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HomeMy WebLinkAboutAgenda - City Council - 04/15/2024CITY COUNCIL MEETING AGENDA APRIL 15, 2024 Participation Options In Person: 180 Market Street, Main Floor, Auditorium Assistive Listening Service Devices available upon request Electronically: https://meet.goto.com/SouthBurlingtonVT/citycouncilmeeting04-15-2024 You can also dial in using your phone: 1 (224) 501-3412 Access Code: 273-479-709 Regular Session 6:30 p.m. 1.Pledge of Allegiance (6:30 p.m.) 2.Instructions on exiting building in case of emergency and review of technology options – Jessie Baker, City Manager (6:31–6:32 p.m.) 3.Agenda Review: Additions, deletions or changes in order of agenda items (6:33–6:34 p.m.) 4.Comments and questions from the public not related to the agenda (6:35–6:45 p.m.) 5.Councilors’ Announcements and Reports on Committee assignments and City Manager’s Report (6:45–6:55 p.m.) 6.Consent Agenda: (6:55–7:00 p.m.) A.*** Consider and Sign Disbursements B.*** Approve minutes from March 7, 2024 CC Meeting C.*** Approve an application for a 2024 Library Summer Programming Grant to purchase materials. 7.Consider applicants to the Planning Commission (1 vacancy), Economic Development Committee (2 vacancies) and Public Art Committee (2 vacancies) (7:00–7:30 p.m.) 8.*** Orientation: Community Services (Recreation & Parks and Library) – Adam Matth, Director of Recreation and Parks, and Jennifer Murray, Library Director (7:30–8:30 p.m.) 9.*** Briefing on the kick-off of the Parks and Open Space Master Plans – Adam Matth, Director of Recreation & Parks, and Silken Kershner, Project Manager of Transportation and Open Spaces (8:30–8:50 p.m.) 180 MARKET STREET, SOUTH BURLINGTON, VERMONT | (802) 846-4107 | WWW.SOUTHBURLINGTONVT.GOV 10. *** Consider the naming of Overlook Park – Adam Matth, Director of Recreation & Parks (8:50– 9:10 p.m.) 11. *** Receive the Chittenden Solid Waste District Proposed FY 25 Budget – Sarah Reeves, Executive Director (9:10–9:25 p.m.) 12. *** Request from Common Roots for a $400,000 allocation of American Rescue Plan Act Funds to acquire property at Spear Street and Allen Road (9:25–9:45 p.m.) 13. *** Convene as the South Burlington Liquor Control Commission to consider; CVS Pharmacy #10690, Second Class License; Shaw’s Beer & Wine, Second Class License, Tobacco License and Tobacco Substitute Endorsement (9:45–9:50 p.m.) 14. Other Business (9:50–10:00 p.m.) 15. Consider entering into executive session for the purposes of discussing of appointments to the Planning Commission, Economic Development Committee and Public Art Committee 16. Adjourn Respectfully submitted: Jessie Baker City Manager ***Attachments included Champlain Water District Check/Voucher Register - Check Report by Fund From 4/16/2024 Through 4/16/2024 Check Date Check Number Vendor Name Invoice Description Check Amount Invoice Number 4/16/2024 4743 Aldrich & Elliott, PC Project 23022.002 9,615.42 82074 4/16/2024 4744 Champlain Water District - Retail Retail to SBWD - March 2024 61,770.30 SBWD-408 4/16/2024 4745 Champlain Water District Refund Overpymt on Account 6722 139.32 REFUND-040524 4/16/2024 Champlain Water District March 2024 Wholesale to SBWD 195.16 SBWD-401 4/16/2024 Champlain Water District March 2024 Water Consumption 180,152.92 SBWDWTR-033124 4/16/2024 4746 E.J. Prescott Irrigation Hydrant 31.17 6305155 4/16/2024 E.J. Prescott Cold Patch 102.48 6305369 4/16/2024 4747 MSK Engineers Project 1460-001 20,178.36 16623 4/16/2024 4748 South Burlington Sewer Department March 2024 Sewer Billings 402,280.69 SEWER-033124 4/16/2024 4749 South Burlington Stormwater Department March 2024 Stormwater Fees 191,779.13 STORM-033124 Total 70 - South Burlington Water Department 866,244.95 Report Total 866,244.95 70 - South Burlington Water Department SOUTH BURLINGTON CITY COUNCIL Date: 4/9/2024 7:40:50 AM Page: 1 Page 1 CITY COUNCIL 7 MARCH 2024 The South Burlington City Council held a reorganization meeting on Thursday, 7 March 2024, at 6:30 p.m., in the Auditorium, 180 Market Street, and by Go to Meeting remote participation. MEMBERS PRESENT: T. Barritt, A. Chalnick, M. Scanlan, L. Smith, E. Fitzgerald ALSO PRESENT: J. Baker, City Manager; Chief S. Locke, Deputy City Manager; C. McNeil, City Attorney, M. Machar, Finance Director, D. Wheeler, Water Resources Engineer; E. Tomey-Walker, R. Doyle, B. Sirvis, S. O’Brien, S. Dooley. Ms. Baker opened the meeting and presided until the Council Chair was elected. 1. Instructions on exiting building in case of emergency and review of technology option: Ms. Baker provided instructions on emergency exit from the building and reviewed technology options. • Additions, deletions or changes in the order of Agenda items: Mr. Barritt moved to approve the Agenda as presented. Mr. Chalnick seconded. Motion passed unanimously. • Comments and questions from the public not related to the agenda: Ms. Tomey-Walker asked the Council to consider changing the Backyard Chicken Ordinance. She gave members handouts regarding her request. Mr. Chalnick asked her to provide photos. • Announcements, councilors reports from committee assignments and City Manager’s Report: CITY COUNCIL 7 MARCH 2024 PAGE 2 Council members reported on recent meetings and events they had attended. Ms. Baker: Introduced some of the City staff present including Deputy City Manager/Fire Chief Steve Locke, City Attorney, Colin McNeil, and Finance Director, Martha Machar. Reviewed election results by districts. She noted that the City budget passed with a 52.09% approval, down from last year’s 72% approval. The water storage bond passed with 75% approval, and the proposed City Charter change passed with almost 80% approval. The School budget failed, passing only in the Orchard District. 30.14% of registered voters voted in this election, higher than other Town Meeting years but lower than other Presidential Primary years. Ms. Baker also thanked Ms. Rees for an excellent job doing her first election as City Clerk. • Under Sect. 13-303 of the City Charter, elect a Council Chair, Vice Chair and Clerk with the City Manager presiding: Ms. Baker opened the floor for nominations for City Council Chair. Mr. Chalnick nominated Mr. Barritt. Mr. Smith seconded. There were no further nominations, and Mr. Barritt was unanimously elected. Mr. Barritt presided over the remainder of the meeting. He opened the floor for nominations for Vice Chair. Mr. Barritt nominated Mr. Chalnick. Mr. Smith seconded. Ms. Fitzgerald offered to serve based on her many years serving as Chair of the school board but agreed to accept the will of the Council. In the vote that followed, Mr. Chalnick was unanimously elected Vice Chair. Mr. Baritt asked for nominations for Clerk and explained the process for handling of Minutes. Mr. Scanlan said he would be happy to serve. Mr. Chalnick then nominated Mr. Scanlan. Mr. Smith seconded. There were no further nominations, and Mr. Scanlan was unanimously elected Clerk. CITY COUNCIL 7 MARCH 2024 PAGE 3 Mr. Barritt congratulated the new City Councilors. He then reviewed his history of service to the City including the Library Board of Trustees and Development Review Board (DRB) prior to the City Council. He also enumerated many of the significant actions he has seen in his 8 years on the Council including: progress toward joint dispatching, Howard Mental Health people accompanying Police on appropriate calls and significant co-training, approval of TIF votes, racial training in the Police Department, conservation of the Auclair Farm, the new radio tower, Wheeler conservation, the new City Hall/Library, the construction of Allard Square, Interim Zoning, FAA noise insulation work near the Airport, Climate Action Plan, new affordable housing buildings, City Plan 2024, Rental Registry, City Center housing, increase in Fire Department staff, and the new O’Brien all-electric housing development. Mr. Barritt added that South Burlington is a wonderful city, and he is thrilled to be in this position. • Council Orientation: Ms. Baker began by reviewing those things over which the Council has authority: • Hiring and firing of City Manager • Appointment of committees and commissions • Liquor Control Board • Board of Health • Adopting ordinances • Fiduciary oversight • Convening of public meetings • Serving on the Steering Committee along with School Board members Ms. Baker then outlined the Rules of Procedure including the following: • Elect leadership • Three members constitute a quorum • Chair runs the meetings • All actions are done in the affirmative • Enter executive sessions as needed CITY COUNCIL 7 MARCH 2024 PAGE 4 • Chair speaks on behalf of the Council unless there is a vote otherwise • A request by 2 Councilors will put an item on the Agenda (1 person can ask as well) • The Agenda Planner is distributed weekly Ms. Baker stressed that Council meetings are meetings of the City Council taking place in public. Public Hearings are when the public is invited to speak. The Council can ask for public input at any time. Council members can express an opinion as an individual citizen. A “Council position” must go through the Chair. Ms. Baker encouraged members to send any “day-to-day” questions to her. Regarding appointments to Committees and Commissions, Ms. Baker noted there are 4 types of appointments: • Regulatory (Planning Commission, DRB, Board of Abatement, Board of Civil Authority, Library Board of Trustees, Sextons, Steering Committee • Policy (Affordable Housing Committee, Bike/Ped Committee, City Charter Committee, Common Area for Dogs Committee, Housing Trust, Natural Resources Committee, Pension Advisory Committee, Public Art Committee, and Recreation/Parks Committee • Task Force (Climate Action Plan, Airport Re-zoning Request) • Others (Green Mountain Transit, Chittenden County Solid Waste District, Winooski Park District, Patrick Leahy Burlington International Airport, Chittenden County Regional Planning Commission (CCRPC), Town Meeting TV Ms. Baker noted that all Regulatory and Policy committees have staff support. Ms. Baker then addressed the issue of “transparency” and said that keeping the public trust is of the utmost importance. The City e-mail address should be used for all City business. Members should avoid having 3 Council members present at one time discussing current or future City Council items. All debate must take place in public. CITY COUNCIL 7 MARCH 2024 PAGE 5 Mr. McNeil said that as long as there is not a quorum present, 2 members can discuss city business. There cannot be 3 members on an e-mail correspondence. He urged members to be careful and not to violate the law or the spirit of the law. Executive Session meetings are confidential and can be used only for those purposes specifically allowed. Members should not forward confidential emails or talk about an executive session outside of the session. Ms. Fitzgerald asked about the sharing of information. Ms. Baker said the sharing of information is OK. Mr. McNeil said such correspondence should indicate “do not reply.” Mr. McNeil then addressed the Conflict of Interest and the Code of Ethics policy. He read the definition of “conflict of interest” and noted that if a member has such a conflict, it should be disclosed and the member recuse him/her self. A recused member cannot sit with the Council or deliberate with the other members on that item. Mr. McNeil noted that this policy is adopted annually and he asked members to do that. Ms. Baker also noted there is a bill in the State Legislature now which could significantly change this policy. Among other things, it would require annual training. Ms. Baker then outlined the City Manager’s authority including the following: • CEO of the City • Propose budgets • Enforce ordinances • Personnel Director • Report to City Council • Attend all City Council meetings • Primary support person She asked that any question of staff be sent through her. She encouraged Councilors to tour the city’s facilities and to reach out to staff regarding Agenda items. The City Manager must be copied on all correspondence between staff and Councilors. CITY COUNCIL 7 MARCH 2024 PAGE 6 Ms. Baker then showed a chart of the City’s organization and staffing. There are 193 regular employees and 15-20 per diem and seasonal staff. The City Council is the final appeal body for employee grievances. The City has 3 bargaining units: Firefighters, Police, and AFSCME employees. Ms. Baker discussed the annual Policy Priorities and Strategies on which the City Manager reports quarterly to the Council. Ms. Baker encouraged members to review documents such as the Climate Action Plan and City Plan 2024. Mr. Scanlan asked at what point the Council works on the budget impact. Ms. Baker said this occurs during budget season, September through March. Policy issues are continual, and staff will bring funding implications to the Council. Ms. Baker noted that the city is tracking how new construction is complying with the climate ordinances. Other planning efforts that are active include zoning amendments, impact fees, the Rental Housing Ordinance, actively building out City Center, and various studies. • Adopt the City Council Rules of Procedure: Mr. Chalnick moved to adopt the City Council Rules of Procedure as presented. Ms. Fitzgerald seconded. Mr. Doyle explained that the three places to publicize Council meetings should be just a minimum because of the dense development that is going in in various places in the city. He felt this information should be more accessible to the public, especially since it does not always get posted in the places where it now should be. In the vote that followed, the motion passed unanimously. • Adopt the Conflict of Interest and Ethical Conduct for Council and Appointed Members: Mr. Scanlan moved to adopt the Conflict of Interest and Ethical Conduct as presented. Mr. Chalnick seconded. Motion passed unanimously • Consent Agenda: • Approve and Sign Disbursements • Approve the grant application for the National Council on Ageing Bone Health and Osteoporosis Community Pilot Project CITY COUNCIL 7 MARCH 2024 PAGE 7 • Approve the 2024 Certificate of Highway Mileage • Award the contract for the Ash Tree Injection Project to Teacher’s Tree Service Mr. Wheeler explained the bidding process for the Ash Tree Injection Project. Mr. Smith moved to approve the Consent Agenda as presented. Mr. Chalnick seconded. Motion passed unanimously. • Appoint Charter and Ordinance required positions for a period of one year as outlined in the attached memorandum: Ms. Baker showed the list of appointments that require City Council approval. Mr. Chalnick moved to approve the appointment of Charter and Ordinance required positions for one year as presented on the attached list. Mr. Smith seconded. Motion passed unanimously. • Discuss and possibly approve the 2024-2025 City Council meeting schedule pursuant to the City Charter, Chapter 13, Section 305(a): Ms. Baker noted that the Council is required to meet twice a month. Dates can always be changed, and special meetings can be added. Mr. Chalnick moved to approve the City Council meeting schedule as presented. Ms. Fitzgerald seconded. Motion passed unanimously. Ms. Baker noted there will be significant items coming to the Council in the next 3 months. She asked if there are topics members want to add for future agendas. Ms. Fitzgerald suggested a discussion of community engagement with the Council, especially since there are 3 new members. Mr. Scanlan agreed and added they should look at different ways of communicating. Mr. Smith said he would like to put together an advisory team from different parts of the city that could meet with him on a regular basis, if that is allowed. Ms. Baker said these are good topics for discussion on the next agenda. CITY COUNCIL 7 MARCH 2024 PAGE 8 Mr. Smith noted he won’t be in town for the 20 May Priorities meeting but could be available remotely. Ms. Baker said that is just a place holder and an official date will be set with the full Council. • Designate The Other Paper as the Official Paper of Record: Ms. Baker noted that this designation is required by State Statute. Mr. Chalnick moved to designate The Other Paper as the Official Paper of Record. Ms. Fitzgerald seconded. Motion passed unanimously. • Council Orientation: General Government: Ms. Baker showed a chart of government organization and noted that the Council will be hearing from Department Heads in coming meetings. She then showed a pie chart of where tax dollars go and reviewed the general fund budget. The Grand List which is a $4,100,000,000, is set as of 1 April every year, and the tax rate is set by the Council at the first July meeting. One cent on the tax rate raises $411,416. One percent on the tax rate raises $200,262. 94 new single family homes are needed to increase the Grand List by 1%; 139 condos will also increase the Grand List by 1%. Ms. Baker also explained the working of values in the TIF district. The City received $5,600,000 in ARPA funds. To date, $4,500,000 has been allocated. The balance needs to be allocated by December, 2024 and spend by December, 2026. Ms. Baker also explained the use of the Fund Balance. This is the fund that can be accessed when a generator breaks down, etc. The City Manager needs Council permission to spend that money. The City will be receiving more earned interest than budgeted for FY24. This could be from $700,000 to $900,000. The Council should consider how to handle this. Ms. Baker noted that the City has had clean audits for many years and also had a clean TIF audit. She explained what information the Council will see. There are several active lawsuits which the City Attorney will discuss with member in executive session. Ms. Fitzgerald asked if the noise issue that was brought to the Council has been resolved. Mr. McNeil said it has. CITY COUNCIL 7 MARCH 2024 PAGE 9 Emerging issues in the City include: • Parking fund for City Center • Rental Registry • New data capacity • New Climate staff • On-line permitting system • Modernization of financial systems • Collective bargaining • Designate TD Bank as the City’s Official depository: Mr. Chalnick moved to designate TD Bank as the City’s official depository. Mr. Smith seconded. Motion passed unanimously. • Convene as South Burlington Liquor Control Commission to consider: Double Tree Hotel, 1st Class Hotel License & 3rd Class Hotel License & 2nd Class License; Interstate Shell, 2nd Class License & Tobacco License; Jiffy Mart #445, Tobacco Substitute Endorsement; Olive Garden Italian Restaurant #1520, 1st Class Restaurant/Bar License & 3rd Class Restaurant/Bar License; Skinny Pancake Airport LLC, 1st Class Restaurant/Bar License & 3rd Class Restaurant/bar License: Mr. Chalnick moved that the Council convene as Liquor Control Commission. Ms. Fitzgerald seconded. Motion passed unanimously. Mr. Chalnick moved to approve the liquor and tobacco licenses as presented. Ms. Fitzgerald seconded. Motion passed unanimously. Mr. Chalnick moved to reconvene as City Council. Mr. Smith seconded. Motion passed unanimously. • Other Business: CITY COUNCIL 7 MARCH 2024 PAGE 10 Mr. Barritt explained the “Councilors’ Corner” column in The Other Paper. He also noted that Front Porch Forum has the ability to publish to all neighborhoods and encouraged the use of that communication. As there was no further business to come before the Council Mr. Smith moved to adjourn. Mr. Chalnick seconded. Motion passed unanimously. The meeting was adjourned at 8:50 p.m. _________________________________ Clerk Recreation and Parks Adam Matth April 15, 2024 Organization-Recreation & Parks Who is South Burlington Recreation and Parks? The mission of the Recreation and Parks Department is to create and support dynamic public spaces and programs which grow, inspire, and create inclusive social interactions through land and people.We aim to foster a support and constructive environment that embraces equity through inclusive decision making and mindful daily actions. •Director –Adam Matth (2023) •Senior/Adult Recreation Specialist –Rebecca Isham (2021) •Operations & Event Specialist –Travis Ladd (2016) •Recreation Specialist –Brett Leonard (2015) •Recreation Specialist –Kate Likhite (2024) Adam Matth Kate Likhite South Burlington Parks Where are our parks and what do they consist of? •Bay Crest Park •City Center Park •Farrell Park •Jaycee Park •Overlook Park •Red Rocks Park •Symanski Park •Hubbard Rec. & Nat. •Veterans Memorial Park •Wheeler Homestead & Nature Park Recreation & Parks Programming Recreation and Parks programming consists of three different age demographics •Seniors: •Wednesday & Friday Lunches •AARP Tax Aide •Senior Cardio •Bone Builders •Bingo •Brushstrokes and Brews •Etc. •Adults: •Drop In Baskeball & Pickleball •Paint Nights •Yoga •Cornhole •Cake Decorating •Community Gardens •Running Club •Etc. •Youth: •Basketball •Lacrosse •Soccer •Baseball •Summer Camps •Swimming – Classes and Team •Jiu Jitsu & Wrestling •Track and Field •Etc. Recreation & Parks Events New events for 2024: •Family Series •Recreation on the Go •July Fitness Series •Park Hop Brews •Community Movie Series •Egg Hunt •Paint Nights •Community Yard Sale Other events in 2024: •Valentine Dance •Turf Times •Skate Night •SB Night Out •Spark the Park •Green Up Day Emerging Issues-Recreation & Parks •Expanded programming across all ages and representative of demographics (youth-adults-seniors) •City Plan – Goal 58 •Projected funding •Projected staffing •Indoor programmable space •Lacks scheduling control and opportunities during school year •Results of Parks Master Plan •Impact and resources provided •Resources distributed geographically appropriate for surrounding areas •High density housing; change in need for Recreation and Parks services •Providing equitable access and investments •Balance the needs of developed and undeveloped •City Plan 2024 – Goal 55 & 56 Library Orientation Jennifer Murray April 15, 2024 Library Organization Who is the South Burlington Library? Mission and Vision: The South Burlington Public Library strengthens our community through abundant resources, including books; information; and opportunities to learn, share and grow. The Library is a community destination that welcomes people of all ages and abilities. We foster individual inspiration, community connection, self-directed learning, and access to technology and information. The Library staff is made up of 22 people (12.4 FTE) of which nine are full time. The departments inside the Library are: •Children's Services •Adult Services •Circulation and Cataloging We are supported in mission building, outreach and policy creation by the Board of Trustees. Staffing chart April 2024 CITY MANAGER DIRECTOR (40) CIRCULATION LIBRARIAN (40) CIRCULATION SPECIALIST (40) CIRCULATION ASST. (19) CIRCULATION ASST. (19) ADULT SERVICES LIBRARIAN (40) ADULT SERVICES SPECIALIST (40) TEEN SPECIALIST (28) ADULT SERVICES ASST. (19) CHILDREN'S LIBRARIAN (40) CHILDREN'S SPECIALIST (40) CHILDREN'S ASST. (19) CATALOGING SPECIALIST (40) DIGITAL SPECIALIST (40) SHELVERS (various) SUBSTITUTES (various) BOARD OF TRUSTEES FY23 Successes The Library is busy! •Library visits came in at over 95,010 for the year, a 32% increase from FY22. •Staff now offer two toddler storytimes per week averaging 45 people per session. •Library programs were up 36% in FY23, serving 9836 attendees. •Almost 2000 attended summer programs, including those who joined reading incentives for all ages. •15,288 items were checked out by users at the self-service stations •Growing collection of "Things" were checked out over 600 times. FY23 Successes continued Books remain our brand A month in review 2024 Over 9500 visitors Over 26,000 items checked out 2,500 are self-checkout 3,000 are e or e-audio books 50 programs Over 700 attendees 320 hours on public PCs 10,295 total card holders Emerging Issues Library Current building projects are expected to bring over 1,000 new residents to our neighborhood alone.We will be called upon to open for more hours and to offer more simultaneous services leading to a need for more staff. Our neighbors are becoming more culturally and linguistically diverse than is reflected in our collections and programs. Staff will continue to develop skills and knowledge in delivering relevant programs and services across cultures. Current rates of room and auditorium rental require a higher level of audio-visual skill than we have within the City. We will be looking at alternate ways to best offer these spaces to staff and the public. In light of additional online resources and streaming video, physical collections will change to maximize their value to library users. As VT libraries join the nation in serving residents who are experiencing homelessness, mental illness or substance abuse, we need to consider hiring staff outside the traditional library box to aid in information and referral. Come see us! Photo from Dec. 2023 180 MARKET STREET, SOUTH BURLINGTON, VERMONT | (802) 846-4112 | WWW.SOUTHBURLINGTONVT.GOV Parks & Open Spaces Master Plans Silken Kershner, Transportation & Open Spaces Project Manager & Adam Matth, Director of Recreation & Parks Why Do We Need a Master Plan? •Master Plans were explicitly requested under the Recreation & Environmental Actions of the City Plan •Actions #39 and #87 •Master Plans will address many or all the goals outlined under Recreation & Environmental Goals Parks Key Questions •Identify needs/resources and process for future demographic changes •Identify how parks can best be utilized and connected (passive & active) •Guide for redevelopment of our parks and associated programming •Guide to better understand the needs of our public with regards to active recreation, programs, etc. •Assessing our parks system and current resources •Assessing our current programs and age demographics being covered •Assessing our accessibility of our parks for walking, biking, driving, etc. •Create a guide for adoption of a private park •Guide for balancing active recreation and open space •Guide for privately developed rec/park areas to maximize resources and facilities •Create a metric of size of population in an area to be served by "x" square footage of parks Open Space Key Questions •Create a guide for future conservation and initiatives to grow from •Identify needs and processes for future demographic changes •Identify how Open Spaces can be utilized and connected •Guide for balancing open space with active recreation •Create a guide or resource for land management practices Why Combine Parks & Open Spaces in One Plan? •Funding & Timeline •Interplay of Active & Passive Recreation •Public outreach and canvassing will cast a wider net Step 1 –Kick Off •Establish a timeline and project process •Point of contact: Adam Matth (Parks Master Plan) & Silken Kershner (Open Space Master Plan) •Timeline: Phase A –Rec and Parks Master Plan, Phase B –Open Space Master Plan ARPA Funds are from FY25, and must be spent by Dec 2026 Co-meeting with Rec & Park Committee and NRCC March 6th at 6:00pm Approach council in April/May to proceed, with an RFP in May/June Integration in August, with the Phase B to start in 2025 Step 1 –Kick Off (continued) •Identify key stakeholders and participants •Determine who needs to be heard and how •NRCC and Rec & Parks Committee, Bike/ Ped Advisory Committee, Committee on Common Areas for Dogs •Underrepresented groups such as working parents, youths, elderly •Groups such as schools,multi-family housing property managers,Champlain Housing Trust etc. •Understanding context for long-range planning •What does the City want to accomplish? See key questions •What are the goals, objectives and metrics for success? •How do the master plans fit in with other City objectives, plans or goals? Timeline Step 1 –Kick off (Spring 24) Joint Committee Mtg (March 2024) Presenting to Council (WE ARE HERE) Consultant Selection, Bid and Award (Spring/Summer 24) Step 2 – Listening & Learning (Summer/Fall 24) Step 3 – Evaluation (Winter 2024- 2025) Step 4A – Options and Goals, PARKS (Spring 25) Step 5A –Bring it Together, PARKS (Summer 25) Step 4B – Options and Goals, OPEN SPACES (Fall 2025) Step 5B –Bring it Together, OPEN SPACES (Winter 2025) Step 2 –Listening & Learning •Outreach should be fun and engaging! •Family friendly approach, encourage multi-generational participation •Time meetings to maximize participation •After school/work, weekends, during events etc. •Promote meaningful interaction using park tours, site visits, etc. •Provide ample options for listening •use several diverse approaches –direct outreach, interviews with key stakeholders, orgs and committees –cast a wide net for input •Maintain open communication •Check in, utilize task force(s), publish survey results via website or newsletter Step 3 –Evaluating Capacity & Identifying Needs •Part 1 –Inventory and Assessment •Goal is to summarize and evaluate existing community resources •NRCC has provided a great prototype •Assess more than quantity and type •Identify usage patterns •What is working well? Where are we seeing fully utilized resources? •Use GIS mapping to enhance our existing inventory •Create/define the spatial characteristics of parks, open spaces, and trails •Where are they? How do they relate to the community? (i.e. proximity, accessibility, activities offered, etc.) •Second iteration of site visits from Step 2 •Meet with facility and program managers •Consolidate results into a comprehensive assessment of existing conditions Step 3 –Evaluating Capacity & Identifying Needs (continued) •Part 2 –Audit Current Plans, Policies and Regulations •Digest existing plans such as individual park plans, recreational program plans, overall city plans, Comprehensive Plan etc. •Extract common policy elements, goals and objectives •Part 3 –Needs Analysis & Establishing a Baseline •This is how we help a consultant provide a data driven answer to, "What does our community need?" •Use metrics such as acres of park per capita, facilities per capita, walk/bike- ability, operating expenditures per managed acres or capita, etc. •Use these metrics for a Gap Analysis Step 4 –Exploring Options and Defining Goals •Recreational Market Assessment •Based on Gap Analysis, consider and explore the options/ opportunities to be pursued •Characterize programs, facilities, and activities that align with community needs and identify gaps •Explore recreational trends and how they interface with the recreational environment of South Burlington •Provide case studies to highlight opportunities *At this stage, the Phase A and B approach would come in, focusing on parks first and eventually repeating the process for open spaces as well Step 4 –Exploring Options and Defining Goals (continued) •Formalize Recommendations (Phase A) •Parks –explore options to align park assets with community needs. •Identify new park opportunities and provide recommendations for management and operations. •Prepare specific recommendations for each park within the City. Including standards for maintenance and quality. •Provide recommendations for the most appropriate benchmarking metrics for parks •Identify opportunities for public-private sector collaboration, interplay with community non-profits and educational institutions Step 4 –Exploring Options and Defining Goals (continued) •Formalize Recommendations (Phase B) •Open Spaces –provide recommendations to align open space recreational policies with existing and future open space acquisition. •Provide recommendation for upgrades or new linkages within trails and natural corridors. •Evaluate current stewardship objectives and efforts and provide recommendations for improvements. •Prepare specific recommendations for each open space within the City. Step 4 –Exploring Options and Defining Goals (continued) •Develop Actions, Priorities, and Phasing •Summarize recommendations developed in Phase 4, potentially using graphics, highlighting key actions •Consider cost-ranges for various initiatives or recommendations •Provide a "road map" for phasing of higher priority elements –include documentation and discussion of funding approaches Step 5 –Bring It All Together •Build a Master Plan! •Bring all the above into a visually compelling and usable "guidebook" •Add maps and graphics to help tell the story •Work collaboratively to communicate the plan •Distribute the plan to stakeholders •Identify the best approach for discussing recommendations –neighborhood meetings,Committee meetings,City newsletters, online, face to face Coordination •Active Transportation Plan •Climate Action Plan •2024 City Plan •Climate Resilient •Inclusive, Fair & Just •People Oriented, Thoughtful, and Sustainable Built Environment •Collaborative & Engaged Questions…? Comments…? 180 MARKET STREET, SOUTH BURLINGTON, VERMONT | (802) 846-4112 | WWW.SOUTHBURLINGTONVT.GOV 2024 - X 2024 - X March 9, 2023 Jessie Baker City of South Burlington 575 Dorset Street South Burlington, VT 05403 Dear Jessie: Attached please find copies of the Chittenden Solid Waste District Proposed FY 25 Budget. CSWD is scheduled to meet with the City of South Burlington on Monday, April 15, 2024, at 8:30 p.m. Please forward the attached copies to your City Council for their review. The Board of Commissioners approved sending the Proposed FY 25 Budget to Member towns for their approval on Wednesday, March 27, 2024. Below is Section 4. (b) of the Chittenden Solid Waste District Charter. Within 45 days of the approval of the budget by the Board of Commissioners, the legislative body of each member municipality shall act to approve or disapprove the budget. The budget shall be approved if approved by the legislative bodies of a majority of the member municipalities. (For such purposes, each member municipality shall be entitled to one vote.) A legislative body that disapproves the budget must file with the Board of Commissioners a written statement of objections to the budget identifying those specific items to be changed, and failure to file such statement of objections within the forty-five (45) day period shall constitute approval by such municipality. A legislative body that fails to act to approve or disapprove the budget within the forty-five (45) day period shall likewise be deemed to have approved the budget. As stated above, each member municipality may choose to approve or disapprove the budget prior to May 12, 2024. Please feel free to contact me should you have any questions. Thank you. Sincerely, Amy Jewell Director, Administration Cc: Paul Stabler– Rep., Allison Lazarz-Alt. March 19, 2024 FISCAL YEAR 2025 BUDGET Dear Board of Commissioners and Citizens of Chittenden County, I present to you Chittenden Solid Waste District's Fiscal Year 2025 Budget proposal. It provides necessary funding for facilities, operations, public programs, and capital programs to meet the Board's strategic goals over the coming year. It also lays the foundation to continue to advance those goals towards the future. The financial condition of CSWD continues to be sound and I do not see a need for any municipal assessments or per capita fees. We continue to be self-sufficient, relying on revenue from facility user fees, material sales, and the Solid Waste Management Fee – the per ton fee charged to haulers when disposing Chittenden County trash at the landfill to cover the costs of the services we provide. This budget requires a small draw from reserves to cover anticipated expenses, and I am recommending increasing the Solid Waste Management Fee to help fund the Closed Landfill Reserve. Managing Increasing Costs Across Programs Costs continue to increase in key areas, specifically health benefits, hauling services, fuel costs, waste disposal fees we pay at the transfer station, and processing fees we pay our MRF operator. The cost- of-living adjustment provided in July 2023 (7%) corrected the previous year’s “behind the curve” COLA and brought CSWD employees in line with adjustments seen across various sectors. This budget proposes a 2.81% COLA for July 1, based on the 2023 twelve-month annual average percent change. We monitor the US Bureau of Labor Statistics’ consumer price index for the Northeast (Urban B/C class) and use this as the foundation for COLA recommendations. We are proposing an additional four positions, bringing our staffing to 56.80 Full Time Equivalents. The increased staffing and the annual increases across the board in each benefit sector is resulting in a Wages and Benefits increase of 13.3%. To mitigate the costs associated with healthcare benefits, in 2023 CSWD moved to a lower-priced plan and increased the employee contribution to healthcare premiums. Employees contribute 3.5% of their salary/wages towards the costs of providing healthcare benefits, up from a previous contribution of 3.25% of salary/wages. These two changes decreased the impacts to the District, and the resulting overall increase to employee Total Compensation per Full-Time Equivalent over FY24 is 5%. MATERIALS RECOVERY FACILITY: MRF processing costs are increasing in FY 2025 per the operating contract with MRF operator, Casella Waste Systems. CSWD pays Casella a per-ton fee to operate the MRF and to market the sorted materials. The processing fee increased by 55%, from $45/ton to $70/ton as of March 1, 2023. Per the contract, the operating fee increased on January 1 to $72.80/ton and will increase again on January 1, 2025. To remain self-supporting, we are raising the MRF tip fee from $85/ton to $90/ton as of July 1. This tip fee is closer to the regional market rate as fees in the region range between $90-$110/ton as of the date of this memo. 2 MRF commodity revenue for Q1 and Q2 of FY 2024 remained in the depressed state seen in FY2023, hovering around $55/ton, only picking up in December. The forecast for the remainder of FY 2024 and for Q1 FY 2025 is for an average commodity revenue rate around $100/ton, blended across all commodities sorted at the MRF. The demand remains suppressed for plastics heading into FY 2025, however demand is beginning to increase and stabilize for fiber products. This budget assumes a conservative average commodity revenue of $75/ton, which I expect we will surpass. Modern Facility In November 2022 Chittenden County voters voiced overwhelming support for the construction of a new Materials Recovery Facility on Redmond Road in Williston. The vote authorized a bond amount of $22,000,000. We are designing a state-of-the-art facility, complete with high-tech sorting equipment and an education center. In Q4 FY 2024, we will be selecting a construction firm and aim to break ground in Q1 of FY 2025. ORGANICS RECYCLING FACILITY: FY 2025 will see a renewed focus on identifying sources of contamination in the food scraps and implementing a new Contamination Policy (pending Board approval) which will lead to greater quality control and customer education opportunities. CSWD has invested in equipment and people to manage the contaminants once onsite, but the goal is to incentivize cleaner inbound streams of material. The combination of equipment, people, and policy is reflected by a budgeted 58% decrease in Materials Management costs (transportation and disposal fees). The ORF Team has been working with haulers and the CSWD Outreach Team to inform and educate food scrap generators of the effects of contamination on the process and to alert them to the upcoming policy. We are mindful of the Board’s desire that the ORF be self-supporting and are also mindful that food scrap collection is an additional burden of cost to generators. In this budget, we are striving to balance those two potentially competing factors. Organics Recycling Facility tip fees are remaining at $70/ton for FY 2025. This budget shows a decrease in budgeted inbound food scraps to 4,527 tons. ORF staff are actively seeking additional high-quality tons to help improve tip fee revenue, projected to be down 4.5% from the FY 2024 budget. Budgeted sales revenue is up 18% due to increasing wholesale pricing, but even with the increase in product sales we are projecting needing to draw from the Operating Reserve to bring the ORF to -0-. Additional clean inbound food scraps are vital to reducing the draw. DROP OFF CENTERS: In Q3 FY 2024 we adjusted pricing for construction and demolition debris to match the bag price increases that took effect July 1, 2023. We are not raising prices for bagged trash in FY 2025. A small bag is priced at $3.00, a medium bag is $8.00, and a large bag is $11.00. New in FY 2024 is an extra- large bag priced at $15.00. An extra-large bag holds 46-65 gallons. This pricing brings us closer to covering the costs of managing recycling and food scraps as part of the price of a bag of trash (although the smallest bag still doesn’t cover those costs) and will allow the DOCs to generate a small amount of revenue in excess of expenses to contribute to the Operating Reserve. The biggest factor to bringing the DOCs firmly “in the black” was removing the allocation for Maintenance and Roll-Off 3 services as a program expense and considering that expense an internal District service supported by the Operating Reserve. This is the same approach taken with general Administrative, Outreach & Communications, Compliance, and Finance services, which are all completely supported by the Solid Waste Management Fee Reserve. Friendly Neighborhood DOC Our six DOCs serve 28% of Chittenden County as a primary source of waste disposal, recycling, and management of special materials not accepted elsewhere. More than 75% of Chittenden County residents use the DOCs each year, such as for electronics recycling, bulky waste disposal, or leaf and yard waste drop off. We recognize that we perform a vital function in the community, and the mission is to do so safely, efficiently, economically, and in an environmentally responsible manner. Even though the DOCs are District facilities, they are very much viewed as “local.” This capital budget includes long-awaited improvements to the DOC in Milton as well as redesigning the DOC in Burlington. The remaining DOCs will receive updates in successive out-years. In FY 2024 we changed the DOC schedule for most sites (except Hinesburg and Burlington) to a Tuesday – Saturday schedule, 8:00am 3:30pm. This schedule added service days to Milton and provided two-days off in a row for our hard-working DOC Team. The five-day schedule created efficiencies for our Maintenance Team when performing repairs and making improvements at the DOCs while they are closed to the public. The additional service days coupled with the FY 2024 price increases are reflected in the 32% increase in FY 2025 revenue compared to FY 2023 Actuals. When the DOC in Burlington resumes accepting trash (Q1 FY 2025), it will adopt the five-day schedule. SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT FEE: This is the fee charged to haulers when they dispose trash in the landfill in Coventry. The fee has not risen in eleven years, despite dramatic increases in District expenses. I am recommending that the Solid Waste Management Fee increase from $27.00 per ton of trash disposed to $30.00 per ton. The increase is needed at this time in part to help further fund the Closed Landfill Reserve. We are in Year 28 of the 30-Year landfill post-closure plan, and there are not sufficient funds remaining in the reserve to perform the work needed to move the landfill to its final stage, Custodial Care. The landfill continues to produce leachate in excess of what is expected of a landfill this far into post- closure. We are actively investigating the cause or causes. A further complicating factor, and one that may be extremely costly, is the yet to be announced PFAS treatment requirements for landfill leachate. The EPA and VTANR will be changing environmental rules within the next 12-18 months regarding PFAS, and the expectation is that landfill managers will be required to at minimum treat, but possibly destroy, any PFAS detected in the landfill leachate. There is no way to estimate the cost of the requirement until the extent of expected treatment is known, however, the balance in the Closed Landfill Reserve fund is most certainly inadequate to the task. The FY 2025 budget reflects the SWMF increase, however the increase must be approved by the Board as an official change to CSWD’s local Ordinance. The Ordinance change process is separate from the budget process, with its own warnings, public processes, and approvals. 4 As the economy continues its recovery towards a “soft landing” (as it is being forecast to do through 2024-25) waste reduction education will be even more important. Our team of solid waste professionals is dedicated to ensuring our members’ solid waste is managed in an environmentally sound, efficient, effective, and economical manner. I continue to work with our team positioning CSWD to make sure we remain a stable and predictable service provider to the citizens of Chittenden County. Sincerely, Sarah Reeves, Executive Director FY 2025 BUDGET PROPOSAL 19 GREGORY DRIVE, SUITE 204 SOUTH BURLINGTON, VT 05403 802-872-8100 Home - CSWD Printed on recycled paper CHITTENDEN SOLID WASTE DISTRICT FY 2025 BUDGET PROPOSAL TABLE OF CONTENTS A. Budget Memo to Board of Commissioners B. FY25 Summary Budget C. Administrative Descriptions D. Administrative and Solid Waste Management Programs E. Operations Descriptions F. Operating Programs G. Self-Funded Descriptions H. Self-Funded and Allocated Programs I. Capital Budget Highlights J. Capital Plan K. Projected Solid Waste Management Fee Revenue L. Budget Reserve Summary M. Schedule of Program Tipping Fees N. Organizational Chart Individual Program Budgets with Details and Comparisons to previous years are available on line at https://cswd.net/about-cswd/financial-information/ page 3 CSWD Annual Report Fiscal Year 2023 OUR MISSION The Chittenden Solid Waste District’s mission is to reduce and manage the solid waste generated within Chittenden County in an environmentally sound, efficient, effective and economical manner. OUR VISION Products are designed to be reused or recycled and our community fully participates in minimizing disposal and maximizing reuse and recycling. HOW WE’RE FUNDED Our revenue comes from three primary sources: ›User fees on incoming material at our facilities; ›The Solid Waste Management Fee (SWMF), a per-ton fee on material sent to the landfill; ›Material and product sales from material we collect and process at our facilities and sell; › A small, variable percentage of our funding comes from State grants for hazardous waste and other materials management. We are not funded by Income, Sales, or Property tax dollars. who we are We are a municipal district created in 1987 to oversee and manage solid waste in Chittenden County. CSWD serves about a quarter of the population of Vermont (169,301 residents and 8,092 businesses)* with facilities, programs, and expertise developed over our 34-year history. *2022 data. Sources: U.S. Census and VT Dept. Of Labor 169,301 residents 8,092 businesses 2022 data. Sources: U.S. Census and VT Dept. of Labor Income, Sales, or Property Taxes 0% Other .1% User fees 56.35% SWMF 26.38% Material & Product Sales 17.16% FY23 REVENUE $13.2M (unaudited) page 4 CSWD Annual Report Fiscal Year 2023 what we do REDUCE WASTE ›Educate residents, businesses, schools, and event leaders on waste prevention and diversion ›Promote community reuse options ›Process leftover paint from residents and businesses into Local Color Paint ›Maintain and enforce our Ordinance , which includes waste prevention and diversion requirements ›Help our members comply with federal and state solid waste laws ›Provide facilities and tools to help members prevent waste and maximize diversion from the landfill to recycling, composting, and other resource recovery ›Advocate for state-wide policies that will reduce waste MANAGE MATERIALS Our facilities: ›The only municipally owned Materials Recycling Facility (blue-bin recyclables sorting center) in Vermont ›Six regional Drop-Off Centers for household trash, recycling, organics, and special materials ›A comprehensive hazardous waste program for households and small businesses that includes a permanent year-‘round collection facility and a seasonal mobile collection unit ›The state’s largest Organics Diversion Facility (home of Green Mountain Compost) turning food scraps and yard trimmings into compost and soil blends supporting local soils CSWD LOCATIONS Q Drop-Off Centers Q Environmental Depot Q Materials Recycling Facility Q Organics Recycling Facility (Green Mountain Compost) SUPPORT OUR MEMBERS ›Technical expertise and support for waste-related RFPs and studies ›Grant funding › Community Cleanup Fund for all member towns › Waste Reduction Container and Project Grants ›Brokering and investigation of beneficial use options for biosolids ›Green Up Vermont donation on behalf of all member towns; ›Outreach and education page 5 CSWD Annual Report Fiscal Year 2023 how we’re doing This graphic shows three key measurements of all the materials that individuals and businesses in Chittenden County, VT generated in 2022: 1. An estimate of how much “stuff” we all generated and needed to manage as solid waste in 2022. 2. Which stream all that stuff went to via recycling or composting. 3. How much recoverable material our community chose to send to the landfill instead of keeping it out of the trash by using a currently available program or facility. Full details are available in the 2022 CSWD Diversion Report. Materials that could have been diverted 7,464 10,293 31,400 10,362 60,434 7,651 47,799 47,887 86,491 15,155 58,092 79,287 96,853 60,434 309,781 TONS GENERATED 309,781 TONS GENERATED 189,828 TONS DIVERTED 189,828 TONS DIVERTED 119,953 TONS LANDFILLED 119,953 TONS LANDFILLED 100% MATERIALS GENERATED (309,781 tons) 61.28% RECYCLED/DIVERTED + 38.72% LANDFILLED 1 2 3 To: Board of Commissioners From: Sarah Reeves, Executive Director Nola Ricci, Director of Finance Date: March 20, 2024 RE: Fiscal Year 2025 Budget Proposal OVERVIEW Fiscal Year 2025 brings many important changes to the future of CSWD. We will be breaking ground on the new Materials Recycling Facility, reconfiguring the CSWD Drop Off Center at Burlington, and redesigning the CSWD Drop Off Center at Milton. The proposed budget for Fiscal Year 2025 remains conservative and acknowledges some of the increases we’ve experienced, and those we anticipate, as costs rise. FY24 was the first full fiscal year at the leased Administration building, and administrative staff has adjusted the FY25 budget includes costs associated with the use of the building. At the outset of FY25 we are budgeting to end the year in a deficit, requiring a modest draw from reserves. Because several budget projections are very conservative, we don’t believe that we will need to tap reserves to bring the year to Zero, however we do feel it is prudent to establish the expectation that we may, should the conservative path prove correct. CSWD SOURCES OF REVENUE CSWD’s revenue has three main components: Solid Waste Management Fees (SWMF), User Fees (tip fees), and Material Sales. The remaining revenue comes from rental income, license fees, bin sales, grants, and Extended Producer Responsibility program reimbursements. CSWD receives no municipal payments (assessments, per capita fees, tax payments, etc.) from our member communities.  Solid Waste Management Fees: Fees charged on each ton destined for disposal and which originated in Chittenden County. Four material types make up the tons subject to the SWMF- municipal solid waste, construction & demolition debris (C&D), construction & demolition debris fines, and material eligible to be used as alternate daily landfill cover (ADC). C&D fines and ADC are charged 25% of the SWMF. In FY25, SWMF are 24% of the revenue budget.  Tipping/User Fees: Fees charged for material disposal at Drop-Off Centers (DOCs), the Materials Recovery Facility (MRF), the Organics Diversion Facility (ODF), and the Environmental Depot. In FY25, Tip/User Fees are 57% of the revenue budget.  Material Sales: Revenue generated from the sale of products we make—compost products, Local Color paint, baled recyclables—or products we purchase on behalf of the public and then resell, like compost bins. In FY25, Materials Sales are 16% of the revenue budget. Attachment A 2 REVENUE SNAPSHOT Revenue (in thousands) FY23 Actual FY24 Budget FY25 Budget Change from FY24 Budget Change from FY22 Actual % of Overall Revenue Tip Fees 7,426 8,937 9,072 1,5% 22.2% 56.8 Material Sales 2,262 2,629 2,612 -0.6% 15.5% 16.4 SWMF 3,476 3,336 3,781 13.3% 8.8% 23.7 All Other 534 500 498 -0.4% -6.7% 3.1 TOTAL 13,698 15,402 15,963 3.6% 16.5% 100% Cost of Goods Sold 201 122 163 33.6% -18.9% Gross Profit 13,497 15,280 15,800 3.4% 17.1% Tip Fees, User Fees, and Material Sales Assumptions:  Materials Recycling Facility processing costs are increasing in FY 2025 per the operating contract with MRF operator, Casella Waste Systems. CSWD pays Casella a per-ton fee to operate the MRF and to market the sorted materials. On March 1, 2023, the processing fee increased by 55%, from $45/ton to $70/ton. Per the contract, the operating fee increased again on January 1 to $72.80/ton and will increase again on January 1, 2025. To remain self- supporting, we are raising the MRF tip fee from $85/ton to $90/ton as of July 1. This tip fee is closer to the regional market rate, as fees in the region range between $90-$110/ton as of the date of this memo. o MRF commodity revenue for Q1 and Q2 of FY24 remained in the depressed state seen in FY23, hovering around $55/ton, only picking up in December. The forecast for the remainder of FY24 and for Q1 FY25 is for an average commodity revenue rate around $100/ton, blended across all commodities sorted at the MRF. The demand remains suppressed for plastics heading into FY 2025, however demand is beginning to increase and stabilize for fiber products. This budget assumes a conservative average commodity revenue of $75/ton, which I expect we will surpass. We are assuming 47,500 tons of inbound recycling, and marketing 38,000 of those tons. o In November 2022 Chittenden County voters voiced overwhelming support for the construction of a new Materials Recovery Facility on Redmond Road in Williston. The vote authorized a bond amount of $22,000,000. We are designing a state-of-the-art facility, complete with high-tech sorting equipment and an education center. In Q4 FY24, we will be selecting a construction firm and aim to break ground in Q1 of FY25.  Organics Recycling Facility will renew focus on identifying sources of contamination inbound food scraps and implementing a new Contamination Policy (pending Board approval) which will lead to greater quality control, reduced materials management costs, and improved customer 3 education opportunities. CSWD has invested in equipment and people to manage the contaminants once onsite, but the goal is to incentivize cleaner inbound streams of material. The combination of equipment, people, and policy is reflected by a budgeted 58% decrease in Materials Management costs (transportation and disposal fees). The ORF Team has been working with haulers and the CSWD Outreach Team to inform and educate food scrap generators of the effects of contamination on the process and to alert them to the upcoming policy. o We are mindful of the Board’s desire that the ORF be self-supporting and are also mindful that food scrap collection is an additional burden of cost to generators. In this budget, we are striving to balance these two potentially competing factors and therefore Organics Recycling Facility tip fees are remaining at $70/ton for FY 2025. ORF staff are actively seeking additional high-quality tons to help improve tip fee revenue, projected to be down 4.5% from the FY 2024 budget; This budget shows a decrease in budgeted inbound food scraps to 4,527 tons. Budgeted sales revenue is up 18% due to increasing wholesale pricing, but even with the increase in product sales we are projecting needing to draw from the Operating Reserve to bring the ORF to -0-. Additional clean inbound food scraps are vital to reducing the draw.  Drop Off Centers We are not raising prices for bagged trash in FY 2025. A small bag is priced at $3.00, a medium bag is $8.00, and a large bag is $11.00. New in FY24 is an extra-large bag (holding 46-65 gallons) is priced at $15.00. Also in FY24 we adjusted pricing for construction and demolition debris to match the bag price increases that took effect July 1, 2023. This pricing brings us closer to covering the costs of managing recycling and food scraps as part of the price of a bag of trash (although the smallest bag still doesn’t cover those costs) and will generate an estimated $187,500 of revenue in excess of expenses to contribute to reserves. The biggest factor bringing the DOCs firmly “in the black” was removing the allocation for Maintenance and Roll-Off services as a program expense and considering that expense an internal District service supported by the Operating Reserve. This is the same approach taken with general Administrative, Outreach & Communications, Compliance, and Finance services, which are all completely supported by the Solid Waste Management Fee Reserve. DOCs continue to manage materials that do not have adequate (or any) revenue associated with them, meaning CSWD is subsidizing the collection and management of certain materials such as universal waste, some electronics, and leaf and yard debris. Solid Waste Management Fee: Solid Waste Management Fees (the fees charged to haulers when they dispose trash at the landfill in Coventry) revenue is projected to be 13.3% higher than FY24 budget. We are budgeting a slight uptick in solid waste generation and an increase to the solid waste management fee, from $27/ton to $30/ton. The fee was last increased in FY13 and would require an ordinance amendment to make the change. We used the Solid Waste Disposal and Diversion Trends Model developed for CSWD by SERA, Inc to generate our projections for FY25. Supporting the model’s output, the state’s Joint Fiscal Office is 4 projecting slow growth in FY25, demonstrated by increasing consumer confidence and anticipated lower interest rates mid-year. This is the fee charged to haulers when they dispose trash in the landfill in Coventry. The fee has not risen in eleven years, despite dramatic increases in District expenses. The increase is needed at this time in part to help further fund the Closed Landfill Reserve. We are in Year 28 of the 30-Year landfill post-closure plan, and there are not sufficient funds remaining in the reserve to perform the work needed to move the landfill to its final stage, Custodial Care. The landfill continues to produce leachate in excess of what is expected of a landfill this far into post-closure, and we are actively investigating the cause or causes. A further complicating factor, and one that may be extremely costly, is the soon to be announced PFAS treatment requirements for landfill leachate. The EPA and VTANR will be changing environmental rules within the next 12 months regarding PFAS and PFOA, and the expectation is that landfill managers will be required to at minimum treat, but possibly destroy, any PFAS detected in the landfill leachate. There is no way to estimate the cost of the requirement until the extent of expected treatment is known, however, the balance in the Closed Landfill Reserve fund is most certainly inadequate to the task. The FY 2025 budget reflects the SWMF increase, however the increase must be approved by the Board as an official change to CSWD’s local Ordinance. The Ordinance change process is separate from the budget process. EXPENSES SNAPSHOT Actual Budget Forecast Change from FY24 to FY25 FY23 FY24 FY25 $ % Expenses Salaries & Wages 3,236,495 3,752,336 4,200,898 448,562 12.0% Benefits 1,374,524 1,630,639 1,897,751 267,113 16.4% Payroll Expenses 4,611,018 5,382,975 6,098,649 715,675 13.3% Travel & Training 47,516 118,175 127,432 9,257 7.8% Administrative Costs 79,244 182,885 152,753 (30,131) -16.5% Professional Fees 201,044 280,690 345,691 65,001 23.2% Equipment & Fleet 630,966 772,074 1,284,628 512,554 66.4% Supplies 105,636 133,644 131,813 (1,831) -1.4% Materials Management 5,959,886 6,691,366 6,998,897 307,530 4.6% Property Management 548,396 597,111 686,715 89,605 15.0% Promotion & Education 137,728 142,178 150,317 8,139 5.7% Community Support 32,346 100,950 106,400 5,450 5.4% Total Expense 12,353,781 14,402,047 16,083,295 1,681,248 11.7% 5 Key Points:  The cost-of-living adjustment provided in July 2023 (7%) corrected the previous year’s “behind the curve” COLA and brought CSWD employees in line with adjustments seen across various sectors. This budget proposes a 2.81% COLA for July 1, based on the US Bureau of Labor Statistics’ consumer price index for the Northeast (Urban B/C class) 2023 twelve-month annual average percent change. For FY25 we are proposing an additional four positions, bringing our staffing to 56.80 Full Time Equivalents. The increased staffing and the annual increases across the board in each benefit sector is resulting in a Wages and Benefits increase of 13.3%. o To mitigate increases associated with healthcare benefits, in 2023 CSWD moved to a lower-priced plan and increased employees’ contribution to healthcare premiums. Employees contribute 3.5% of their salary/wages towards the costs of providing healthcare benefits, up from a previous contribution of 3.25% of salary/wages. These two changes decreased the impacts to the District, with the resulting overall increase to employee Total Compensation per Full-Time Equivalent over FY24 at 5%. FY24 FY25 % Difference Payroll Expense 5,382,975 6,098,649 Full Time Employee 52.66 56.80 Expense per Employee 102,221 107,371 5.0%  In FY25, we will move the Maintenance and Roll Off department under the Operating Programs as an expense unto itself and funded this year out of the Operating Reserve. Maintenance and Roll Off was once allocated to various programs based on assumptions of time used, however we found the allocations were not yielding an accurate view of the full scope of services provided. The allocations hit the DOCs with significant expenses (88% of the M&R/O budget was allocated to DOCs) and the DOC revenue could not keep pace with the expense without significant subsidy. o Historically, the M&R/O program has not been a revenue-generating program but in FY25 we will be actively engaging in a pilot program to determine if there is a possibility of a new revenue stream.  Equipment and Fleet expenses are significantly higher at 66% above FY24 budget because more purchases that previously were part of the Capital Budget are now part of the Operations Budget. We’re fine-tuning our approach to Capital Expenditures (CapEx) and Operating Expenses (OpEx), and specifically our approach to asset depreciation. CapEx are those purchases that have long-term benefits and can be depreciated over time. OpEx are purchases that are consumed (used) over a short time period or are used regularly for day-to-day business. Some OpEx purchases are depreciated as well, but they are depreciated over a very short time period and will appear in budgets as an operational expense. 6 o Prior to FY25, CSWD used the capital budget to purchase all operations-related equipment over a cost of $7,500. Two years ago we increased the capital purchase threshold to $25,000 and moved smaller purchases to operating budgets. This year, we’re also using depreciation as a factor to determine which items should be purchased with capital dollars versus operating dollars.  Travel and Training is budgeted slightly higher compared to FY24 (7.8%), however we continue to struggle to fully utilize this line item. Scheduling coverage for key personnel is an ongoing challenge, and our ranks are thin in several operational positions. I continue to stress to all CSWD staff that I strongly support continuing professional development and skill building, and we will review our approach to trainings in FY25 to try to better understand how to be more successful in this area.  Administrative costs are down 16.5%, reflecting (among other things) budgeting based on known actuals at our leased space in South Burlington.  Materials Management is up only modestly (4.6%) for the first time in several years, reflecting a modicum of pricing stabilization across key inputs, such as diesel fuel costs. Materials Management is how we refer to hauling services we use to move materials we produce (compost, recyclables) to market, and move materials we collect (MSW from Drop-Off Centers, trash we generate, etc.) to disposal. RESERVE FUNDS Please see the FY25 Reserve Funds memo included in the budget packet for details on the reserve balances. In FY22, the District revised the Reserve Fund Guideline and structure. The new structure establishes a priority funding mechanism, minimum and maximum balances, and proposes to restrict certain funds (Closed Landfill, Facility Closure, and Biosolids). As each priority reserve reaches its maximum, remaining excess revenue flows (“waterfalls”) to the next priority reserve fund in order, as illustrated below: Reserve Type Reserve Name Minimum Carry Value Maximum Carry Value Restricted Biosolids Reserve Current depreciation of Biosolids Trailers, as contracted $650,000 or cost of replacing Biosolids trailers Restricted Landfill Post Closure Reserve Original cost of calculated closure less operating reduction Original cost of calculated closure Temporarily Restricted Material Recycling Facility Reserve 10% of total Bond 10% of total Bond 7 Reserves Subject to Funding Priority Waterfall Assigned Solids Waste Management Reserve (General Fund) 3 months of budgeted administrative expenses 6 months of budgeted administrative expenses, or highest past calculated cost Assigned Operating Reserve 3 months of budgeted operating expenses 6 months of budgeted operating expenses, or highest past calculated cost Assigned Capital Reserve Current value of fully depreciated assets Current value of total asset depreciation Unrestricted, Unassigned Undesignated Fund 5% of budgeted revenue 10% of budgeted revenue Reserves Using a Set Calculation Reserve Type Reserve Name Minimum Carry Value Maximum Carry Value Assigned Facilities Decommission Reserve Calculated cost of facilities decommissions Highest past calculated cost of facilities decommissions Restricted Facilities Solid Waste Termination Reserve Calculated cost of facility solid waste termination Highest past calculated cost of facility solid waste termination Assigned Community Clean Up Fund Current balance due to communities Maximum carry over allowed to communities RESTRICTED FUNDS The Biosolids, Closed Landfill, and Facilities Closure reserve funds are considered Restricted Funds as a best practice. The Materials Recycling Facility Reserve is required by the Vermont Municipal Bond Bank as part of the bonding agreement. Restricting these reserves means that the funds attributed to these programs may be used only for the expenses of these programs. Excess funds, after their restricted use, may be redistributed as deemed appropriate by management or, in the case of the Biosolids Reserve, returned to the member cities/towns that contribute specifically to that reserve. Interest revenue resulting from the investment of monies from these funds are returned to these funds. ASSIGNED FUNDS The remaining reserve funds (except the Undesignated Reserve) are assigned but not restricted. This means that those funds have a specific intended use but are available to be reassigned to other reserves if needed. These funds are organized in priority order and are filled with revenue in excess of expenses at the end of the fiscal year. When the first priority fund is full, the remaining excess revenue is assigned (flows as a waterfall) to the next priority fund. Four reserves make up the “waterfall” 8 reserves: Solid Waste Management Fee, Operating, Capital, and Undesignated reserves, in that order. When the Undesignated Reserve maximum is met, any remaining excess revenue will be assigned to the Capital Reserve. The Facilities Decommission and Facilities Solid Waste Termination Reserves were seeded with excess solid waste management fee revenue. The Community Clean Up Fund is also funded with solid waste management fees and is capped at $95,000. BOTTOM LINE Each year we need to “get to zero.” In FY25, we are projecting a deficit of $287,837, which if realized would require a draw from reserves. We are budgeting conservatively in several areas, such as Sale of Materials, healthcare utilization, and tipping fee revenue from the DOCs and ORF. Should actuals perform better than the budget, the need for a reserve transfer will be reduced or eliminated. Revenue $15,957,869 Cost of Goods Sold $162,411 Gross Profit $15,795,458 Expenses $16,083,295 Income from Operations ($287,837) Transfer from (to) Closed Landfill Reserve $39,125 Transfer from (to) SWMF Reserve ($381,701) Transfer from (to) Biosolids Reserve ($47,000) Transfer from (to) Operating Reserve $582,413 Transfer from (to) Capital Reserve $0 Transfer from (to) Community Clean Up Reserve $95,000 Facility Closure Reserve $0 Net - Actual Budget Forecast FY23 FY24 FY25 $% Income Tipping Fees 5,978,341$ 7,470,630$ 7,574,853$ 104,223$ 1.4% Hazardous Waste 97,010 62,000 92,500 30,500 49.2% Biosolids 1,350,510 1,404,358 1,405,000 642 0.0% Solid Waste Management 3,476,118 3,335,702 3,780,540 444,838 13.3% Sale of Materials 2,261,553 2,628,603 2,612,482 (16,121) -0.6% License Fees, Fines & Penalties 15,423 14,000 14,000 - 0.0% Rental Income 73,500 75,000 12,000 (63,000) -84.0% Product Stewardship & Reimbursements 171,502 169,000 167,500 (1,500) -0.9% Interest & Dividends 172,202 61,000 182,000 121,000 198.4% Charges for Services & Miscellaneous Income 187 75,000 10,524 (64,476) -86.0% Grant Revenue 106,850 106,470 106,470 - 0.0% Equipment Sale/Trade (5,437) - - - 0.0% Total Income 13,697,758 15,401,763 15,957,869 556,106 3.6% Cost of Goods Sold Bins & Containers 1,117 - - - 0.0% Paint (3,855) 19,000 19,000 - 0.0% Organics 203,145 102,405 143,411 41,006 40.0% Total Cost of Goods Sold 200,407 121,405 162,411 41,006 33.8% Gross Profit 13,497,351 15,280,358 15,795,458 515,099 3.4% Change from FY24 to FY25 Chittenden Solid Waste District Summary FY25 Proposed Budget Attachment B Actual Budget Forecast FY23 FY24 FY25 $% Expenses Salaries & Wages 3,236,495 3,752,336 4,200,898 448,562 12.0% Benefits 1,374,524 1,630,639 1,897,751 267,113 16.4% Payroll Expenses 4,611,018 5,382,975 6,098,649 715,675 13.3% Travel & Training 47,516 118,175 127,432 9,257 7.8% Administrative Costs 79,244 182,885 152,753 (30,131) -16.5% Professional Fees 201,044 280,690 345,691 65,001 23.2% Equipment & Fleet 630,966 772,074 1,284,628 512,554 66.4% Supplies 105,636 133,644 131,813 (1,831) -1.4% Materials Management 5,959,886 6,691,366 6,998,897 307,530 4.6% Property Management 548,396 597,111 686,715 89,605 15.0% Promotion & Education 137,728 142,178 150,317 8,139 5.7% Community Support 32,346 100,950 106,400 5,450 5.4% Total Expense 12,353,781 14,402,047 16,083,295 1,681,248 11.7% Net Ordinary Income 1,143,570 878,311 (287,837) (1,166,148) -132.8% Summary Chittenden Solid Waste District FY25 Budget Change from FY24 to FY25 Actual Budget Forecast FY23 FY24 FY25 Other Income Subsidies & Transfers Solid Waste Management Fee Subsidy - 3,342,938 3,398,839 Capital Reserve 136,753 Landfill Post Closure Transfer - 159,125 Operating Reserve Subsidy - 177,452 2,619,395 CCUF Transfer 27,323 95,000 95,000 Depreciation 1,019,262 - - Total Subsidies & Transfers 1,183,337 3,615,390 6,272,359 Total Other Income 1,183,337 3,615,390 6,272,359 Other Expense Reserve Transfers Transfer Capital Reserve 934,614 - Transfer Solid Waste Management Reserve 910,820 3,335,702 3,780,540 Transfer Biosolids Reserve 46,375 45,500 47,000 Transfer Operating Reserve 297,208 176,385 2,036,982 Transfer Facility Closure Reserve 1,883 500 - Transfer Landfill Post Closure Reserve 51,359 1,000 120,000 Transfer Investment in Assets 1,019,262 - - Total Reserve Transfers 2,326,907 4,493,701 5,984,522 Total Other Expense 2,326,907 4,493,701 5,984,522 Other Income and Expenses (1,143,570) (878,311) 287,837 Net Income 0 (0) (0) Chittenden Solid Waste District FY25 Budget Summary Chittenden Solid Waste District Administrative Descriptions Administration Program The Administrative program encompasses the expenses of human resources, the Executive Director, risk management, information and technology, infrastructure and general support services. Compliance Program The Compliance program oversees the Solid Waste Management Ordinance and ensures the regulated community maintains compliance. Additionally, the Compliance program oversees the District Safety program. Finance Program The Finance program provides management, oversight, and control of CSWD financial assets, as well as accurate and timely financial information to facilitate sound management decisions. Outreach and Communications (O&C) The Outreach and Communications program manages statutory mandates for raising awareness of CSWD services and educating residents, businesses, and institutions in reducing and properly managing the waste they generate. Attachment C Administration Compliance Finance Outreach & Communication Solid Waste Management Total Administrative Income Solid Waste Management Fee -$ -$ -$ -$ 3,780,540$ 3,780,540$ License Fees, Fines & Penalties - 14,000 - - - 14,000 Interest & Dividends - - 120,000 - - 120,000 Total Income - 14,000 120,000 - 3,780,540 3,914,540 Gross Profit - 14,000 120,000 - 3,780,540 3,914,540 Expenses Salaries & Wages 633,516 146,998 339,237 599,124 - 1,718,875 Benefits 222,846 56,929 156,610 218,150 - 654,535 Payroll Expenses 856,362 203,927 495,846 817,274 - 2,373,409 Travel & Training 49,543 7,300 2,303 31,761 - 90,907 Administrative Costs 37,636 6,570 2,980 33,848 - 81,034 Professional Fees 112,732 13,500 35,000 61,559 - 222,791 Equipment & Fleet 199,962 5,570 86,400 13,565 - 305,497 Supplies 5,794 950 3,350 38,126 - 48,220 Materials Management 2,000 - - - - 2,000 Property Management 140,014 - - - - 140,014 Promotion & Education - - - 144,567 - 144,567 Community Support - - 95,000 4,400 - 99,400 Total Expense 1,404,043 237,817 720,879 1,145,100 - 3,507,839 Net Ordinary Income (1,404,043) (223,817) (600,879) (1,145,100) 3,780,540 406,701 Other Income Subsidies & Transfers Solid Waste Management Fee Subsidy 1,404,043 223,817 625,879 1,145,100 - 3,398,839 Total Subsidies & Transfers 1,404,043 223,817 625,879 1,145,100 - 3,398,839 Total Other Income 1,404,043 223,817 625,879 1,145,100 - 3,398,839 Other Expense Reserve Transfers Transfer Solid Waste Management Reserve - - - - 3,780,540 3,780,540 Transfer Community Clean Up Reserve - - (95,000) - - (95,000) Transfer Landfill Post Closure Reserve - - 120,000 - - 120,000 Total Reserve Transfers - - 25,000 - 3,780,540 3,805,540 Total Other Expense - - 25,000 - 3,780,540 3,805,540 Other Income and Expenses 1,404,043 223,817 600,879 1,145,100 (3,780,540) (406,701) Net Income - - (0) (0) - (0) Chittenden Solid Waste District FY25 Proposed Budget Administrative Summary Attachment D Chittenden Solid Waste District Operating Descriptions Operating Administration The Operating Administration program (formerly Engineering) provides resources for compliance, design, project management, and applicable permitting. Additionally, this program oversees capital projects through the lifecycle of feasibility, design, and construction management. Drop Off Centers (DOCs) CSWD Drop Off Centers provide residents and small businesses with economical options for the management of their trash, recycling, food scraps, compostable yard debris, and certain special recyclables. Hazardous Waste The Hazardous Waste program includes both the Environmental Depot and Paint Depot. The Environmental Depot manages the hazardous waste of the residents and small businesses of Chittenden County. The Paint Depot manages discarded paint and produces recycled paint for the CSWD Local Color Program. Materials Recovery Facility (MRF) The Materials Recovery Facility manages single stream recycling from Chittenden County and Northern Vermont through sorting and preparing recyclables for domestic commodity sales. Organics Diversion Facility (ODF) The Organics Diversion Facility manages the acceptance, processing, and transfer of organics for use in compost and anaerobic digestion. Property Management The Property Management department maintains and protects CSWD’s investment in residential and business tenant property. Maintenance & Roll-off The Maintenance department provides material hauling and supports facility operations through ongoing maintenance of CSWD assets. Attachment E Drop Off Center DOC Materials Recycling Facility Organics Recycling Facility Property Management Hazardous Waste Operating Administration Maintenance & RollOff Total Operating Income Tipping Fees 2,938,000$ 4,320,000$ 316,853$ -$ -$ -$ -$ 7,574,853$ Hazardous Waste 15,000 - - - 77,500 - - 92,500 Sale of Materials 230,202 1,440,000 896,780 - 45,500 - - 2,612,482 Rental Income - - - 12,000 - - - 12,000 Product Stewardship & Reimbursements 36,000 - - - 131,500 - - 167,500 Charges for Services & Miscellaneous Income 8,000 - 2,524 - - - - 10,524 Grant Revenue - - - - 111,323 - - 111,323 Total Income 3,227,202 5,760,000 1,216,157 12,000 365,823 - - 10,581,182 Cost of Goods Sold Paint - - - - 19,000 - - 19,000 Organics - - 143,411 - - - - 143,411 Total Cost of Goods Sold - - 143,411 - 19,000 - - 162,411 Gross Profit 3,227,202 5,760,000 1,072,746 12,000 346,823 - - 10,418,771 Expenses Salaries & Wages 865,588 55,775 458,068 - 387,819 347,702 333,223 2,448,175 Benefits 502,696 21,384 230,525 - 204,407 95,858 185,666 1,240,536 Payroll Expenses 1,368,284 77,159 688,593 - 592,226 443,560 518,888 3,688,711 Travel & Training 3,000 6,265 13,560 - 6,350 2,100 3,250 34,525 Administrative Costs 27,900 28,000 10,154 - 2,500 1,000 800 70,354 Professional Fees 7,650 2,000 4,500 1,000 2,750 - - 17,900 Equipment & Fleet 171,805 292,500 307,356 - 26,100 - 181,370 979,131 Supplies 26,350 1,150 19,743 1,000 17,500 - 17,600 83,343 Materials Management 1,305,900 3,761,812 101,005 - 432,800 - - 5,601,517 Property Management 82,551 121,014 125,916 81,846 74,150 - 22,623 508,100 Promotion & Education - - 5,750 - - - 5,750 Community Support 7,000 - - - - - 7,000 Total Expense 3,000,440 4,289,900 1,276,577 83,846 1,154,376 446,660 744,531 10,996,331 Net Ordinary Income 226,762 1,470,100 (203,831) (71,846) (807,553) (446,660) (744,531) (577,560) Chittenden Solid Waste District FY25 Proposed Budget Operating Summary Attachment F Chittenden Solid Waste District Self-Funded Descriptions Biosolids Program The Biosolids program provides efficient and effective residuals management for participating community members. This program is developed to be self-funding. Closed Landfill Program The Closed Landfill program oversees the 30-year post closure period through responsible maintenance, reporting and monitoring according to the safety standards of applicable governing bodies. This program is funded through monies reserved at the launch of the closing project. Attachment G Income Biosolids 1,405,000$ Total Income 1,405,000 Gross Profit 1,405,000 Expenses Travel & Training 2,000 Administrative Costs 1,000 Professional Fees 5,000 Materials Management 1,350,000 Total Expense 1,358,000 Net Ordinary Income 47,000 Other Expense Reserve Transfers Transfer Biosolids Reserve 47,000 Total Reserve Transfers 47,000 Total Other Expense 47,000 Other Income and Expenses (47,000) Net Income - Chittenden Solid Waste District FY25 Proposed Budget Biosolids Attachment H Income Interest & Dividends 62,000$ Total Income 62,000 Gross Profit 62,000 Expenses Salaries & Wages 33,849 Benefits 2,681 Payroll Expenses 36,529 Administrative Costs 365 Professional Fees 100,000 Supplies 250 Materials Management 45,380 Property Management 38,601 Total Expense 221,125 Net Ordinary Income (159,125) Other Income Subsidies & Transfers Landfill Post Closure Transfer 159,125 Total Subsidies & Transfers 159,125 Total Other Income 159,125 Other Income and Expenses 159,125 Net Income - Chittenden Solid Waste District FY25 Proposed Budget Closed Landfill To: From: Josh Estey, Director of Compliance and Hazardous Waste Date: February 2, 2024 Fiscal Year 2025 Capital BudgetRE: Operating Capital Presented in this enclosure is a capital budget and timeline for FY25, FY26, and FY27 as well as, for the first time, an overview of previously approved capital projects that are in progress and are yet to be completed. This memo highlights the projects and procurements planned for FY25. As has been presented to this committee, the Executive Board, and the full Board of Commissioners over the last few months, the initial estimates of the cost of the new MRF have come in significantly higher than initially planned, leaving the District in a position (from a capital reserve point of view) tighter than in years past. Previously approved capital projects have been provided in the 3-year outlook for that reason, so the full picture of capital needs and capital reserve position can be understood. Staff has completed a thorough review of previously approved capital projects and those that had not/will not begin have been removed from the capital project outlook and the dollars associated with those projects have been returned to the capital reserve fund. Staff has worked to diligently to reduce the overall capital project expenditure projection not just for FY25 but for fiscal years to come in light of the increased cost estimation of the new MRF. Additionally, staff has been working to identify capital projects that have a higher likelihood to be covered by potential grant opportunities in the next few years, including aspects of the new MRF, with the knowledge that some federal monies will be flowing to the state this calendar year (the actual dollar amount will be understood later this spring/early summer). The capital budget does not specify which projects are likely to be funded, as grant funding is never guaranteed. The budget is presented as though all expenditures will come from capital reserve funds. Highlights of the FY25 projected capital projects list include an increase to the monies dedicated to the Milton Drop-Off Center expansion and improvement project (the result of an updated cost estimation exercise), a new hook truck to be used by our maintenance department to haul specific containers (food scraps and some recycling containers), and a shredder that will be used for both reducing yard to waste to produce a suitable carbon feedstock for ORF as well as potentially shredding tires to reduce the number of trips to Maine. The shredder, of all the projects, seems to have the highest potential for grant coverage. The last project to note is plans for the Drop-Off Center in Burlington to become a “fast trash” operation utilizing existing space and built infrastructure. Equipment purchased for this project could be readily removed and relocated if the Pine Street location were to no longer be available in the future. Please note that this is a description of intended projects and procurements and is inclusive of all potential capital expenses for FY25. Approval of the budget does not mean work will proceed without a proper bidding process and associated Board approvals according to CSWD financial policies. All capital projects greater than $50,000 will require approval from the Executive Board of Commissioners and all capital projects greater than $100,000 will require approval from the Board of Commissioners. In addition to Board notice of projects exceeding $100,000, Staff will regularly report updates of facility projects that are under the $100,000 threshold. Board of Commissioners Attachment I Previously Budgeted Works in Progress FY25 FY26 FY27 MATERIALS RECOVERY FACILITY Building & Building Repair Building Roof $150,000 Sub Total -$ $150,000 $0 $0 Capital Equipment Single Stream System Sub Total -$ $0 $0 $0 Rolling Stock Scissor Lift 35,000.00$ MSW Compactor 25,000.00$ Skid Steer #2 58,600.00$ Sub Total 118,600.00$ $0 $0 $0 New MRF Project Site and Design Plan & Attorney 209,200.00$ Sub Total 209,200.00$ $0 $0 $0 Total MRF 327,800.00$ $150,000 $0 $0 ORGANICS DIVERSION FACILITY Site Work Concrete Patching (water abatement)78,000.00$ ASP Water System 35,000.00$ Expansion Phase III Site Grading 150,000.00$ Sub Total 263,000.00$ $0 $0 $0 Building & Building Repair Main ASP Pad Repair $25,000 Concrete Pad Replacement (mixing bay)$60,000 Sub Total -$ $0 $60,000 $25,000 Capital Equipment Single-shaft shredder (Eggersmann F25 or Equivalent)$750,000 Eggersmann Air Separator V 60 Aeras air classification $50,000 Komtech L3 Screener 750,000.00$ F550 Organics Collection Insert 100,000.00$ Sub Total 850,000.00$ $800,000 $0 $0 Rolling Stock 644k Loader $350,000 Pump Truck Refurbishment 25,000.00$ Sub Total 25,000.00$ $0 $350,000 $0 CHITTENDEN SOLID WASTE DISTRICT CAPITAL PROJECTS 3 YEAR PLAN At t a c h m e n t J Hauling Second Hauling Truck (non-CDL) Hauling Infrastructure (Heated Garage, Wash Pad, etc.) Sub Total -$ $0 $0 $0 ORF New Projects Compost pad expansion - lagoon pad, bunker for YW/FW expansion Greenhouse $50,000 East-end redesign/repurposing (1042, greenhouse, bagging building, pole barn, fueling station, hill carve)$50,000 Sub Total -$ $50,000 $50,000 $0 Total ODF 1,138,000.00$ $850,000 $460,000 $25,000 Closed LF Site Work East side base remediation $15,000 $50,000 Total Closed LF -$ $15,000 $50,000 $0 Biosolids Total Biosolids $0 $0 $0 Roll-OFF and Maintenance Building & Building Repair Building Maintenance (Roof, Systems,…) Lean-to and building renovation 65,000.00$ 50,000$ Sub Total 65,000.00$ 50,000$ -$ -$ Rolling Stock 2012 KENWORTH TRUCK T800 #31 275,000$ Overage needed 2012 KENWORTH TRUCK T800 #31 - (FY2307)255,000.00$ 20,000$ New Hook Truck 175,000$ Overage needed for new Deere 644P (FY2409)250,000.00$ 86,500$ Sub Total 505,000.00$ 281,500$ -$ 275,000$ Total Roll-Off and Maintenance 570,000.00$ 331,500$ -$ 275,000$ Drop Off Centers Site Work BUR Fast Trash 90,000$ MIL Design and Expansion 185,000.00$ 520,000$ MIL Special Waste Building 45,000.00$ BUR Sitework & Planning Sub Total 230,000.00$ 610,000$ -$ -$ Building & Building Repair Sub Total -$ -$ -$ Capital Equipment Sub Total -$ -$ -$ Total Drop Off Centers 230,000.00$ 610,000$ -$ -$ HAZARDOUS WASTE AND LATEX PAINT Sitework Paving 80,000.00$ 10,000$ Sub Total 80,000.00$ 10,000$ Building & Building Repair Waste Oil Heater 45,000.00$ Storage Building #1 40,000.00$ Storage Building #2 40,000.00$ Sub Total 125,000.00$ -$ -$ -$ Rolling Stock Rover Truck 115,000.00$ Forklift 25,000$ Sub Total 115,000.00$ 25,000$ -$ Total HAZARDOUS WASTE AND LATEX PAINT 320,000.00$ 10,000$ 25,000$ -$ Property Management Total Property Management $0 $0 $0 Administration Site Work Building Site Design & Permitting 55,000.00$ Sub Total 55,000.00$ -$ -$ -$ Intangible Revenue Sufficiency Analysis 55,000.00$ Website Upgrades 99,000.00$ Sub Total 154,000.00$ -$ -$ -$ Total Administration 209,000.00$ -$ -$ -$ Miscelaneous 50,000$ 50,000$ 50,000$ Total Cap Cost 2,794,800$ 2,016,500$ 585,000$ 350,000$ Program Input General Fund Support 2,001,500$ 535,000$ 350,000$ Closed Landill Reserve 15,000$ 50,000$ -$ MEMORANDUM TO: Sarah Reeves FROM: Jon Dorwart DATE: January 25, 2024 RE: FY 2025 Projected SWMF Revenue As you know, CSWD’s Solid Waste Management Fee (SWMF or Fee) is imposed on all solid waste generated in the District as established in Article VIII of CSWD’s Solid Waste Management Ordinance. Certain materials are exempt from the SWMF or are subject to a reduced Fee. Generally, the Fee is assessed at disposal sites, such as transfer stations and the landfill in Coventry. Haulers, including CSWD, which hauls waste from the District’s Drop-Off Centers, recover the cost from their customers (the waste generators) through the rates they charge. The SWMF was originally set at $17.61 in 1993. It was raised to $22.06 in 2009 and to $27.00 in 2013. The SWMF is anticipated to be increased to $30 for FY25. Estimated SWMF revenue for FY 2025 is $3,780,540. The estimate is based on projections of waste generation and diversion from the Solid Waste Disposal and Diversion Trends Model prepared for CSWD by Skumatz Economic Research Associates. Variables impacting projections in the Model were updated including the expected economic growth rate for the coming year. SWMF revenues rose 3.2% from FY 2022 to FY 2023, with both years enjoying a much higher than average amount of alternative daily cover due to ongoing demolition and construction at Burlington High School and other projects. The CY 2023 receipts are 7.0% higher than CY 2022 for the same reason. Calendar year disposed tons for 2023 were 159,946, a 16.0% jump from CY 2022. Total tons disposed is always greater than the total SWMF tons since ADC material is discounted by 75%, and by Board motion, asphalt shingles collected by Myers and disposed at the landfill for beneficial use is also exempt temporarily due to a lack of markets. Green Up Day material collected in the spring is also not subject SWMF, but this amount of material is a small increment of the Attachment K 2 year total. There is no guarantee either of the ADC trends will continue to climb or not substantially decrease in the next projected fiscal year, which could impact the SWMF collected. As the high school demolition winds down, we expect our ADC rates to be lower and more in line with historical averages. As usual projections under unusual conditions continue to be extremely difficult to prepare (i.e. waning pandemic related issues, international conflict, reduced labor force, supply chain disruptions, and shifting consumer preferences). It will not be surprising that waste generation will return to pre-pandemic levels in FY25, as economic activity has improved, the impact of federal investment continues, and we appear to be headed for a ‘soft landing’ avoiding a recession. However, inflation or excessive changes to monetary policy driving the risk of recession, commercial real estate instability, potential domestic turmoil during the upcoming presidential election and international political volatility continue to be countervailing forces. On the upside, the State of Vermont’s Joint Fiscal Office’s forecast (https://ljfo.vermont.gov/subjects/revenue-and-tax/state- forecasts/consensus-revenue-forecasts-legislative-economic-outlook) points toward the positive impact of unspent appropriated federal funds and strong consumer spending despite broadly partisan sentiment (exceeding expectations in first half of ’23 by 1.9%). Likewise, numerous large-scale real estate projects remain underway in the County and indicates continued strengthening in the current construction cycle despite higher interest rates. Continuation of building is favored by historically low vacancy rates, though data is somewhat limited to confirm that this trend will necessarily continue. Whether we will enjoy as high or increasing diversion rates in the future also could be in question since recent increases may have been driven in part by the pandemic response, though the diversion rate did increase last 0 500 1000 1500 2000 2500 New Privately-Owned Housing Units Authorized in Permit-Issuing Places: Total Units USA (THOUSANDS)VT 2 year and appears stable. Ultimately, a wide variety of factors could impact the amount of disposed material in potentially unpredictable ways. Given the Vermont economic forecast and using the Skumatz model, the SWMF is projected to be 2.0% higher than the FY 2024 projection and 7.0% lower than the actuals for CY 2023 resulting in a baseline of 129,618 tons at $3,780,540 in revenue for FY 2025. Disposal data from recent calendar and fiscal years and SWMF projections are shown in the following table: C&D Road TONS DISPOSED MSW C&D Build* ADC* TOTAL SWMF TONS CY 2021 actual 88,485 34,806 1 11,352 134,644 126,129 CY 2022 actual 86,148 37,724 0 14,090 137,962 127,395 FY 2023 actual 87,321 39,702 0 17,205 144,228 131,324 CY 2023 actual 87,317 40,531 0 32,098 159,946 135,873 FY 2024 budget projection 86,595 36,500 800 1,000 124,895 123,545 FY 2025 budget projection 83,361 41,457 800 4,000 129,618 126,018 25% of SWMF FY 2024 200 1,000 SWMF Tons 126,018 SWMF Revenue $3,780,540 *These are regular C&D fines from the C&D recycling facility plus painted concrete from demolition projects in FY21 & beginning of FY22 used in landfill road building. The SWMF rate for these and ADC is 25% of the full rate. B Chittenden Solid Waste District Fiscal Year 25 Proposed Budget Reserve Funds 1 of 2 Excess income is allocated to specified reserve accounts based on their established priority and reserve type. Reserve Types include: Restricted Reserves: resources subject to constraints. Due to the nature of their restriction, expenses must be tracked to prove the funds are used as authorized. Committed Reserves: include encumbrances not otherwise reflected in Restricted Reserves. Limitations on spending imposed by the annual operating budget naturally lapse with the passage of time and thus do not remain binding indefinitely. Committed Reserves allows for the inclusion of encumbrances committed to, but not yet obtained. Assigned Reserves: may be established by the Board from time to time to meet the future needs of CSWD. These reserves are established and may be changed by resolution of the Board in accordance with the Open Meeting Law requirements. Undesignated Funds: not considered special revenue fund and include the unrestricted surplus funds not accounted for and reported in another fund In FY25, CSWD will manage the following Restricted Reserves: Biosolids Reserve – established by the contract with the members of wastewater treatment plants for the disposal of sludge. Reserves are often designated to reduce the impact of market conditions on the fees assessed from biosolids or to collect funds for the purchase of capital equipment. Budget projections for FY25 indicate an increase of $47,000. Landfill Post Closure Reserve – designated to assure funding exists to meet the requirements of the 30-year process of closing the landfill that began in 1996. Members of the operations team perform an annual audit to review the current closing cost and adjust for inflation and alterations, as necessary. Excess funds will remain in this fund until CSWD reaches custodial care through resolution with the state, expected no sooner than Fiscal Year 2025. A portion of the reserve earns interest through interest-bearing accounts. Both expected expenditures and expected interest earned are included in the annual budget. Budget projections for FY25 indicate a reduction of $39,125. Facilities Solid Waste Termination Reserve – mandated to safely remove solid waste from closed operating facilities as required by state law. Members of the operations team perform an annual review of the current termination cost adjusting for inflation and alterations, as necessary. Funds for this reserve reside in an interest-bearing account; revenue from the account is included in the Finance budget. Budget projections for FY25 indicate the reserve will remain unchanged. In FY25, CSWD will manage the following Temporarily Restricted Reserves: Materials Recycling Facility Reserve- developed in FY23 to maintain a minimum fund balance per the bond agreement. Funds will be deposited as available, until management is confident bond payments can be completed through the net ordinary income at the Materials Recycling Facility. Attachment L Chittenden Solid Waste District Fiscal Year 25 Proposed Budget Reserve Funds 2 of 2 In FY25 CSWD will manage the following Assigned Reserves: Solid Waste Management Reserve – designated to provide support to management services as described in the Charter through a management fee structure. Budget projections for FY25 indicate an increase of $381,701. Operating Reserve – designated to provide funds to operating programs and reduce the reliance on the solid waste management subsidy. It is assumed contributions are made in years when operation allocations balances are in excess; withdraws are made when operational allocations balances are insufficient. In the event operating reserves are depleted, funding will be withdrawn from the Solid Waste Management Reserve. Budget projections for FY25 indicate a decrease of $577,560. Capital Reserves – established to preserve funding for future capital projects, asset upgrades and replacement of depreciated or disposed assets. In FY25 the capital budget projects a decrease of $2,016,500. Community Clean Up Fund – designated to member communities for local permissible projects. Budget projections for FY25 indicate a decrease of $95,000. Actual Beginning Balance Budgeted Budgeted Beginning Balance Proposed Budget Reserve FY23 FY24 FY24 FY25 FY25 Biosolids 335,224 335,224 380,724 380,724 427,724 Landfill Post Closure 608,302 608,302 430,850 430,850 391,725 Facilities Closure 1,466,062 1,466,062 1,466,062 1,466,062 1,466,062 Solid Waste Management 1,910,820 1,000,000 1,284,546 1,000,000 1,381,701 Operating 2,047,208 1,750,000 1,794,566 1,750,000 1,172,440 Designated for Capital*9,653,950 10,834,655 10,834,655 11,068,767 11,068,767 Community Clean Up 67,677 95,000 - 95,000 - Undesignated 882,101 882,101 882,101 882,101 882,101 16,971,343 16,971,343 17,073,503 17,073,503 16,790,518 *designated for capital balance assumes Work In Progress remains in progress CHITTENDEN SOLID WASTE DISTRICT FY 24 SCHEDULE OF PROGRAM TIPPING FEES FY23 FY24 FY25 Change from FY24 to FY25 MATERIALS RECYCLING FACILITY Materials Sales fluctuate with market price. Budgeted Tipping Fees: In-District materials, per ton 80.00$ 85.00$ 90.00$ 5.00$ Out-of-District materials, per ton 80.00$ 85.00$ 90.00$ 5.00$ DROP-OFF CENTERS Items accepted vary by facility Household Trash Small - up to 13 gallons 2.00$ 3.00$ 3.00$ -$ Medium - 14 to 35 gallons 6.00$ 8.00$ 8.00$ -$ Large - 36 to 45 gallons 8.00$ 11.00$ 11.00$ -$ per cubic yard 42.00$ 48.00$ 48.00$ -$ at Drop-Off Center in Burlington, per pound n/a n/a n/a Recycling Blue-bin Recyclables, with paid trash items No charge No charge No charge Blue-bin Recyclables ONLY 2.00$ 2.00$ 2.00$ -$ Organics Food Scraps, with paid trash items No charge No charge No charge Food Scraps (per 5 gallons), without paid trash items 1.00$ 1.00$ 1.00$ -$ Tree limbs, trunks, clean stumps, & brush (Williston no longer accept '24): Up to 1 cubic yard (Milton, SB & Essex) (up to 3 cy in 24)No charge No charge No charge Up to 3 cubic yards (up to 2 cubic yards starting '24) No charge No charge No charge Each cubic yard in excess of 3 cy (changed to 2 cy in 2024)5.00$ 5.00$ 5.00$ -$ Pallets & clean lumber: Up to 1 cubic yard (Milton, SB &Essex) No charge No charge No charge Up to 3 cubic yards (Williston) (changed to 5 in '24)No charge No charge No charge Each cubic yard in excess of 1 cy 5.00$ 5.00$ 5.00$ -$ Per ton 50.00$ 50.00$ 50.00$ -$ Yard debris No Charge No Charge No Charge Special Materials Non-covered Electronics ~ per pound (by appt. only)0.18$ 0.18$ 0.18$ -$ Gypsum wallboard (clean, new scrap): Small loads (up to 2 cy), per cubic yard 22.50$ 22.50$ 28.00$ 5.50$ Large loads, per ton 90.00$ 90.00$ 100.00$ 10.00$ Tires ~ up to 16” (bike tires up to 20)3.00$ 3.00$ 4.00$ 1.00$ Tires ~ 16.5” to 19”3.00$ 3.00$ 4.00$ 1.00$ Tires ~ per ton 225.00$ 225.00$ 250.00$ 25.00$ Propane cylinders over 20 lbs.5.00$ 5.00$ 5.00$ -$ Mercury-containing products*No charge No charge No charge Propane cylinders 20 lbs. & under*No charge No charge No charge Construction & Demolition Materials up to 13-gallon bag/barrel 5.00$ 5.00$ 6.00$ 1.00$ up to 33-gallon bag/barrel 10.00$ 10.00$ 16.00$ 6.00$ up to 45-gallon bag/barrel 15.00$ 15.00$ 22.00$ 7.00$ up to 64-gallon bag/barrel n/a n/a 30.00$ new category per cubic yard 82.00$ 82.00$ 96.00$ 14.00$ 1 of 2 Attachment M CHITTENDEN SOLID WASTE DISTRICT FY 24 SCHEDULE OF PROGRAM TIPPING FEES FY23 FY24 FY25 Change from FY24 to FY25 DROP-OFF CENTERS, continued Items accepted vary by facility Other Items Appliances without refrigerants 5.00$ 5.00$ 5.00$ -$ Appliances with refrigerants 15.00$ 15.00$ 15.00$ eliminated range Batteries (household and lead acid)*No charge No charge No charge Electronics -non-covered No charge -$ 2.00$ 2.00$ Electronics - items covered by State program No charge No charge No charge Fluorescent lamps*No charge No charge No charge XS Furniture Item n/a n/a 3.00$ new category Small furniture item $4-11 $4-11 8.00$ eliminated range Medium Furniture item n/a n/a 11.00$ new category Large furniture item $16- 22 $16- 22 15.00$ eliminated range XL furniture item n/a n/a 24.00$ new category Twin box spring 20.00$ 20.00$ 20.00$ -$ Twin mattress 20.00$ 20.00$ 20.00$ -$ Full/double/queen mattress 25.00$ 25.00$ 25.00$ -$ Full/double/queen box spring 25.00$ 25.00$ 25.00$ -$ King mattress 30.00$ 30.00$ 30.00$ -$ King box spring 30.00$ 30.00$ 30.00$ -$ Crib mattress 6.00$ 6.00$ 8.00$ 2.00$ Hard cover books* -$ -$ -$ -$ Scrap metal No charge No charge No charge Textiles*No charge No charge No charge Tires 3.00$ 3.00$ 4.00$ 1.00$ Tires ~ Up to 19.5”3.00$ 3.00$ 4.00$ 1.00$ Tires ~ 20” to 24.5”15.00$ 15.00$ 15.00$ -$ Tires ~ large equipment tires 56.00$ 56.00$ 56.00$ -$ Tires ~ XL equipment tires n/a n/a 100.00$ new category Used oil*No charge No charge No charge Used oil filters*No charge No charge No charge Ashes (accepted as trash)$2-8; $42 (Cubic Yard) $2-8; $42 (Cubic Yard) $3-15; $48 (Cubic Yard) $6/cubic yard HAZARDOUS WASTE - ENVIRONMENTAL DEPOT & ROVER Environmental Depot Household hazardous waste No Charge No Charge No Charge Business hazardous waste ~ Conditionally Exempt Generators Call For Pricing Call For Pricing Call For Pricing Rover Household hazardous waste No Charge No Charge No Charge Organics Diversion Facility Food Waste Tip fee, per ton 65.00$ 70.00$ 70.00$ -$ Solid Waste Management Budgeted Fee: Management Fee, per ton 27.00$ 27.00$ 30.00$ 3.00$ 2 of 2 FY 25 PROPOSED CSWD ORGANIZATIONAL CHART FY 24 - 52.66 FY 25 - 56.80 FTE's 4.15 Increased FTE 1 Software Developer 1 Compliance Specialist 1 Construction Project Manager 0.79 DOC Operators 0.5 MRF Manager -0.15 O&C staff Board of Commissioners Executive Board (5) Executive Director (1) Finance Committee Finance (1) Finance Staff (3) Information Systems (1) Administration (1) Organics Recycling Facility (1) Compliance Staff (1.5) Public Policy & Communications (1) Operations (1) Marketing & Communications (1) Maintenance Staff (5) Admin Staff (1) Property Mgmnt Drop-Off Center Staff (16.38) Hazardous Waste (1) MRF (.5) Biosolids Associate Director Operations (1) Landfill (.5) Outreach (1) Compliance/ Safety (1) ORF Staff (5.6) Haz Waste Staff (4) IS Staff (2.05) Outreach Staff (3) Marketing & Comm Staff (1.26) Construction Project Manager (1) Attachment N April 9, 2024 To: S. Burlington City Council Jessie Baker, City Manager Dear Chairman Barritt, Jessie and Council Members, Common Roots is pleased to share with you about their plans, progress and long-term sustainability planning for their non-profit programming offered in So. Burlington. Common Roots currently offers extensive free of charge programming in teaching nutrition education at all levels of elementary education, pre -k through high school in S. Burlington. Common Roots is also a key supporter of three food shelves, So. Burlington, Chittenden Feeding Chittenden, and our local Abnaki Seed Savers Food Shelf. Common Roots farms 12+/- acres at Allen Rd E in S. Burlington located in the South Village neighborhood. They also farm 4acres at Hubbard Park and tend the Larkin Orchard on Rte 116 in S. Burlington. Common Roots is also leases and manages the Wheeler Homestead. While generously offering extensive public programming free of charge, Common Roots has come to understand that to continue to do so, they require needing to strengthen their enterprises that generate income to sustain their workforce and model. Their programs are ~50% supported by enterprises and the remainder by philanthropy. A challenge they and other farms face is paying their workforce what it costs to live here. Having a stronger economic engine is what’s required. Common Roots holds the purchase and sale agreement for the commercially zoned lot at the corner of Spear St and Allen Rd E in S. Burlington. They plan to expand their retail market from it’s current iteration as a seasonal farm stand to become a year-round farm market, nutrition education, culinary kitchen and child education space. It is with this opportunity that Common Roots comes before the City Council, to request financial support for this initiative. The cost of land to Common Roots is $450k. We are requesting the City allocate ARPA funding in the amount of $400k to Common Roots for land acquisition. We are also requesting City based fees for permitting this project be waived for the non-profit. Common Roots currently has commitments from four local building professional businesses to support the new buildings planning, permitting and construction at several levels at present. Common Roots is planning to manage education programming in combination with others who offer childcare and programming for the childcare initiative that will be located in the building. A feasibility study for the market has been conducted and is currently being updated for the project for 2024. The need for childcare is well demonstrated. It is with gratitude for all the opportunities we’ve been given, that we humbly ask the City for their support in our sustainability planning, so that Common Roots may continue to serve the community for many years to come with food equity at our food shelves, nutrition education and healthy organic local food supply. Respectfully, Robin Jeffers and Carol McQuillen On behalf of Common Roots Robin Jeffers PO Box 236 Shelburne, VT 05482 Rjeffers95@gmail.com 802.881.5184 Food Equity - Food Education - Organic, Restorative Agriculture Common Roots Growing a sustainable, equitable, local food system. Common Roots is committed to food equity in our community, food education in our schools and to growing organically and locally for healthy food security. Through its charitable giving, Common Roots (CR) teaches 100s of lessons to school children annually, trains 100+/- high school and college aged interns annually through their commitment to education. We teach all ages about nutrition though experiential learning, and eating, in the CR kitchen, our Common Roots farm market, on the CR Farm and in classrooms. Common Roots provides fresh, nutrient dense fruit, vegetables, meat, poultry, eggs, and value-added products, such as ice cream from neighboring farms to over 4,000 customers. CR supports 3 food shelves providing for 400+ people weekly w fresh produce in season, cold storage veg in winter and value added meals seasonally, like chicken soup in winter. CR hosts over 100 different fresh local organic food program events annually. CR raises veggies, bees, fruits and flowers. Nearby farms raise cattle, grow grains for flour and harvest maple for sweetening. Together, with neighboring farms, CR is able to offer a complete-diet of abundant, local food. Farming with organic practices, food production helps decarbonizes the atmosphere, and regenerates the soil. What could be better! Teaching younger generations the value of nutrient dense healthy food, and providing equitable food access, is Common Roots mission, and core to our community health and wellness. Our Challenge “VT loses 15 to 20% of its farms annually” - VT Agency of Natural Resources AOFB report (Jan 2023). And, “41 million people died last year from preventable chronic illness. The good news is that eating the RIGHT foods can prevent and even reverse most of the major illnesses of our times.” 2024 Food Revolution Summit This reality is propelling us forward to address the urgent need for sustainability planning for Common Roots programs and future, now. Market Development Currently we have a seasonal market in a building intended for storage only- it’s been great, but, we need conditioned space to be open year-round in a location with high traffic and high visibility to grow our Farm Market enterprise, add inventory with higher profit margins, expand our value added food products, and feature products from surrounding farms and artisans. Workforce Instability Current farmer wages fall well below median income levels making it challenging to choose farming as a career here. We need to address wages and housing to improve cost of living challenges to have a thriving farm community. Overarching failed food system The price of food often falls below the cost of production, which makes profitability extremely challenging. Value added prepared food is a new avenue for us to increase food product profitability. A high visibility market in a convenient location will facilitate growth in this area. Sustaining our programming & workforce, capacity to grow our economic engines. Our Solution Commercial Development Opportunity: 1.3 Acre Spear Street Commercial Property: $450K Commercially zoned corner lot in high visibility, high traffic location, to site an open year-round Farm Market, Culinary Kitchen and expanded education programming.  Opportunity to expand our retail Sales Engine with increased inventory of CR produce, value- added retail Meals to Go, Pantry items, and exponential growth in SKUs from areas farms and artisans = higher profit margin inventory, visibility and traffic, directly adjacent to our Farm. A perfect-fit: a parcel of land zoned for Retail Food, Childcare, Personal Instruction is an opportunity for Common Roots to build a year-round Farm Market, culinary kitchen and childcare to seed our programs sustainability into the future by growing our enterprises in support of our mission and vision. . * Imagery is conceptual only Common Roots currently derives 50% of its income stream from diversified Farm and Food enterprises. All program offerings are funded through philanthropy, local grants and the five enterprises. Our plans for sustainability are to grow our enterprises and build their profitability through transition from a seasonal farmstead to a well located, year-round Farm Market & Culinary Kitchen with diversified inventory showcasing food, beverages and other local artisan farm products from local producers. Commercial zoning will allow us greater bandwidth than we’ve previously had with our current limited farm zoning, allowing more inventory and improved profitability. Current Financial Snapshot Phase 1 : Putting it all together at the seed level: Land Acquisition Goal: By October 2024 we need to: Secure Lot #1 Spear St and Allen Rd East: $450k Directly adjacent to our Farm, a commercially zoned lot with high traffic and high visibility, this lot is perfect, to grow our Farm Market enterprise, programming and education opportunities, including afterschool programs and pre-K education. Secure Capacity Funding $200k We are additionally seeking capacity funding for the project. This funding includes project management, initial planning and engineering consulting, grant writing support, and key partnership development. Future Phases to follow: Phase 2: Initial Planning completion with Architect/ Engineer, Final Budgeting, Grants Search and Application, Permitting [Fall ’24 - Spring ’25] Phase 3: Capital Campaign [Spring 2025 - Fall ’25] Phase 4: Construction {2026] * Phases will have overlap. Join us in providing food equity, education & fresh, delicious organic food to our community. You can help us make Common Roots become a sustainable model for community based food equity, education and a resilient healthy local food resource for our community. Funding for land acquisition is the first step to bringing our long term sustainability into reality. Our programs are working in our community, providing hope, joy, learning and bellies full of delicious fresh nutrition for many. We want to grow and continue to serve our community well. Land security is the base we need to grow from to meet present and future challenges. We thank you sincerely for your support! “Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed people can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has.” Margaret Mead Together we can support local farming solutions to combat climate change, feed our community healthfully, and support our economy and local farmers. We believe your values and ours align. Please join us, in our commitment to a brighter future for us all. Common Roots Team Common Roots PO Box 9335 WWW.COMMONROOTS.ORG South Burlington, VT 05407 Food Education . Food Equity . Land Stewardship Vision To educate the value of eating nourishing foods to promote optimum health by providing learning opportunities in classrooms, kitchens, food shelves, and on organic farms with dynamic community partnerships Overall Mission Common Roots nonprofit mission includes: Food Education, Food Equity, and Land Stewardship. Our 5 current Programs connect farmers, educators, youth, interns, and community members to build a sustainable future through food and land education. 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, environmentally conscious farming practices provide food security, on nutrient dense soils, nurturing our common roots. Food Education Providing opportunities from preschool through college & beyond to learn basic nutrition principles, food cultures, and culinary skills Food Equity Inspiring outreach while ensuring nourishing foods will always be available, including access to farm fresh vegetables, herbs, fruits, and house-made products, with dignity & respect Land Stewardship Practicing local, organic agriculture from soil to consumption with a minimum footprint and increased climate resilience Core Values Integrity Inclusion Biodiversity Gatherings on the Land • Engage people of all ages on the land to deepen our understanding of the integral relationship between bounty and stewardship • Offer field trips, summer camps, workshops, Farm Hops, Maple Moon Gathering as sought by our community members • Nurture the sense of wonder, gratitude, and offer acts of reciprocity toward the land Internships • Provide meaningful learning opportunities for college students to gain practical experiences in food education, food access, farm production, nutrition and more • Mentor interns to achieve new skills through our diverse opportunities • Guide interns to understand the relationship between our programs and enterprises that help provide sustainability Celebrating 16 Years Common Roots — Food Education and Access Programs PO Box 9335 • South Burlington VT 05407 (802) 652–0188 • info@commonroots.org • www.commonroots.org Farmstand at the South Burlington Food Shelf + • Provide a Farmstand at the Food Shelf each time it is open May 1st through Thanksgiving • Deliver nourishing, fresh, organic foods from our farm and licensed kitchen year-round • Provide plant starts and guidance for folks who would like to grow some of their own food Farm to School • Instruct children grades K-5 about nourishing whole foods, both in-person and through videos (over 1,300 students monthly) • Provide taste tests and recipes to expand their experiences (>160,000 to date) • Empower and support children and families to try new recipes and visit local farms Farm to Go • Teach middle school student-chefs how to prepare balanced meals for their families • Prepare meals that require an expanding skill set • Provide education and support for students to be successful (> 15,000 meals) Nourish to FlourishNourish to Flourish Common Roots Farm Market 2.0 Business Plan April 9, 2024 (rev) Introduction: Common Roots is a South Burlington, VT based 501c3 corporatfon, founded in {date}, whose key tenets are food educatfon, food access and land stewardship. Currently they five existfng programs support, their mission, including a farm and farm market. The market needs to expand to both meet local demand, and to expand the financial engine of Common Roots. This plan shares the introductfon to Common Roots Farm Market 2.0, a year-round market to replace the current seasonal market at vastly improved locatfon, directly adjacent to the Farm on a main byway of our community to support expansion and sustainability of Common Roots organizatfon, through a revenue producing market. CR Farm Market 2.0 Mission Statement: Our local food first market brings unique value to our community, from growers to consumers, bringing to market over fifty vendors of diverse local products. Customers will be able to learn exactly where products come from, their ingredients (if applicable), how they’re made, and know they’re shopping is part of ecosystem come full circle, that not only nourishes themselves and their families, but also helps to support the farmers, growers and food and product producers in our area, who in turn, stewarding the working landscape in healthy ways, to benefit and better our environment, helping us to both mitfgate climate change in our area, and build climate resilience in our community to have locally available food, beverage and consumables. Every purchase will be supportfng the greater good of our community’s health, equity and environmental ecosystems. Market Description: Common Roots Farm Market 2.0 will be wholly owned by Common Roots Inc, a 501c3 charitable non-profit organizatfon. The market will be a full-service market selling food, beverage, and household items for everyday consumptfon and will also feature items suitable for gifting and special occasions. We will sell Common Roots farms organic produce, neighboring farms meats and poultry, cheeses, eggs, dairy products, flour, honey, fresh, dried, and frozen local produce, herbs, spices, and locally crafted soaps, cleaning supplies, candles, and selected local artfsanal products, including breads, baked goods and ready-to-eat meals, deserts and snacks. Local beer and wines and non-alcoholic beverages will be featured. A supply of common household needs will also be available, to enable one-stop shopping for consumers. We currently feature products from over fifty local producers, we envision that number will likely double or triple in our expanded market, expanding marketplace share for Common Roots and many other local farmers, producers and artfsans. The market will be open 7 days a week, staffed by 3-6pp/day, 7:45am-6:30pm initfally, with expanded weekend evening hours. As part of our marketfng, all local products sold will feature informatfonal signage sharing the story of ‘how it’s made/origins’ etc, to educate consumers about products, and the community origins. Our existfng dedicated customer base will now be able to shop year-round, and the new locatfon on Spear Street, will provide new access to our market to commuters of one of the most highly trafficked roads in our county. The profile of commuters on this street are typically those with substantfally higher household incomes in our county, travelling to and from Burlington, S. Burlington, Shelburne and Charlotte on an axis of higher income households & neighborhoods, away from public transportatfon. Our market is intended to serve as both a destfnatfon and a convenience market. Organization and Management: Common Roots is 501c3 charitable non-profit managed by a Board of Directors, Executfve Director, Executfve Chef, Full Time Farmer, __. Full Time Employees in the management, coordinatfon and marketfng circle, and 140 supportfng interns and volunteers gaining powerful skills and experience being part of our team. • Founder and Executive Director: Carol McQuillen • Board of Directors: Carol McQuillen-Founder & Co-Chair, Matt Canning Co-Chair, Juff Culkin, Eric Ayers, Liz Spitler, Ron Lissak, Amy Jones, Treasurer, Anthony Jones, Monica Merrihew, Lisa Gorke, Noah Gilbert-Fuller • Advisors: Ross Schoembs, Megan Camp, Rich Cassidy, Stephanie O’Brien • Headquarters: Wheeler Homestead, PO Box 9335, South Burlington, VT Common Roots unique business model, incorporatfng interns from neighboring schools who receive skills training in many areas, coupled with a host of professional volunteers has made Common Roots the success that they are, serving the community schools, farm educatfon, nutritfon and food preparatfon, retailing, and customer service, with a cadre of interested, enthusiastfc individuals, excited to share about and motfved by Common Roots mission, a powerful workforce is created sustaining the non-profits growth and success. Leadership from Educators Carol McQuillen and Joanne Denee, Chef Anthony and Farmer Colin, ground Common Roots work in community service to Common Roots motto, ‘Nourish to Flourish’. Experience: Common Roots has over 11 year’s experience operatfng a Farm Market, growing for, staffing, training, stocking, staging, packaging, storing, POS Systems implementatfon, customer service and marketfng experience. Additfonally, CR serves two ready-to-eat meals service twice weekly, with a full-tfme chef also featuring a la carte items. Expansion to CR Farmstand 2.0, will be a growth experience, one our entfty is yearning for, we have geared up for this step over the past five years, and are ready to launch. Staff are committed, management enthusiastfc, and customers are waitfng. Our market management team, and chef will provide leadership in the expansion to the 2.0 version of our market. Market Analysis; The closets mainstream supermarket in our locale is Hannaford’s, 1.7 miles to our north on US Rte 7, where there are additfonal markets of the same genre, Shaws and Price Chopper. Trader Joes & Healthy Living and a second Hannaford locatfon are 2.8 miles to the north on Dorset St. Costco is 7.5mi north of our locatfon. Shelburne Supermarket is 4.4 mi to the south. Mill Market & Deli, 2.1 mi to northeast on Dorset St, Bread & Butter Farm Market, 3 miles east on Cheesefactory Rd, close to Route 116. Dorset St and Rt 116 are separate North/South axis commuter routes, with travel to different southbound towns. The median income of these commuters grows less the more eastbound. The Spear St route has commuters of highest income based upon median incomes of communitfes in the travel zone. We believe most commuters seeking a convenient shopping place will remain close to their route. Those with a preference for Farm Market, will have Bread and Butter Farm Market and Common Roots farm markets to choose from ‘on the way to or from work’. We believe customers will support the market on their way, and consequently believe the two farm markets will complement each other, more so than compete. The larger markets mentfoned, are located in more congested areas, and less likely to be tfmely for a commuter to stop, unless their intentfon is for large shopping. Destfnatfon shoppers will come to us for what we uniquely offer, and those in nearby neighborhoods and commuters will find us more easily accessible than other markets. Common Roots currently is a nearly invisible destfnatfon market, and plan for the expansion to take advantage of increased visibility on a highly trafficked route to expand our customer base. Our current customer base will contfnue to support us, and we believe the convenience factor will increase our customer base exponentfally. Any person travelling on Spear St would need to travel away from their preferred commute to access any other store. There are no other markets on Spear St untfl 7.6 mi south to Spears Corner Store in Charlotte. While we don’t expect to replace all customers shopping patterns, typically a household in our community will weekly or biweekly shop at some combinatfon of supermarket/more specialized market/Costco, and fill-in with markets most convenient to their locatfon and travel route. Customers interested in local organic food, and supportfng local would naturally prefer our market. We are fortunate to be in a community that does value local, and who will prioritfze and choose fresh, local food. Our market will meet the needs of both a convenience store and the nutritfonal and emotfonal needs of those who preference is to eat organically, clean with earth friendly products, support local economy and local farmers, producers and artfsans. No other market exists in our area, offering same or similar array of products in one place. The new market will be like Roots Market in Middlesex, serving Washington County. They’re currently increasing their footprint to meet customer demand, with plans to expand in the coming months, their success story provides a model for the Common Roots Farm Market 2.0. The owner/manager of the market has consulted with us and has offered to coach us as we move forward. Currently there is no other market providing the same offering we will make in our locale. Roots Market in Middlesex is the closest match to our vision. We have visited and interviews Roots Market owner, who is supportfve, will coach us, and who does not see our locatfon as competftfon. They operate with a proven positfve bottom line. Bread & Butter Farm store, while smaller is a bit similar, smaller and has a less broad offering then we will. This coupled with being on separate travel route, offers us a competftfve advantage. Our locatfon, on a well-travelled, high traffic count route also provides us with the opportunity to expand our customer base exponentfally, as we’re not effectfvely ‘visible’ currently, from the main road. We expect in the distant future Bread and Butter will expand their market to a Route 116 locatfon, serving commuters on the north/south 116 traffic, to St George and Hinesburg, while our market will contfnue to serve S. Burlington, Shelburne, Charlotte, and points south on Spear. We will have a digital presence, both to support our marketfng efforts and also for online shopping to fully capture the interest of commuters. We are not currently planning delivery service. Our locatfon has drive-by convenience and is bike and pedestrian close by to many neighborhoods. Goals: 1)Our goal is to feature local products produced environmentally consciously. From food and beverage to soap and ‘ready to eat’ food to go, all products will create positfve impacts. All products will be of the highest quality and worthy of consumer support. 2) Provide equity and fair wages for our workforce, who serve our community as growers, chefs, food educators, farmers, servers, customer service providers and the backbone staff who serve them, human resources, marketers, and management. 3) Educate our community about healthy nourishment, climate positfve land stewardship, honor and respect for all things, including our earth and each other. 4) Educate the community about regeneratfve agriculture practfces, their benefits for health and climate mitfgatfon and how same as on farm, the same methods can be deployed at home. 5) Provide educatfon in growing, harvestfng, preserving, cooking and serving local foods, to make nourishment fun, enjoyable and delicious. 6) Have a solid bottom line that is achieves all of the above and has positfve cash flow. 7) Be effectfve communicators and have systems that are efficient and cost effectfve. 8) Host customer in an environment that echoes our values and provides knowledge through assimilatfon, in a manner that is pleasing. Location; A corner, 44 Allen Road East and Spear Street, South Burlington, Vt. We are located at the 2nd most used north/south travel route between Burlington, S. Burlington and points south to Shelburne, Charlotte and beyond. The most travelled route is US Rte 7, often not used by commuters due to the traffic, stoplights, and lack of scenery. The locatfon affords high visibility, parking, lake and mountain views, pleasant atmosphere, and is directly adjacent to our farm, providing a grounded-ness to our business, no other market has. Timing: The value of local food supply has never been more esteemed that it is today due to the recent pandemic, supply chain obstacles, proving communitfes’ best resources are the local producers that grow food they need. We plan to close on the land lot in fall of 2024, and begin constructfon at the same tfme, to complete in summer of 2025, to be fully operatfonal by 3rd quarter of 2025. Master Budget Projected Expenses Labor Average Cost/year Store manager $ 55,000.00 Assistant manager $ 50,000.00 BookKeeper $ 50,000.00 5 Support staff @ $35,000 $ 175,000.00 Employer Payroll Tax Obligation @ 7.65% $ 25,245.00 Insurance $ 12,000.00 Building maintenance $ 5,000.00 Website updates and maintenance $ 10,000.00 Utilities $ 10,000.00 Other expenses $ 5,000.00 Mortgage @ $7,968.68 $ 95,624.16 Inventory $ 792,441.00 TOTAL $ 1,285,310.16 Projected Income Monthly Sales First Year Projected sales Rental space- 2500 Sq Ft. $ 2,500.00 $ 30,000.00 Common Roots products $ 88,000.00 $ 1,056,000.00 Third Party Products $ 17,000.00 $ 204,000.00 Total Projected Monthly Sales $ 107,500.00 $ 1,290,000.00 Projected Net Income-year one $ 4,689.84 Service and Products [See also Descriptfon] Common Roots Market will offer local farm produced products standard to a grocer, meat, poultry, dairy, produce, cooking and baking essentfals, local artfsanal products, bread, candles, chocolates, coffees, teas, etc, local beer and wines will be featured, and local personal products and cleaning supplies will be stocked. A necessitfes sectfon will offer household commonly needed supplies in additfon to the above, that may not be farm produced here in VT, like salt, and band aids, for example. Additfonally, we will offer ready-to-eat meals and a la carte items, same/similar as our current Tuesday and Friday night offering several days of the week to satfsfy those looking for readymade on their way to and from work. We plan to have digital platiorm, POS system and will be open 7, 11 hour days. Gift items will also be offered and of course, ice cream! We plan to have a full-service market meetfng the needs of most without their having to visit a supermarket. Marketing & Sales Goals Sales Goal: Achieve 1.285M Year one, Achieve 1.5M Year two. Marketfng: Local newspaper, Social Media, PR, Aditorials, paid advertfsing campaign/VT Public, Signs, locatfon visibility, word of mouth, on-site events, mailing list, direct marketfng. Fundraising We are currently exploring ARPA funding with the City of South Burlington, to support the initfal expenses of land acquisitfon. We are also fundraising with applicatfons to local, state and federal entftfes, along with development of philanthropic donor and foundatfon relatfonships. Local and crowdfunding will be deployed once our campaign goals are secured by a majority of the income needed. We are meetfng regularly with VAAFM who assure us, IRA dollars, and Farm Bill dollars will be coming into the state, earmarked for market expansion, and we are on their radar. We’re developing relatfonships with possible partners: UVMMC Culinary Medicine, mission aligned with CR, looking for a public annex of their Osher Center Culinary Medicine Program. We’re in conversatfons with builders and developers seeking in-kind contributfons towards constructfons, and have received an initfal substantfal donatfon to date from four leading building biz in the local area, incl Architecture, Planning, Budgetfng, Excavatfng, Equipment access and Project Management. We are building an Advisory Board for both professional and fundraising support. We plan to host fund raising events on the land, in support of development expense. Our initfal goal is to raise: $450k for land acquisitfon, with additfonal funding for capacity building. A ‘bricks and mortar’ Capital Campaign is planned for 2025 to fund needed cost for constructfon, fit up, and initfal operatfons. Revised 06/16/2023 What types of alcohol can be sold where? • Ready-to-drink spirits beverages with not more than 12% alcohol in sizes not more than 24 oz and beer, wine, and hard cider with not more than 16% alcohol are sold at 1st Class and 2nd Class establishments. • Beverages containing more than those amounts are considered liquor (or spirits) and are sold at 802 Spirits stores or served at businesses with 3rd Class Licenses. • 2nd Class Licensees can sell Fortified Wines (16-23% alcohol) with a Fortified Wine Permit. What fees go where? • 1st Class and 2nd Class Licenses are charged both a municipal and a state fee. Licensees apply on the DLL Portal and pay the town directly when applying. Licensees pay DLL fees on the DLL Portal once approved by the Town. • 1st Class fee: Full year license: $115 DLL/$115 Town. • 2nd Class fee: Full year license: $70 DLL/$70 Town. • 3rd Class fee: Full year: $1095 DLL. Half year: $550 DLL. As of 7/1/21, the Town may add up to a $50 fee for 3rd Class License applications when they are not submitted with a 1st Class License application. • Fee for Manufacturers to have a 3rd Class License is $230 DLL. Once the town approves a license, what happens? • Towns will use the DLL Portal to notify DLL of approvals. The DLL Office of Licensing will review and process the application. It can take up to 8 weeks for the DLL to complete. • Applications that are incomplete will take longer. Please note that an incomplete application can be approved by the Town and sent to DLL for completion and processing. Town fees should be paid before approval is sent. • Approved 1st Class, 2nd Class, and/or 3rd Class Licenses, Tobacco Licenses and Outside Consumption Permits are emailed to the Town/City Clerk and to the licensee and are available to view on the DLL Portal. • Towns can view applications and their statuses on the DLL Portal. Emails will be sent to both the Town/City Clerk and the licensee throughout the process as well as when the DLL issues the approval. Once the town approves a permit, what happens? • Towns will use the DLL Portal to notify DLL of municipal approvals. Once the State receives the permit, it can take between 5 to 15 business days to approve, depending on the permit. Be sure to allow the DLL sufficient processing time. • Towns can view applications and their statuses on the DLL Portal. Emails will be sent to both the Town/City Clerk and the permittee throughout the automated process as well as when the DLL issues the approval. What is the license renewal process? • Renewal applications will appear in the Town/City Clerk’s DLL Portal account under In Progress Applications. Towns must reapprove 1st, 2nd, and 3rd Class Licenses, Tobacco Licenses and Outside Consumption Permits annually and submit the approved businesses’ renewals to the DLL for processing. Any changes in information, or incomplete information on the license, may cause a delay if not received and resolved in a timely manner. Delay in Town approval will also cause a delay in the State approval. • Re-approved 1st, 2nd, and 3rd Class, Tobacco Licenses and Outside Consumption Permits are emailed to the Town/City Clerk. DLL emails all other re-approved licenses directly to the licensee. Town/City Clerks and licensees can check the status of any application on the DLL Portal. Town/City Clerk Licensing Information What licenses or permits do NOT require Town approval? • Manufacturer Licenses • 4th Class Licenses • Farmers Market Permits • Tasting Permits • 1st Class Boat or Railroad Car Licenses • Catering Licenses • Wholesale Dealer License • Retail Delivery License • Fortified Wine Permit • Destination Master Resort License What do license names mean? 1st Class License Allows a business on-premise service of beer, hard cider, wine and RTD spirits beverages. 2nd Class License Allows a business off-premise sales of beer, hard cider, wine and RTD spirits beverages. 3rd Class License Allows a business on-premise service of spirits/liquor. Tobacco License Allows a business to sell tobacco products and tobacco paraphernalia. Tobacco Substitute Endorsement Needed for businesses with a Tobacco License to sell any e-cig product or paraphernalia. The business does not need to sell tobacco products but must have the license to receive the Endorsement. Manufacturer Allows a business to manufacture or rectify spirits onsite. Manufacturers can also apply for 1st and 3rd Class Licenses. They can apply for 4th Class Licenses which allow them to serve samples of and sell their product and up to 5 other manufacturers’ products by the bottle. They can apply for Farmer’s Market Permits allowing them to serve samples of and sell by the bottle at those markets. No more than a combination of 20 Farmer’s Market Permits and 4th Class Licenses may be granted to one manufacturer or rectifier per year. Manufacturers can hold an event that is open to the public and serve their own beverages in full pours if notification to DLL as occurred. Manufacturers wanting to operate regularly with full pours must hold 1st and/or 3rd Class Licenses. Manufacturers may only sell unopened bottles of alcohol at 4th Class establishments or Farmer’s Markets. Special Event Permit Allows manufacturers to hold an event lasting up to 4 days that is open to the public where they may promote their products with samples, offer/serve full pours, and may sell by the bottle. Each manufacturer at an event must hold their own permit. No more than 108 permits can be issued per year to each Manufacturer. Caterer’s License Allows a business holding a 1st Class License or a 1st/3rd Class License to apply for Catering Permits. Commercial Caterer’s License Allows a business holding a 1st Class License or a 1st/3rd Class License that is not licensed as a restaurant or club to apply for Catering Permits. Catering Permits Allows a business holding a Caterer’s License or Commercial Caterer’s License to serve alcohol at a specific event at a specified location. Special Venue Permit Allows a Museum, Art Gallery, Library or Bookstore to serve beer, hard cider, wine or RTD spirts beverages by the glass to the public at an event. No limit on the number of permits. Limited Event Permit Allows an applicant to hold an event serving alcohol lasting up to 4 days. No more than 4 permits issued to the same applicant per year. Sampling Event Permit Allows an applicant to hold an event serving samples of alcohol lasting up to 4 days. No more than 4 permits issued to the same applicant per year. For additional information, please contact us at (802) 828-2339 or by email at DLL.DLCLicencingteam@vermont.gov. 180 Market St South Burlington, VT 05403 802-846-4105 April 15, 2024 The following 2024 Second Class, Tobacco, and Tobacco Substitute Endorsement Licenses were approved by the South Burlington Liquor Control Board after review by the City tax, fire and police departments: NAME DESCRIPTION CVS Pharmacy #10690 Second Class License Shaw’s Beer & Wine Second Class License, Tobacco License and Tobacco Substitute Endorsement SOUTH BURLINGTON LIQUOR CONTROL BOARD _______ ______ Mike Scanlan Laurie Smith ______ _______ Tim Barritt Elizabeth Fitzgerald _______ Andrew Chalnick