I would double-check the solar option. Here's some things to think about though:
Photovoltaic: No way. It's 11-14% efficient converting sunlight into electricity, rebates are often tied to efficiency so your rebates per panel is dismal, if one cell gets blocked by shade that cell becomes a resistor all cells must overcome causing the panels efficiency to drop 50% (most have bypasses but you lose sections of the panel), and when the sun is at its best they are at their worst (the hotter the panel the lower their efficiency). Plus very, very expensive compared to Hydronic solar.
Hydronic Solar: This is where you send a fluid (preferably a safe drinkable glycol) through panels and warm up the fluid. Sunlight converts to heat very well, they are 60-85% efficient converting sunlight into heat, since rebates are typically tied to efficiency you get massive rebates per panel (one time I checked Massachusetts rebates and the cost of a panel was $812 and rebates per panel was $888 you would be paid $76 a panel). There are 2 types, flat panels and evacuated tubes if you're thinking about evacuated tubes talk to me first almost all the benefits often listed for evacuated tubes is a sham (the biggest sham they do is compare equal apertures, comparing 32 sq ft evac to 32 sq ft FP's. An evac that collects 32 sq ft of sunlight takes up 48-64 sq ft of space because of all the space between each tube, glass, header, while an FP takes up only 32 sq ft to collect 32 sq ft of sunlight! If you compared an evac system that takes up 64 sq ft of roof (and collects 32 sq ft of sunlight) to an FP that takes up 64 sq ft of roof (and it will collects 64 sq ft of sunlight) no comparison
If you want me to continue what isn't to like about evacs, let me know.
I have Hydronic FP's I installed about 10 years ago. I purchased it from Radiantsolar.com which is a Vermont company. You can see their pricing here
http://www.radiantsolar.com/solar_packages_and_pricing.php it can work with forced hot water because usually they put way too many baseboards in ones house, or the house has had an insulation overhaul since being built and now the baseboard
I live in VT too, I only did solar hot water. That was a mistake, I'm getting too old and tired to deal with wood I really wished I'd done more solar panels and used it for heating it's frustrating for me to come home on a 45F sunny day at noon and I'm lighting a fire when I know had I done solar heating I'd be nice and warm and it'd be free.
Some things to consider about solar.
1.) Rebates are once per house. If you decide to do hot water like I did, then want to do heating later you'll get no rebates for doing the heating. Plan and do hot water and heating at the same time to maximize rebates.
2.) You need radiant or forced hot water baseboard heating. Radiant is best, forced hot water baseboards can work as most often they usually put in way too many of them and/or the house has had a full insulation upgrade later so it can work too.
3.) Solar is a low energy form of heating, typically 4 panels will collect the same energy per day as a single gallon of fuel oil. Have 8 panels, it should collect the energy of 2 gallons fuel oil. You say you burn 8 chords/year, that's a lot I typically burn around 1 chord. I don't know if you're using an old stove in your basement to heat 3-4 floors that's what my old house was like. I used to go through 5-6 chords with an old pre-EPA stove (circa 1974) in the basement to keep the main floor above around 70F.
4.) There's something strange about November - January in New England. There's always about 4-8 weeks of cloudy days during those months, I'm not sure I remember a single year there wasn't. Seems to start the 2nd week of November and go until January. As a result, look at solar as being your free hot water and spring/fall heating and be happy with the occasional sunny day in mid-Winter. I ended up angling my solar panels to maximize Spring & Fall and couldn't be happier.
5.) I got a 3 panel system with a 120 gallon tank (the kit from that page). You want 2 tanks... one for the solar to act as a preheater and a another for your direct use. I knew the 1 tank design I started with wasn't going to be as efficient, I was surprised how much so. If you're interested I can explain why 1 tank will almost certainly cost you more than 2 in short order, no one should be doing the 1 tank.
6.) I have electric backup on my hot water tank, and I have a meter that measures how much energy my hot water tank uses. So I know exactly how much additional boost I needed from my electric backup because my solar didn't fulfill the entire need. From March2015 - February2016 I needed 331kw of electricity to boost the hot water tank for 3 of us, so my hot water is looking like it's $75-85 for the year. This year January seems to been the cloudy month I used 62kW of electricity for hot water heating which accounts for 20% of the energy for the year. My lowest month I needed 3kw for a boost.
Good luck!