Vermont Agency of Commerce and Community Development
The Vermont Agency of Commerce and Community Development (ACCD) is the principal state agency responsible for economic development, community planning, housing, historic preservation, and broadband policy across Vermont. Structured under the executive branch, ACCD coordinates state investment strategies, administers federal grant programs, and sets regulatory and programmatic frameworks affecting municipalities, businesses, and nonprofit entities statewide. Its decisions touch land use patterns, workforce development pipelines, and the financial health of Vermont's 14 counties.
Definition and scope
ACCD operates under 3 V.S.A. Chapter 7, which defines the organizational authority of Vermont's principal state agencies. The agency encompasses several distinct departments and divisions, including the Department of Economic Development, the Department of Housing and Community Development, the Vermont Arts Council (through partnership), and the Vermont Downtown Program. The Department of Tourism and Marketing also falls within ACCD's umbrella, administering promotional activities directed at Vermont's visitor economy.
Scope of coverage is explicitly state-level. ACCD's regulatory authority applies to Vermont-chartered businesses, Vermont municipalities, and federally designated programs administered through Vermont. Federal economic development programs — such as those channeled through the U.S. Economic Development Administration or the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development's Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) program — fall outside ACCD's originating authority but pass through ACCD for state-level administration and compliance oversight. Activities governed exclusively by federal statute, or disputes arising under federal contract law, are not covered by ACCD jurisdiction.
ACCD does not regulate land use permitting directly under Act 250, which sits with the Vermont Natural Resources Board and the Environmental Division of Superior Court. Tax incentive programs administered by ACCD may intersect with the Vermont Department of Taxes, but tax administration itself remains outside ACCD's scope.
How it works
ACCD functions through a cabinet-level secretary appointed by the governor and confirmed by the Vermont Senate. Below the secretary, each department operates with its own commissioner. The agency's operational structure assigns distinct mandates:
- Department of Economic Development — administers Vermont Employment Growth Incentive (VEGI) awards, coordinates with regional development corporations, and manages Vermont's Certified Business locations program.
- Department of Housing and Community Development — distributes CDBG funds, oversees the Vermont Community Development Program, and coordinates housing policy with the Vermont Housing Finance Agency.
- Downtown Program — designates downtown development districts, village centers, and new town centers under 24 V.S.A. § 2791, which triggers eligibility for state tax credits.
- Broadband and Connectivity — coordinates with the federal Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act broadband deployment funding administered through the Vermont Community Broadband Board.
- Historic Preservation — administers the State Historic Preservation Office (SHPO), which reviews federal undertakings under Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act (54 U.S.C. § 306108) and administers Vermont Historic Preservation Tax Credits.
Funding mechanisms include direct state appropriations through the Vermont state budget process, federal formula grants, competitive federal awards, and revolving loan programs. ACCD publishes annual reports to the legislature and the governor detailing program expenditures and outcomes.
Common scenarios
ACCD involvement is triggered across a range of operational contexts:
- Municipal grant applications: A Vermont town seeking CDBG infrastructure funding submits through ACCD's Department of Housing and Community Development. Eligible projects include water and sewer upgrades, accessible facility improvements, and downtown revitalization. The federal CDBG program requires that at least 70% of aggregate expenditures benefit low- and moderate-income persons (42 U.S.C. § 5301).
- Business incentive certification: A manufacturer seeking Vermont Employment Growth Incentive approval submits a prospective jobs-and-payroll growth projection reviewed by the Vermont Tax Department against ACCD-established thresholds.
- Downtown designation: A municipality seeking state Downtown Designation submits evidence of a defined downtown center, a local development organization, and a boundary map. Successful designation unlocks rehabilitation tax credits for qualifying historic structures.
- Broadband permitting coordination: An internet service provider awarded federal broadband deployment funding coordinates with ACCD for state-level oversight, including SHPO review for any federally assisted construction affecting historic properties.
- Historic tax credit projects: A developer rehabilitating a certified historic structure applies through SHPO for a Vermont Historic Preservation Tax Credit worth up to 10% of qualified rehabilitation expenditures under state law, stackable with the 20% federal Historic Tax Credit administered by the National Park Service.
Decision boundaries
ACCD's authority is bounded by several structural limits.
ACCD vs. Vermont Agency of Natural Resources: Environmental permitting, Act 250 district commissions, and wetland and stormwater regulation fall exclusively with the Vermont Agency of Natural Resources. ACCD may hold a policy coordination role but holds no permitting authority over land use or environmental compliance.
ACCD vs. Vermont Agency of Transportation: Transportation infrastructure investment decisions, including highway and transit project approvals, rest with the Vermont Agency of Transportation. ACCD's role in transportation is limited to economic impact analysis and broadband corridor coordination.
State authority vs. local authority: Vermont's selectboard system and regional planning commissions retain independent land use and zoning authority under 24 V.S.A. Chapter 117. ACCD provides technical assistance and funding but cannot override locally adopted zoning ordinances.
Federal passthrough vs. state programs: Federal programs administered by ACCD — CDBG, Historic Tax Credits via IRS/NPS, EDA grants — are governed by federal eligibility rules. State eligibility criteria may add requirements but cannot relax federal statutory thresholds.
For a broader orientation to Vermont's executive branch structure, the Vermont Government Authority index provides a comprehensive reference to all principal state agencies and their functional relationships.
References
- Vermont Agency of Commerce and Community Development — Official Site
- 3 V.S.A. Chapter 7 — Organization of Executive Branch
- 24 V.S.A. § 2791 — Downtown Development Districts
- 24 V.S.A. Chapter 117 — Municipal and Regional Planning and Development
- 42 U.S.C. § 5301 — Community Development Block Grant Authorization
- 54 U.S.C. § 306108 — National Historic Preservation Act, Section 106
- U.S. Economic Development Administration
- National Park Service — Historic Tax Credits
- Vermont Legislature — Vermont Statutes Annotated