Transportation-Energy-Land Use Connections

VNRC works with a growing and diverse network of citizens, policy makers, businesses and others to expand alternatives to the single occupancy vehicle and more efficiently get people where they need to go. These initiatives include not only changing transportation systems themselves, but also planning for future land use development that will allow us to minimize inefficient and expensive transportation in the future.
In “Programs”
- Energy and Climate Action
- Education and Advocacy
- Climate Dispatch
- JOIN US: #ActOnClimateVT
- 2014 Legislative Lowdown on Clean Energy and Climate Action
- 2013 Legislative Letdown on Energy and Climate
- The Vermont Yankee Vote
- Local Energy Leadership Meets Legislative Leadership
- Energy Bills of the 2012 Vermont Legislative Session
- A Timeline of Entergy Nuclear Vermont Yankee’s Falterings and Falsehoods
- Energy Committees and VECAN
- Efficiency and Conservation
- Energy Planning
- Global Climate Change
- Renewables
- Transportation-Energy-Land Use Connections
- Education and Advocacy
- Forests and Wildlife
- VT Parcelization Website
- Conservation Planning
- Subdivision Analysis
- Estate Planning for Landowners
- Community Strategies for Vermont’s Forests and Wildlife: A Guide for Local Action
- Forest and Habitat Fragmentation
- Technical Assistance to Communities
- Vermont Forest Roundtable
- Working Lands and Forest Management
- Sustainable Communities
- Act 250 and Permitting
- Art Gibb Award
- Community Planning Toolbox
- Designations/Growth Centers
- Land Use Planning/Smart Growth
- Research
- Small Grants for Smart Growth
- Tax Policy
- Transportation for Vermonters (T4VT)
- Working Lands
- Water
- Living With Vermont’s Rivers – A River Science Conference
- Water Caucus
- Dam Operation and Licensing
- Enforcement
- Groundwater
- Groundwater Map Examples
- Groundwater Mapping: Importance and Overview
- Groundwater Problems in Vermont
- Groundwater Protection in Your Town: A Guide
- Protecting Groundwater: The Case for Filling a Gap in Vermont Water Law
- S.304 – Groundwater Withdrawal Permit Program
- The Benefits of Declaring Groundwater a Public Trust
- The Case for Declaring Groundwater a Public Resource
- The Science of Groundwater
- Vermont’s Groundwater Factsheet
- Violating the Public’s Trust, and the Public Trust
- Rivers
- Stormwater Pollution
- Vermont’s Water Quality Standards
- Wetlands