Posted today on the Calais Front Porch Forum by Sharon…
My farming grandfather didn’t go to Town Meeting. His was a north-facing sugarbush, so he sugared late and Town Meeting Day was when he set out the taps. He didn’t go to Town Meeting because he “had” to work that day. Could he have set out the taps on Monday or Wednesday? Of course — but he was set in his ways and didn’t care enough about Town Meeting to shuffle his schedule. Vermont’s small town residents have always had — and still do have — choices about whether to attend Town Meeting, and they made (and make) their choices based on their personal sense of priorities for the day.
I, in contrast to my grandfather, have an employer who expects me to show up for work every day. And with a new job, I don’t have vacation time earned. But I worked it out because it matters to me to do so, and even without a vacation day to use I’ll be there (as I have for most or all Town Meetings in the 10+ years we’ve lived in Calais) voting to keep our Town Meeting alive.
Town Meeting is a tradition in Vermont established by our forefathers. But that’s not a reason to keep it or reject it. We should keep it or not for its relevance to today, the world we want to live in, and the world we want to leave to our children. Gathering together one time per year to decide our town and school budgets, elect local officers, and debate policy both local and beyond is an important part of the richness of our community. It’s one of the things that makes Calais, Vermont special. I’m with Erica. If we have to switch the day let’s do that — or even move it around from year to year to accommodate a variety of schedules — but let’s not be hasty to toss it away. Please join me and vote “no” on Town Articles 11, 12, and 13 and the School District Article 5. Thank you.
Shared by Leslie on the Northfield Front Porch Forum today…
I just want to celebrate that we are 10 members away from reaching 600 people in town with one newsletter!! That is so fantastic considering that a year and a half ago there were 40 people at a GO! Northfield meeting saying that the one big problem in our town is a way to get out any information. See what can happen when we all get together to improve our beautiful town! This is such a great resource! Let’s use it to improve this town one project at a time!!
And now every community in Vermont has this same opportunity. Go to FrontPorchForum.com to check out what your Vermont neighbors are talking about.
Vermonters have always helped neighbors whose homes burn. And with Front Porch Forum at their disposal, this response can easily increase 10 or 100 fold.
Here’s an example from this week in Winooski from the Burlington Free Press…
The Winooski School District has raised over $4,000 so far as part of a fundraiser for the victims of an apartment fire that displaced 21 city residents last Thursday night, Superintendant Sean McMannon said. Six students were directly affected and displaced by the Malletts Bay Avenue blaze while two other students had family members who were affected, McMannon said. The Winooski district offices are collecting cash and check donations only, according to McMannon…
McMannon said Wednesday that the fundraiser had begun the day after the fire, and the district has mainly gotten word out through its website, a post on the Front Porch Forum website, and through emails within the school…
Since Thanksgiving, 21 families and 60 people have been displaced from their homes because of fires, according to a newsrelease issued by the Vermont and the New Hampshire Upper Valley Region Red Cross Wednesday. The Red Cross, who assisted in relief efforts for the victims Thursday, said fire is “the disaster most likely to befall someone in our region.”
[C]ity manager Katherine “Deac” Decarreau said Winooski citizens have been “extraordinarily generous.” “The generosity is overwhelming, and from all areas from the community,” Decarreau said. “It’s really heartwarming.”
Donations to victims of the Malletts Bay Avenue apartment fire can be sent to JFK, Main Lobby, Middle School-High School or District or mailing to WSD, 60 Normand Street, Winooski, VT 05404. Checks can be made out to: WSD-MBA Fire Support.
Caroling is one of our few remaining traditions where it’s acceptable to go door-to-door in your neighborhood and engage neighbors. Trick-or-treating… student fund-raisers… campaigning during election season… it’s a short list.
Our neighbor and local photographer, Carolyn Bates, has been organizing Caroling on Caroline Street with Carolyn for 20+ years… and it’s always a treat. Last night’s snowfall set the perfect scene. Thanks Carolyn et al.!
Vermonters in Manchester are talking about their new Front Porch Forum. Posted today…
From Helen:
I have been a fan of Front Porch Forum since I first heard about it several years ago, when it started in the Burlington area. At the time, I was working for The Orton Family Foundation, and we at the Foundation were developing, testing, and advocating for a wide range of community building tools. FPF was in its early stages, but already winning awards, including one I think from the Foundation.
When I am not at home in Manchester, I spend a lot of time in Lyme, New Hampshire, a community that has its own “listserve” – not technically an FPF, but certainly similar. Daily people are looking for something, selling or giving away something, looking for service, seeking lost pets, finding ride-shares, announcing meetings, inviting people to events, etc, etc. I imagine that FPF in Manchester can and will develop into the same sort of well appreciated and powerful local communication tool. In addition to meeting this sort of individual need, the listserve enables lively discussions on community topics….for example, a current topic in Lyme has to do with whether the community should or should not have a skating surface on the common, the related issues, and who is willing step up to maintain it.
At the moment, I have nothing to sell or give away, nor am I looking for a service, but for sure I will post a note when I need to. I am, however, encouraging my friends to join, and I hope you will too. The more people involved, the more powerful the site will be. For those of you who are looking for something or have something to sell or give away, go ahead and post it to get the ball rolling!
Followed by this posting from Linda:
Your post regarding Front Porch Forum was well said and received. I too was living in the Burlington area when FPF was in its infancy and enjoyed hearing about neighborhood yard sales, items for sale, and other general neighborhood news. To my knowledge, nothing inappropriate ever made it to my desktop and it was easy to communicate back and forth with someone seeking a service or product that I might be able to supply. Looking forward to hearing from others in our neighborhood soon.
Lots of great Thanksgiving postings shared on Front Porch Forum this week… neighbors thanking neighbors. Here’s one example from the Marshfield Plainfield FPF…
Dear Plainfield: I am so grateful to be your librarian. Thanks to each of you who comes into our little library. We all make it to special place that it is… I certainly couldn’t do it without all of you.
I want to also take this opportunity to thank the Town Clerk’s office and Selectboard members, the Cemetery Commission, the Social Concerns Committee, PACA members… am I forgetting anybody who helps Plainfield function as a town? Also, hurray for Susan and Sylvia at the Jaquith Library in Marshfield!
Last but not least, thank you to all of our wonderful volunteers! Janet, Gail, Sherri, Will, Libby, Ben, Talvi, Emily, Joyce, Maria, Donna, Laura & her Master Gardeners, and the board of trustees (they volunteer their time, too): Jan, Sandra, Bev, Stephen, Monica, Erika and Bob.
When I am reflecting on all I have to be thankful for at the table on Thursday… living in this wonderful state, and serving this diverse and passionate community at this amazing little library, will be high on the list!
ALSO! Thank you, Front Porch Forum for connecting me with the wonderful family who sold me a set of great snow tires at a really great price.
Happy thanksgiving, everybody. We’ll be open again Saturday from 10-2.
Love, your librarian Loona
“If you think driving a car or walking is unsafe on Wes White Hill, try riding a horse! I’ve been riding there for 15 years. I have been run off the road and thrown into the ditches so many times that I have stopped counting. I even reported a state trooper who was speeding, no lights, just speeding and leaving a trail of dust. Finally, after all these years my older horse, Norman, had had enough and stood his ground. As a car was coming towards us over the speed limit, I cued him to move to the side of the road. He refused, stopped in the middle of the road and there was nothing I could do. The car stopped in front of us and the young driver looked as if she was going to faint. Norman then moved over and continued walking home. He finally learned that horses have the right of way in Vermont.”
That was posted by Carol to the Richmond Front Porch Forum yesterday.
Lisa Rathke’s story about Front Porch Forum hit the Associated Press wire and appeared in news outlets across the country today.
One correction… she spoke with Spencer Putnam in Weybridge, not Spencer Palmer.
Online forum connects Vt. residents in rural towns
By LISA RATHKE / Associated Press / October 13, 2013
MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP) When Tropical Storm Irene flooded mountain valley towns in Vermont two years ago, some savvy residents turned to social media to rally for help and spread news.
Their posts on Facebook pages and other community forums were answered in droves with volunteers, fundraising and supplies.
Now advocates are making sure every community has access to an online community platform where they can share information with their neighbors and pull together in times of need as Vermont spreads broadband service to all corners of the rural state.
An online community called Front Porch Forum is now available to all 251 Vermont towns and cities. Residents can register for free, and once 100 people have signed up in the community, it goes live.
Michael Wood-Lewis and his wife started a precursor to the forum in 2000 after they moved into a south-end Burlington neighborhood where they didn’t know their neighbors. They got such positive feedback that they wanted to expand it elsewhere, Wood-Lewis said.
“˜”˜It’s just remarkable to watch how folks put it to use,” he said.
In 2006, they formed a business and added community forums for towns across Chittenden County. By August of this year, the forum had expanded to every community in Vermont with help from about $300,000 in a federal disaster relief grant that is being used for software development, marketing and ramping up service.
Towns and cities with a strong presence on Front Porch Forum had an easier time pulling together after Irene because they had a platform to communicate, said Sharon Combes-Farr, project director for the Vermont Digital Economy Project, who directs the grant.
Meg Allison, of Moretown, used the forum during Irene when the village was evacuated and roads were washed away.
“˜”˜We had one thing going for us that some other towns did not a digital infrastructure and a citizenry who knew how to use digital tools to communicate, to organize, and ultimately, to continue our long-term recovery,” she said in a blog in 2013.
The days and weeks following Irene, interest in Front Porch Forum exploded in the town with dozens and dozens signing up, Allison said.
The forum offers an outlet for members to get baby sitter recommendations, borrow equipment, spread the word about a lost pet and launch a reading group. Forum staffers monitor the forums to keep discussions civil. Besides the grant, the forum is supported through advertising.
A similar private social network started in San Francisco in 2010 called NextDoor. More than 100 cities around the country now use it, according to its website.
In the Vermont town of Westford, population 2,027, a food shelf got off the ground through Front Porch Forum.
Julia Andrews responded to a post from a woman asking for help starting a food pantry. They became partners six years ago and still use the forum to organize volunteers, food drives and events.
“˜”˜I can also say it’s very useful for thanking people who contribute,” Andrews said.
It’s also helpful for organizing meetings and sales, said Spencer Palmer, who helped bring the service to the small Addison County town of Weybridge. Palmer says his biggest coup was selling a full-size tractor within a day.
Susan Clark, of Middlesex, recently posted on the forum asking to borrow a stationary bike for a month as her son recovered from an injured knee.
“˜”˜I was getting emails and phone calls for two days with people offering to loan theirs,” she said in an email.
On the forum, local officials post meetings, votes and news about upcoming road work. The school board has conducted surveys about improvements to facilities. Some residents have posted gardening tips, seasonal recipes, poems, and weather records. They also warn about burglaries or other problems.
“˜”˜My hope is that it makes us feel less polarized and isolated, so that when controversial issues do come up, it’s that much more likely that we can come together face-to-face and talk about them in a civil, respectful manner,” Clark said.
Steve Pappas, editor of the Barre Montpelier Times Argus, asks good questions! See more here.
Front Porch Forum is now available in every town and neighborhood in Vermont! Check out the media coverage here.
Please tell friends, family, co-workers, schoolmates and others to join at FrontPorchForum.com. Share the news via email lists, newsletters, Facebook, Twitter… all channels are appreciated!
We’re especially grateful to the Vermont Council on Rural Development for supporting FPF’s expansion to the entire state.
We depend on word-of-mouth from FPF members to spread the news to others… so please pitch in. Send people to: http://FrontPorchForum.com
Thanks much!
-Michael and the FPF team
UPDATE: Responses are pouring in from around Vermont…
Ghost of Midnight is an online journal about fostering community within neighborhoods, with a special focus on Front Porch Forum (FPF). My wife, Valerie, and I founded FPF in 2006... read more