Made Energy Efficiency Improvements in 2014? Don’t Forget Your Tax Credit!

pellet stove

If you made energy efficiency improvements to your home in 2014, you may be eligible for a substantial tax credit. Here are the six areas for which tax credits have been made available:

  • Biomass stoves (this would mainly be wood or wood pellets, though there are some other, less common kinds)
  • Upgrading to a more efficient heating or cooling device (a more efficient boiler, a heat pump, etc.)
  • Insulation
  • Improving efficiency of your roof
  • Non-solar water heater
  • Sealing/improving windows and doors

Full information is available on the Energy Star site, here.

insulating

Sustainable Williston meets this Thursday, Mar 12th

Sustainable Williston’s main or steering group will meet this Thursday, March 12th, at 7:15pm, at very pleasant meeting space provided by Michelle Robbins at 528 Essex Road, above the Habitat for Humanity Restore.

We’ll hear reports from each of our newly-organized task forces and discuss plans and mission for Sustainable Williston going forward. Everyone in the area with an interest in sustainability is welcome; we’d love to meet you. You can join one or more task forces and/or attend the main meetings, whatever works well for your interests and schedule.

Our current task forces are

  • Light Pollution
  • Transportation
  • Town Connections
  • Trees
  • Carbon Footprint
  • Waste Reduction
  • Water Quality
  • Local Food
  • School Connections

Carpooling is available; to join or offer a ride, contact us through our contact page with name, address, and phone.

Join the CSWD Waste Warriors

This post courtesy of Chittenden Solid Waste District

Are you a rampant recycler?
Do you carry your banana peel home when you can’t find a compost bin?

Are you on a mission to reduce waste and spread good fun in the process?

If so, we want you!  We’re looking for friendly, enthusiastic, volunteer Waste Warriors to help bring our waste reduction mission to life at Chittenden County events.

waste warriors

Your Waste Warrior opportunity starts with a free one-hour training, where you’ll become a certified CSWD Waste Warrior. Come meet like-minded neighbors, have a snack, and learn how to help make composting and recycling efforts at local events successful. You’ll learn:

  • How to determine what goes into recycling and composting containers (It’s not always as easy as you think – there are a lot of different kinds of materials and products out there!)
  • How to communicate with attendees in ways that help them learn
  • How to help an event up their game in making sure as much as possible stays out of the landfill
  • And more!

Sign up today! The Waste Warrior training dates are:

  • Monday, February 2nd
    5:30-6:30PM
    Contois Auditorium (City Hall), Burlington
  • Thursday, March 12th
    5:30-6:30PM
    Contois Auditorium (City Hall), Burlington

Waste Warrior Training Signup

Use the form here to sign up for a Waste Warrior training session.

Sustainable Williston meets Thursday, Feb 5th at 7:15pm

Please note: our meeting day, time, and location have changed for this month!

Sustainable Williston will hold its monthly meeting on Thursday, February 5th, from 7:15-8:45pm at 528 Essex Road (Route 2A) in Williston, upstairs from the Habitat for Humanity ReStore. Everyone interested in environmental or sustainability issues is welcome to attend.

CVU Money, Energy and Power Class Petition to Reprogram Hinesburg Traffic Light

Here’s a message from Nicole Bouffard:

CVU Road and 116

Our project, the Bright Light’s Project, for Money, Energy and Power class, is aimed at benefiting the Hinesburg community.

We have identified the traffic light at the intersection of CVU Rd/ Shelburne Falls Road and Route 116 as a system that can be improved and made more efficient. We have found that many CVU students and citizens of Hinesburg to be idling in large amounts of unnecessary traffic.

The light for Route 116 does not allow for the people turning left onto CVU Rd to safely do so. This is because drivers coming north from the town of Hinesburg create a constant flow of traffic that builds up, so when Route 116 going South light turns green, drivers turning left onto CVU Rd are blocked. This creates a large problem mainly in the morning when students of CVU are trying to get to school.

However the students are not the only ones affected. Citizens of Hinesburg who are trying to go straight through the light are blocked by the cars waiting to turn left.

Our goal is to help reduce environmental pollution from idling, maintain a steady traffic flow through CVU Rd and Hinesburg, and help the public save gas money.

To do this we will encourage the state to reprogram the light so that Route 116 going South gets a green light before Route 116 North does. This will allow for several people to get through the light, including people turning left, before the South bound traffic receives a green light.

We would like you to take ten seconds out of your day to sign our petition to change the light on Route 116. Changing the light will limit the amount of unnecessary traffic and idling.

Sign our online petition at: http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/bright-lights-project-go-green

Thank you for your time,
Keller Longchamp, Nicole Bouffard,
Amelia Dodds, Jack Carnahan

Attend the VTrans On-Road Bicycle Plan Meeting Wed, Jan 7

From the Vermont Department of Transportation
NOTE: The date of this meeting was moved from Dec 9, when it was postponed due to weather.

bike bridge

Event: Jan 7, 2014

WHAT: VTrans On-Road Bicycle Plan public meeting.
WHY: To provide an overview of the project, introduce the On-Road Bicycle Plan WikiMap and receive comments from meeting participants.
WHEN: Jan 7, 2014 from 2:00-4:00 pm
WHERE: Throughout the state using Vermont Interactive Technology (VIT) sites (excluding Rutland, White River Junction and Lyndonville) along with web streaming group events at the Regional Planning Commissions in St. Johnsbury and Rutland.

In Williston, the VIT site is at Blair Park, 451 Lawrence Place: Click here for detailed location information and directions.

Location Information:
http://vtransplanning.vermont.gov/sites/aot_policy/files/Public%20Meeting%201.pdf

We encourage you to attend the meeting at a VIT site so that you can provide comment and have access to technical support however, the meeting is available for viewing from anywhere at:
http://www.vitlink.org/streamingmedia/vtcvitopen.php

CAN’T ATTEND?
Weigh in about where you ride and where you want to ride using the On-Road Bicycle Plan WikiMap at: http://wikimapping.com/wikimap/VT-State-Highway-On-Road-Bicycle-Facilities-Plan.html

Learn more about the project : http://vtransplanning.vermont.gov/bikeplan

Public input is critical to the success of this project. We thank you for helping to make the project a success by sharing your thoughts and creating project awareness by connecting others.

If you have questions or comments related to this project, please contact VTrans Planning Coordinators:

Sommer Bucossi at (802) 828-3884 and Amy Bell at (802) 828-2678 or email us at vermontbike@gmail.com

Photo by Len Radin

Commuter Options for Willistonians

a reposted message from Emma Long at the Chittenden County Regional Planning Commission

vanpooling

Hello, Williston!

The ice-scraping, defrosting, start-your-car-early season is fast-approaching. Are you ready to try something new?

Check out Go! Chittenden County, a one-stop resource for information about transportation options. By calling or emailing Go! CC, you can get all the customized information you need to explore some new options in and around Williston. Take the bus (it’s already warm inside!), carpool, vanpool, share a car, or gear up to bike or walk.

Go! Chittenden County is committed to helping you get to work in an easy, cost-effective and fun way.

Call the Go! CC hotline at 1-800-685-7433 to ask questions and chat with an expert to get some personalized ideas, or send an email to info@gochittendencounty.org. AND, mention this Williston Front Porch Forum post to be entered to win a CCTA bus pass for one month (valued up to $150) OR a $100 gift certificate to Earl’s Cyclery & Fitness — winner’s choice! We’ll draw a name on Friday, December 5th.

Don’t wait until you’re chipping away at your windshield after an ice storm — call or email today to see how Go! CC can help connect you to the right options to meet your needs. Even a very small change can positively impact your wallet, peace of mind, health, and carbon footprint.

Visit http://gochittendencounty.org/individual/commuter-blues/ for more details.

The Chittenden County RPC is a proud partner of Go! Chittenden County.

Photo by familymwr

Tips and Recommendations from the First Smaller Footprint Meeting

Here are some notes of interest from the November 20th meeting of Smaller Footprint, a group whose purpose is to share information, ideas, and planning for shrinking individual and household carbon footprints.

Here are a fewbooks that were mentioned last night:

Mike Berners-Lee, How Bad Are Bananas – an expert carbon footprint calculator gives footprints of everything from paper towels to steak to car accidents to space shuttle launches.

Barbara Kingsolver, Flight Behavior – The famed novelist’s story of a woman who finds a miracle that turns out to be the leading edge of climate change disaster. Much about the immediate experience of climate change creeping on us, leaving out discussion of what we can do about it.

Doug McKenzie-Mohr, Fostering Sustainable Behavior: An Introduction to Community-Based Social Marketing. The two types of social norms I mentioned that tend to cue people’s behavior, the names of which I can never remember off the top of my head, are injunctive norms (what people understand they’re supposed to do) and descriptive norms (what people perceive to be what others mostly do).


ice packDennis’s “Blue Ice Box” concept is a clever approach to reducing electricity use in refrigerators over the winter: purchase two sets of ice packs (he was thinking the blue ones, say, 12 ice packs total). Put half of them outside in freezing weather, then bring them in to the refrigerator as soon as they’re frozen solid. They’ll help cool your food as their temperature equalizes. When they’re entirely unfrozen, swap in the second set (which you’ll have had outside freezing in the mean time) and put the first set back out to freeze again.

Gotchas: leaving either the outside door or the refrigerator door open too long will cancel out some of the benefit of using this approach. Ideally, bring the ice backs in and out when you’re already going in and out of the house for other reasons.

Refrigerators use a thermostat, so adding the additional chill of ice packs will keep the fridge colder longer without requiring the compressor to start: voila, free cold and electricity savings! (Because cold is a renewal resource in Vermont.)