palace 9 at Fayette Road Palmer Court at Williston Road Park Road at Dorset Street Park Road at Golf Course Road Patrick Street at Airport Drive Patrick Street at Mills Avenue Peterson Terrace at White Street Pheasant Way (Southbound) at Harbor Ridge Road Pheasant Way at Spear Street Pine Street at Patchen Road Pine Tree Terrace at Williston Road Pinnacle Drive at Nowland Farm Road Pinnacle Drive at Spear Street Poor Farm Road at Mountain View Boulevard Preserve Road at North Jefferson Road Preserve Road at Spear Street
Proctor Avenue (Eastbound) at Meadow Road Proctor Avenue (Westbound) at Meadow Road Proctor Avenue (Eastbound) at Orchard Road Proctor Avenue (Westbound) at Orchard Road Proctor Avenue at Shelburne Road
4 of 5
Prouty Parkway at Hinesburg Road Quail Run at Pheasant Way
Quarry Hill Road at Spear Street Queen City Park Road (Southbound) at Queen City Park Queen City Park (Eastbound) at Queen City Park
Queensbury Road at Patchen Road
Queensbury Road at Kirby Road
Randall Street at Meadowland Drive
Richard Terrace at Patchen Road
Richard Terrace at Berkley Street Royal Drive at Braeburn Street
Royal Drive at Cider Mill Drive
Ruth Street at Hinesburg Road
Rye Circle at Landon Road
Sadie Lane at Dorset Street San Remo Drive at Dorset Street
Sandalwood Road at Green Dolphin Drive
Scotsdale Road at Green Dolphin Drive
Shamrock Road at Ethan Allen Drive
Sherry Road at Aspen Drive Sherry Road at Brookwood Drive
Shunpike Road at Kimball Avenue
Shunpike Road at Williston Road
Simpson Court at O'Brien Drive
Simpson Court at Hinesburg Road Slade Street at Allen Road East
Slade Street at Chipman Street
Songbird Road at Spear Street
Songbird Road at Dorset Street
South Beach Road at Bartlett Bay Road SBHS north loop exit onto Dorset Street
SBHS south loop exit onto Dorset Street
South Jefferson Road at Spear Street
South Pointe Drive at Spear Street
Stonehedge Drive at Cedar Glen Drive
Suburban Square at White Street
Sugar Tree Lane at Kennedy Drive
Sunset Ave at Hinesburg Road
Tabor Place at Holbrook Road
Tanglewood Drive at Laurel Hill Drive
Tanglewood Drive at Baldwin Avenue
Technology Park Way at Community Drive
Tilley Drive at Hinesburg Road
Twin Oaks North at Twin Oaks Terrace Twin Oaks Terrace at West Twin Oaks Terrace
Twin Oaks Terrace at Timber Lane
Two Brothers Drive at O'Brien Farm Road
West Twin Oaks Terrace at Kennedy Drive
Vale Drive at Nowland Farm Road
Valley Ridge Road at Patchen Road
Van Sicklen Road at Hinesburg Road
Victoria Drive at Williston Road
Victory Drive at Williston Road Wealthy Avenue at Baldwin Avenue
White Place at Shelburne Road Whiteface Street at Marcy Street
Woodbine Street at Elsom Parkway
Woodcrest Drive at Hinesburg Road
Worth Street at Imperial Drive White Street (Eastbound) at Airport Parkway White Street (Westbound) at Airport Parkway
White Street (Westbound) at Airport Drive
Woodthrush Circle at Songbird Road
Winesap Lane at Braeburn Street
Windswept Lane at Dorset Street
Winter Lane at Fox Run Lane
Winter Lane at Rye Circle
Wright Court at Hinesburg Road
575 Dorset Street at Dorset Street
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Dated this ______ day of April 2022.
SOUTH BURLINGTON CITY COUNCIL
_____________________________________ ___________________________________
Helen Riehle, Chair Tom Chittenden
_____________________________________ ____________________________________
Meaghan Emery, Vice-Chair Matt Cota
_____________________________________
Tim Barritt, Clerk
180 Market Street, South Burlington, Vermont 05403 | 802-846-4107 | www.southburlingtonvt.gov
To: South Burlington City Council
From: Jessie Baker, City Manager
Date: April 15, 2022
Re: Bylaws for Committees Established by the South Burlington City Council
The City has over hundred residents regularly particiating in Statutory and Policy Advising Committees of the
City with hundreds of staff hours going into supproting this work each year. In order to make these groups as
effective as possible, aligned to the Council goals, and valuable volunteering experiences, we suggest
impelmeting a set of “Bylaws for Committees Established by the South Burlington City Council.” Attached is a
proposed DRAFT of these Bylaws. This is for discussion only. We welcome the Council’s feedback and would
anticipate bringing another draft back to the Council for approval at a future meeting.
Committee or Board Staff Liaison Type
Affordable Housing Jessie Policy Advisory
Bicycle & Pedestrian Ashley Policy Advisory
Board of Civil Authority Donna Statutory
Board of Abatement Donna Statutory
City Charter Jessie Policy Advisory
Climate Action Plan Task Force Paul Task Force
Development Review Board Marla Statutory
Common Area for Dogs Holly Policy Advisory
Economic Development Jessie Policy Advisory
Energy Ilona Policy Advisory
Housing Trust Fund Jessie Policy Advisory
Library Board of Trustees Jennifer Statutory
Natural Resource & Conservation Ashley Policy Advisory
Pension Advisory Andrew Policy Advisory
Planning Commission Paul Statutory
Public Art Ilona Policy Advisory
Recreation & Park Holly Policy Advisory
Sextons Donna Statutory
180 Market Street, South Burlington, Vermont 05403 | 802-846-4107 | www.southburlingtonvt.gov
Bylaws for Committees Established by the South Burlington City Council
Adopted: XX, XX, 2022
****DRAFT****
The City Council, under its Charter authority in § 13-307, shall convene bodies they see as “in the best
interests of the city” and appoint members to such public bodies.
Serving on a South Burlington board or committee is an excellent way to get involved in the public
process, shape the future policies of the City, and connect with your neighbors. These volunteer positions
offer many opportunities to provide your expertise as an engaged community member and help make
important community decisions.
Structure of Public Bodies
Statutory Committees: There are some boards, committees, and commissions that are established by
state statue or our municipal charter. These include:
•Board of Abatement
•Board of Civil Authority
•Development Review Board
•Library Board of Trustees
•Planning Commission
Policy Advisory Committees: There are a variety of other policy committees that are established by the
City Council and serve as policy advisors to the Council and, at times, the Planning Commission. Each has
been established via a resolution of the City Council that outlines the specific charge of the body. These
include:
Affordable Housing
Bicycle & Pedestrian
City Charter
Common Area for Dogs
Economic Development
Energy
Housing Trust Fund
Natural Resources & Conservation
Pension Advisory
Public Art
Recreation & Parks
Sextons
Subcommittees and Task Forces: From time to time the Council will establish task oriented public bodies
to undertake a time-limited project. Such groups are also subject to the provisions outlined below for
Policy Advisory Committees. Currently this includes:
Climate Action Task Force
Section 1: Annual Workplans for Policy Advising Committees, Subcommittees, and Task Forces
Policy Advising Committees, Subcommittees, and Task Forces are advisory to the City Council and
function at their direction. As noted above, the charges are established by resolution. In order to best
align the intentions and work of the Committees to the Council goals, annual workplans are developed.
Between April and July of each year, the Committees, City’s Leadership Team, and City Council work to
develop a set of “Fiscal Year Policy Priorities and Strategies.”
180 Market Street, South Burlington, Vermont 05403 | 802-846-4107 | www.southburlingtonvt.gov
Committees proposed annual priorities to the Staff and Council Liaison. These are integrated into the full
set of priorities considered by the Council. They Council adopts a set of Policy Priorities and Strategies in
July that outlines the vision for the community, the policy directions, the implementation strategies of
the staff, and the associated work of the committees. Once adopted by the Council, the Committees will
follow this workplan for the fiscal year and participate in quarterly reporting to the Council on their
deliverables.
Section 2: Qualifications and Appointment of Members
The Council appoints members to serve for a specific term or length of time. These vary from a number
of months to four years. Members may apply to be reappointed at the end of their term.
The resolutions of each public body outline if there is a specific expertise sought for the body. Residency
in South Burlington is required. In order to include diverse viewpoints in policy conversations, residents
15 years of age and older are encouraged to apply and serve on policy advisory committees. To serve on
statutory committees, one must be 18 years of age or older.
Individuals wishing to be appointed shall complete an application as established by the City. Interviews
with the Council, Staff Liaison, and Committee Chair may be requested.
All voting members of a group must be appointed by the City Council at a warned Council meeting.
Appointments shall be made by July 1 annually or as vacancies occur. A term begins at the first meeting
in July and is for a set number of months or years.
Interested community members are encouraged to attend meetings prior to applying.
A member may be removed by a majority vote of the City Council at a warned City Council meeting
except as provided for under State Law.
A member may resign from a public body at any time. Written notice of this resignation must be
provided to the Staff Liaison, Council Liaison, and City Manager.
Section 3: Officers, Elections and Responsibilities
Annually at the first meeting after July 1, each public body shall elect officers including a Chair, Vice Chair,
and Clerk from the appointed members. Should an officer resign, the members shall elect a new officer
as soon as possible at a regularly scheduled meeting. Elected officers shall immediately assume their
positions at the conclusion of elections.
The roles are defined as follows:
•Chair – The Chair is responsible for working with the staff liaisons to prepare an agenda for each
meeting, assuring a quorum will be present at each meeting, setting an annual workplan in
conjunction with the Council liaison, and presiding over each meeting.
•Vice Chair – The Vice Chair shall act as Chair in their absence and shall become Acting Chair
should the Chair resign.
•Clerk – The Clerk shall assure that minutes are taken at each meeting and shared with the staff
liaison for public posting and shall, in the absence of the Chair and Vice-Chair, serve as or appoint
an Acting Chair.
180 Market Street, South Burlington, Vermont 05403 | 802-846-4107 | www.southburlingtonvt.gov
Public body members shall
•Make every effort to attend regularly scheduled meetings or notify the Chair and Staff Liaison if
an absence is required
•Be prepared for each meeting
•Participate in the discussion
•Render a vote on each item, unless a conflict of interest exists (yea, nay, abstain)?
•Adhere to the City’s Conflict of Interest and Ethics Policy
•Adhere to the Vermont Open Meeting Law requirements
•Adhere to any Rules of Procedure established by the public body
•Assume good intentions on the part of their colleagues, be respectful of all voices, and
welcoming of new perspectives
Staff Liaisons shall
•Be appointed to each Statutory Committee, Policy Advisory Committee, and Task Force
established by the Council
•Not vote as part of the public body unless specifically appointed with that ability
•Serve as a subject matter expert to the group
•Actively participate in conversations and be prepared for meetings
•Assist the chair in developing the agendas and annual workplan for the body
Council Liaisons shall
•Be appointed to each Policy Advisory Committee and Task Force established by the Council
o The only Statutory Committee supported by a Council Liaison is the Planning Commission
for which the Council Chair will always serve as the Council Liaison
•Not vote as part of the public body unless specifically appointed with that ability
•Work with the Staff Liaison and Chair to guide the body’s work to ensure it is aligned with the
Council policy goals and aligned to the annual Policy Priorities & Strategies
•Support the Chair in bringing items of the Committee to the Council
•The Council Liaisons are not expected to attend every public meeting. However, to the extent
they do, they are tasked with speaking on behalf of the Council and providing direction in
accordance with Council approved direction.
Section 4: Applicable Laws and Policies
All meetings are subject to Vermont’s Open Meeting Laws, the City Conflict of Interest and Ethics policy,
Vermont’s Public Records laws, all other relevant laws of the State of Vermont, and the City Resolutions
establishing each public body.
Section 5: Meeting Schedule
Regular Meetings: The body shall select one day and time per month (or every other month) as a regular
meeting date. Committees shall not meet on the standing meeting times of the City Council. All
meetings shall be ADA accessible. All regular meetings shall occur on City property. The Chair shall work
with the Staff Liaison to ensure that meetings are properly noticed and on the City calendar.
Special Meetings: The body may decide to hold a special meeting with twenty-four hours’ notice. The
Chair may schedule the meeting in coordination with the Council and Staff Liaisons. Special meetings
must be scheduled in a manner that would reasonably allow all regular members to attend and must be
noticed according to Vermont Open Meeting Law.
180 Market Street, South Burlington, Vermont 05403 | 802-846-4107 | www.southburlingtonvt.gov
This guidance does not negate the opportunity to do site visits or property tours with required notices.
However, no public meetings shall take place at private homes.
Section 6: Meeting Agendas and Minutes
Agendas for each meeting will be noticed in advance and in compliance with Vermont Open Meeting law.
All agendas shall start with the following agenda items:
•Call to Order
•Approval of the agenda
•Public Comment
The Chair, Staff Liaison and Council Liaison must finalize the agenda by noon on the Thursday before the
week of the scheduled meeting. This allows the City to properly notice the agenda on Friday. The
Secretary must provide the draft minutes back to the Staff Liaison within 5 days after a scheduled
meeting for posting on the City’s website.
Section 7: Conducting Meetings
Meetings shall be conducted in accordance with Vermont Open Meeting Law and the practices of the City
Council. A quorum is defined as 50% of the total number of seats plus 1. A quorum is needed to hold any
meeting. If such number is not present, the only action that can be taken is to adjourn. Motions must
be made in the affirmative and be seconded in order to move to a vote.
All members shall assume good intentions of their colleagues and should actively work to include all
voices in the conversations.
Section 8: Member Conduct
In addition to adhering to the City’s “Conflict of Interest and Ethics Policy for Elected and Appointed
Officials” members must conduct themselves at all times in ways that hold the community’s trust, ensure
that all voices are respected and heard, and exhibit actions intended to be in the best interest of South
Burlington.
Any Committee member has a right to express personal views and opinions pursuant to our
Constitutional guarantees of freedom of speech. An individual member is free to voice a position, oral or
written, on any issue as long as it is made clear that the member is not speaking as a representative of
the City, or as a member of the Committee. If testimony or commentary is provided on behalf of the
Committee this should be done through the Chair or Vice Chair (or their designee) following direction or a
vote on a policy area from the full Committee. A committee may represent the view of the Council to
individuals, agencies, and organizations, but otherwise may not advocate or lobby as the committee
unless it is also the adopted view of the Council.
180 Market Street, South Burlington, Vermont 05403 | 802-846-4107 | www.southburlingtonvt.gov
To: South Burlington City Council
From: Jessie Baker, City Manager
Date: April 15, 2022
Re: FY23 Policy Priorities and Strategies (PP&S) Planning
In a council-manager form of government, staff must implement the City Council’s policies and priorities.
With the initiation of this effort in the fall of 2021, the Council adopted a set of Policy Priorities and Strategies
and the Leadership Team has reported on them through the year. I recommend that we continue the process
of annually working together to ensure that we are all making clear and intentional decisions about the policy
priorities of the City and the implementation strategies we will use to achieve this vision with the goal of
producing a fiscal year city-wide workplan for the Council, staff, and Committees.
The FY23 Policy Priorities and Strategies are likely to have a heavy focus on the Comprehensive Plan update –
to be approved in early 2024. We are considering how we can best leverage the FY23 PP&S process to help
kick-off this city-wide work and reaffirmed commitment to the direction of the City in the 2016
Comprehensive Plan. And, obviously, what comes out of that process will ultimately significantly impact
future fiscal year’s PP&Ss.
Roles and Responsibilities
180 Market Street, South Burlington, Vermont 05403 | 802-846-4107 | www.southburlingtonvt.gov
FY22 Policy Priorities and Strategies
The FY22 Policy Priorities and Strategies are available here and are aligned to the City's 2016 Comprehensive
Plan’s guiding principles (or policy statements) for the community.
Here and into the Future, South Burlington is...
•Affordable and Community Strong - Creating a robust sense of place and opportunity for our
residents and visitors.
•Walkable - Bicycle and pedestrian friendly with safe transportation infrastructure.
•Green & Clean - Emphasizing sustainability for long-term viability of a clean and green South
Burlington
•Opportunity Oriented - Being a supportive and engaged member of the larger regional and
statewide community.
Proposed Process and Timeline
There are almost unlimited ways municipal government (elected official and professional staff) can positively
impact community. Therefore, with these policy priorities in place, it’s imperative that we think strategically
about how best to implement these and how we allocate our finite resources to those ends. To that end, we
will maintain the format of a shared workplan as follows:
Role of Council
"This is the vision for our community"
Policy Area Description Related Policy Statement Source
Role of City Manager and Leadership Team
"This is how we are accomplishing this vision."
Implementation Strategy Description Responsible Teams Timeline
Role of City Committee
"This is how our resident committees can inform policy and help implement policy."
Committee Action
I recommend the following timeline.
Date Task Responsible Party
April 18, 2022 Council reviews and possibly adopts process
including the request of Committees to
participate
Council & Jessie
April – May Staff Liaisons work with Committees to
review progress made on FY22 Policy
Priorities & Strategies and make
recommendations for FY23 shared work.
Staff Liaisons &
Committees
180 Market Street, South Burlington, Vermont 05403 | 802-846-4107 | www.southburlingtonvt.gov
Date Task Responsible Party
The FY22 report out will also serve, in part, as
the Annual Report submittals.
May Leadership Team builds the FY23 Policy
Priorities & Strategies Recommendations.
Jessie & Leadership Team
June
(June 11th or 18th?)
Council & Leadership Team Retreat to review
and develop policy priorities and strategies
for FY23.
Agenda for the day to include:
•Welcome and overview – Jessie
•Representation of the community we serve
–Jessie
•Area review by policy – Leadership Team
•Brainstorming exercise – All
•Prioritization exercise – Council
•Wrap up and Gratitude – Jessie
Council & Leadership Team
July 5, 2022 FY23 Policy Priorities and Strategies approved
by Council
Jessie & Council
Starting in September Quarterly updates on Priorities to Council Jessie & Leadership Team
April 2023 Process starts again
July 2023 FY24 Policy Priorities and Strategies are
approved by Council
180 Market St South Burlington, VT 05403 802-846-4105
April 18, 2022
The following 2022 first, second and third class liquor licenses, outside consumption and entertainment permits were approved by the South Burlington Liquor Control Board after review by the City tax, fire and police departments:
NAME DESCRIPTION
Eco Bean and Greens (NEW) First Class Restaurant/Bar License Higher Ground First Class & Third Class Restaurant/Bar License and Entertainment License
Parkway Diner (Renewal) First Class & Third Class Restaurant/Bar License and Outside Consumption Permit
SOUTH BURLINGTON LIQUOR CONTROL BOARD
Helen Riehle Meagan Emery
Tom Chittenden Tim Barritt
Matt Cota