#VT – Powerful conversations among neighbors going on these days. Here’s a sample posted by Guy to the Cambridge Front Porch Forum today…
Today’s Burlington Free Press had a thoughtful article on a declining middle class, as exemplified by a Jeffersonville family… My impressions:
1) Good for my Cambridge village neighbor Mike Moser for providing factual background and context for the story. As someone involved in helping Vermonters discuss important policy issues, I have found that the more relevant facts I have, the better. Sounds obvious but it is remarkable how easily I go straight to interpretation and opinion when what I really need is more information.
2) As I read it I said “thank God for my job” because just three years ago that’s where I was, working three iffy jobs to unsuccessfully scrape together enough money to pay the bills. My family and church communities were helpful in every way when I asked them, but what I really needed is what I finally got – a good paying job. This job gave my wife a good last two years of her life in more ways than one. Sometimes I think that government and non-profits would help people more if they would focus more on simply letting the job creators do their thing. Local applications of this might be – sorry if I offend – saying “no” a little less reflexively to new business proposals. I know there are tradeoffs, but as we weigh the pros and cons in our own minds and in forums like this, perhaps the life-saving creation of a few good jobs should count a little more.
3) As I read it I also said “thank God for the safety net” beyond church and family that provided health care and yes even food at the most difficult times. I made perhaps 10 visits to Lamoille County food shelfs back in the dark old days, swallowing my pride because it was my job to provide, and when my labor wasn’t enough, then my willingness to ask would have to suffice. It was hard, but it was made easier by the welcoming attitude of the staff, as well as by their willingness to make distinctions between food for the really needy (basic, locally donated foods bought with donated cash) and the less-in-demand grocery store perishables, and then finally the federal commodities. What also made it easier was, frankly, going to other towns. I simply don’t know if I could have gone to a Cambridge food shelf. It was so much less humiliating to go to Morrisville, and that has nothing to do with their attitude and everything to do with my vanity. It is a big step to go from feeling compassion for one of “them” to actually being one of “them”. I apologize if I sound politically incorrect, but that is how it felt. So I would recommend that food shelves not be in the least bit territorial. If someone lives in another town, there is a reason they go elsewhere, unless of course they just don’t know. One can say “you shouldn’t feel that way” but – I did, and I suspect others might also.
So, what can we do to help our underemployed neighbors? In a nutshell, here are three things I can think of, maybe you have ideas too: be more open to local job creation; buy services locally; and support the local safety net. FPF is a great tool for doing all three, but it’s up to us as individuals and as a community to go the extra mile, as a great man once said.
By the way, more than 40% of Cambridge households are FPF members.
Dave in Bristol #VT just shared this nugget. He had a trampoline he was looking to unload. He listed it on Craigslist Vermont for a month… no calls. Almost immediately after posting it on the Bristol Front Porch Forum he heard from seven neighbors!
I wish I had 7 to give away after the responses in the first hours after posting.
We hear this kind of thing again and again. FPF can be a super-effective way to buy, sell, give away, etc. The big differentiator… your posting reaches people who are not actively looking for what you have/want. But when they read your FPF posting, some of them think… “Yeah… I’d love a trampoline!”
From Sue in Moretown #VT today…
Thank you Front Porch Forum for connecting me with a Forum member who cleaned my gutters and swept my garage roof. So nice to meet a neighbor in the process.
That’s FPF in a nutshell. Get something checked off your to-do list… and meet a neighbor in the process. Our aim is to help neighbors connect and build community. It happens one small exchange at a time… online and face-to-face.
As a friend said recently… “So much of the Internet feels like a fire hose of information, but FPF is like slow-drip irrigation.” I’m not sure how I feel about being compared to a soaker hose… guess we’ve been called worse. 😉
#VT – A posting by Tracy on the Charlotte Front Porch Forum caught my attention last week…
Hi neighbors. Many of you know our daughter, who is now a freshman at CVU high school. She’s tentatively scheduled for surgery on November 4th and will be in a wheelchair with her leg out straight for 6-8 weeks.
Are there any individuals, groups, or organizations out there who might be available to help us design and build a ramp to get her into and out of our home? Time is of the essence, we may need a permit, there are codes that need to be met, and our finances are limited because much of the medical care and rehabilitation will not be covered through insurance. At least, these are the things we’re thinking… but this is all new terrain for us.
Any and all suggestions would be greatly appreciated! Thanks so much!
Today’s follow-up by her was titled Appreciation Abounds!
A huge thanks to everyone who responded to our posting about building a ramp in preparation for our daughter’s impending surgery! We were overwhelmed by the outpouring of helpful suggestions, tips, and offers of support and are happy to announce that even though surgery was moved ahead by a week, our daughter is now home, recovering beautifully, and is easily able to get into and out of our home via the new ramp. Special thanks to Dave and Micheline, Rice Lumber, and to our former neighbor, Don. Once a Charlotter, always a Charlotter!
#BTV #VT – Host Judy Simpson interviewed Susan Clark and myself about Front Porch Forum and e-Vermont on Across the Fence on WCAX this month (10/20/2011). Susan is the Town Moderator in Middlesex and an expert on Town Meeting in Vermont. Here’s the video…
#BTV #VT – I don’t think of myself as a blogger, yet this blog turns five years old today… guess it kinda snuck up on me. Hard to imagine I’ve written 1,150 postings over that time. I started blogging a month or two after launching Front Porch Forum, which now has 30,000 households participating, including half of Burlington.
Thanks to the blog’s many regular readers. Our frequent back-and-forth (mostly off-blog) about the quickly heating up “neighbor conversation” online space is fascinating. Dozens of start-ups are now aiming to help neighbors connect. We’re glad for the company. I invite more of them to contribute to the field by frequently blogging about what they’re learning. Hosting sustainable neighborly online discussions across many neighborhoods is not trivial!
Many of the pundits who focus on adjacent spaces — hyperlocal journalism, social networking, daily deals, etc. — are slowly waking to the staggering potential of online neighborhoods. We’ve seen it first hand in our super successful pilot. Neighbors, local businesses, public officials, nonprofits… they all flock to Front Porch Forum and put it to excellent use.
There’s monster demand across North America for connection to place and neighbors. The opposite — which too many of us experience now — is untenable… living with a neutered sense of community, being surrounded by strangers for years on end, not knowing what’s going on in the neighborhood, not feeling a sense of ownership of your place. Ugh.
Here’s to the next five years!
Congratulations to Nirav Tolia and his team at Nextdoor.com. After a year of testing, they lifted the cover from their new service this week. We welcome another player into the “neighbor conversation” online space. They join Whitepages.com’s Neighbors, MSNBC.com’s Everyblock, and about 20 other start-ups working to help neighbors connect.
Will they get traction? Will they generate significant revenue? To the first point, many efforts in this space seem a mile wide and an inch deep with broad reach and little traction. To the second… in Nextdoor’s case, they’re not trying yet.
This is in stark contrast to Front Porch Forum which has incredible particpation, albeit in a single region. Half of Vermont’s largest city participates in FPF. And they aren’t just lurkers. Whereas much of social media content is provided by a slim 1-10% of users, on FPF a majority of our members speak up… and the tone is consistently neighborly. Also, we’re seeing great results with our recently launched neighborhood-specific advertising system for local businesses.
Front Porch Forum has given me information, income, and, best of all, the first real feeling of connection to this town after living here for 22 years!– Anne Howland, Middlesex, VT, FPF member
FPF’s super-charged level of engagement doesn’t come easy. Many players in the neighbor-conversation space will fail because they’ll substitute tech bells and whistles for real understanding of the social demand that they’re trying to meet… or because they’ll scale too fast and thin.
Achieving critical mass in hundreds of nearby small online neighborhood groups AND getting folks to stick around for years AND speak up AND keep it civil… this is hard stuff. And this is what FPF is doing successfully now across one-third of Vermont. We’ve developed a complex and nuanced system that we’re pushing from our seasoned staff into our code base as we approach scaling.
Commentary about the Nextdoor launch…
Posted by Don today in Burlington’s South End on Front Porch Forum. May we all be blessed with such a moral compass (I wonder what her name is?)…
While walking the dog at 5 AM this morning, my faithful canine alerted me to some green paper bunched on the sidewalk. Money. Lots of money. Clearly bar money as it was in mostly small denominations and bunched into a wad. Not enough to shift the fate of nations, but enough to put a smile on my face, a song in my heart, and to thank my precious pooch for its discovery.
Later the same morning, in a classic “should have kept my mouth shut” moment, I mentioned the aforementioned booty and its finally tally. The moral compass of our family reminded me of the difference in the value of this size stash to us in our financial state and that of its most likely loser, i.e., a staggering undergraduate returning from a night of debauchery on the town. Clearly to correct thing to do would be to offer said debaucher the opportunity to reclaim the lost stash.
With this in mind I offer the following challenge. Anyone who can correctly identify the street that the cash was found on, its approximate value, an approximation of the denominations of the bills, and the maiden name of my paternal grandmother and her country of origin can claim the money. Please reply by email at your earliest convenience.
Update. The above mentioned moral compass has informed me that the “paternal grandmother” part of the challenge was unfair and should be retracted.
What do you get when you fill a room with 150 hyperlocal online journalists (including 3 from #VT)? That was answered a couple weeks ago at the Block by Block Community News Summit in Chicago. I learned much and was glad to share some of Front Porch Forum‘s story.
Thanks to the Patterson Foundation’s New Media Journalism initiative for its support of this event and more. Janet Coats and Kathleen Majorsky of Patterson focus on FPF on their blog today…
Front Porch Forum (FPF) is an online space that serves small towns and neighborhoods in just about a third of Vermont. Each FPF helps improve Vermont’s local community ecosystem. Hosting these neighborhood conversations leads to face-to-face interaction and ultimately improved community.
When a neighbor posts to the conversation on their local FPF, their name, street name and email address appears in their post.
“Neighbors go from being strangers to actually knowing these people through the conversations,” says Wood-Lewis.
Wood-Lewis and his family moved to Vermont in search of community, but found it difficult to come by through traditional means so they created FPF. It was created to help Wood-Lewis and his family meet the neighbors and understand what was going on around them. Its impact on communities exceeded their expectations, but it is this impact that inspires Wood-Lewis to continue to invest in FPF’s growth.
“We are motivated by the results we see. It has made our neighborhood a better place to live and raise our kids. It’s made our city a better place. It empowers people to do the great things that people do given half a chance to be good neighbors,” says Wood-Lewis.
When Hurricane Irene tore through Vermont at the end of August, FPF played a major role in local disaster relief. People started to self-organize through FPF. Residents would list their needs on FPF and groups of neighbors would gather supplies and make their way to those in need.
“We saw this happen again and again,” says Wood-Lewis, “It’s really powerful.”
More than half of Burlington, VT participates in FPF it’s incredibly vibrant and popular. The desire to know the people who live around us and to be plugged into neighborhood news is strong and growing.
This “neighbor conversation” area is a quickly emerging online space with many start-ups and existing dot.coms jumping in. It’s a close cousin to hyperlocal journalism. More here:http://to.pbs.org/oDcZAI
Front Porch Forum… how do I appreciate thee? Let me count the ways…the puppy crate that a neighbor lent me and hadn’t known I needed, the dry wood I was offered with truck loading included, the trailer we borrowed to pick up a sugaring arch, the dog that we temporarily lost and I felt so much better being able to let my world know about, and, of course, the satisfaction of being able to SO easily organize something like a Zumba class for our town. I donate because it is the best social and economic investment I make every year. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Enid Wonnacott, HuntingtonFront Porch Forum is an important tool, like glue, that keeps neighbors connected despite our busy lives. I love that in the past few months, I’ve been able to offer some support to a neighbor who had a car break-in, pass off a well-loved piece of kitchen furniture to someone for free, and share useful information about city issues as a city councilor. While the Internet will never replace human, face-to-face contact, it helps keep us glued together when we can’t see each other. Please consider supporting FPF in whatever way you can. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Emma Mulvaney-Stanak, City Councilor, BurlingtonBuy FPF a Beer – There are few services I use as often and get as much out of as Front Porch Forum. I’m often strapped for cash, but I contribute $5 a month. It’s sort of like buying FPF a beer every month in gratitude for all it’s done. I hope everyone else out there that loves FPF as much as I do contributes what they can so we can continue to stay connected through this great service. Cheers! http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Christine Hill, BurlingtonDo you need baby furniture? A good auto mechanic? A painter? An acupuncturist? Want to hear about local concerts, sales, sit-ins, triathlons? Puppies needing homes? Homes needing house-sitters? A bumper crop of cherries available for the picking? Front Porch Forum has all the neighborhood news. It’s a resource worth supporting. I do — please join me! http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Valerie Graham, CharlotteDear Williston Neighbors – In this past year, FPF has helped me find a caterer, sell a trampoline, remove valuables from my car when I learned of break-ins. It’s locally-grown, safe, helpful, and builds a sense of community. Therefore, I’ve just sent in a contribution to help keep them going and I am urging you to do the same via the link below. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Adina Panitch, WillistonNeighbor to neighbor, helping each other out. My husband and I both grew up near here & the neighborhood spirit has always been wonderful. We feel fortunate to be part of it. Front Porch Forum only feeds the growth of unity within our neighborhood. Let’s show some support towards them so they can continue their great work! I know I will. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Mary Heinrich Aloi, BurlingtonDear Neighbors…Front Porch Forum couldn’t be a better community builder. It reintroduces the richness of neighbors connecting with one another on their front porch. How often I’ve felt isolated walking in my new neighborhood. If a house has a front porch there’s no one on it! FPF offers an ingenious way for neighbors to overcome the sense of isolation that stifles the spirit of community. We cannot take this inspired resource for granted. It deserves our financial support. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Roddy O’Neil Cleary, South BurlingtonFor a great communication tool among community members, this is my vote of support for the continued success of Front Porch Forum. Hats off and thanks to Michael Wood-Lewis and the FPF crew for their good work. I am sending a check in memory of my Mom who loved new and innovative ways of “talking to people.” http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Lucinda Hill, HuntingtonHello Neighbors – If you are reading this it is because you are already a member of Front Porch Forum and share an interest in extending your sense of community. One of the things a community does is support its resources. Pioneer efforts tend to be fragile and need care and support while they take hold. We’ve yet to directly benefit from an offer; nor have we had what someone desired. But, we’re pretty sure that one day we will either have or desire something that appears in the listings as a need or an offer. We are grateful that this valuable mechanism exists and have made a donation to help insure its continued success. Will you join us? http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members Yours in the spirit of community,
– Lynette and Will Raap, ShelburneFront Porch Forum has provided a valuable service to the people of Richmond over the past several years. It was an invaluable tool for connecting those in need of help after the flooding caused by “Irene” with those that wanted to help. It is a good way for local organizations to get notices of events out to the public. The ways it has been and can be used are countless. However, this service can not just operate on goodwill and limited advertisements. It needs your donations in order to continue. Please consider making a donation to FPF at http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Fran Thomas, RichmondI know FPF has helped me out in many ways. We connected a lost cat with its owner, we found an advocacy group to help my mother in law when her car was stolen, we found babysitters, and a tip on how to keep my dog from devouring the cat’s food. For real! If you have found it useful, consider making a donation to insure we keep this format rolling for the future. Donation info here: http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Katharine Montstream, BurlingtonWhere can you advertise for a baby sitter, report a lost kitty, warn about break-ins, ask for gardening advice, sell Aunt Tillie’s antique commode and tell your neighbors to watch for the skunks in the area? FPF, of course, and it’s worth supporting with your dollars. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Betty Little-Royer, BurlingtonPlease consider a gift to prop up our wonderful Front Porch [Forum]. Make a donation today; we did. FPF deserves our support. Thanks. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Bill and Kate Schubart, HinesburgDear Neighbors – I bet most of you consider Front Porch Forum an incredible value to our neighborhood and one worth supporting. I hope you will join me in making a small monthly contribution to support this incredible asset. You can sign up here. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members. AT this point, I can’t imagine our neighborhood without it. We owe a lot to the Wood-Lewises for getting this going.
– Mary Sullivan, BurlingtonIn different ways for different people, Front Porch Forum connects us all with our neighbors and our community in a unique and powerful way. We are very fortunate to have a resource like this at our fingertips and I urge you to take a minute to show your appreciation at: http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Dave Reville, BurlingtonJust a quick note to say we also want to encourage anyone who can, to please donate whatever they can, to our Front Porch Forum. We are so fortunate to have such a great way to communicate among neighbors. Here is a quick link: http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Sandy Wynne and Sean McKenzie, BurlingtonFront Porch Forum, the site to check for so many reasons. Lost pets, free stuff, town information, church dinners and social events are just part of the things that we can find on FPF. Please, consider a generous donation to support this site: http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Linda Parent, Town Clerk, RichmondDear Neighbors – I hope you will join me in supporting Front Porch Forum. It’s hard for any of us to imagine life before FPF now that we all have the ability to access this wonderful resource that connects us in such a unique way. I first used FPF years ago to find child care in our neighborhood when our daughter Caroline was very young and our sons, Andrew and Adam were still in grade school. Before I had time to turn around, our sons are now driving and Caroline entered middle school this fall. Through it all, I have relied on FPF to keep myself connected with our neighbors. As a City Councilor, having FPF in our community makes it possible for me to keep in touch with you on important City matters and for you to communicate easily with me. Here’s the link to supporting FPF. Please give what you can. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Karen Paul, City Councilor, BurlingtonI love FPF! Every time I read about a little lost cat or dog finding its way home because of a posting on the Forum, or read recommendations for local painters or electricians or other kinds of work done well, it makes me happy. And as a small business owner, I love being able to tell people in town about upcoming events. There’s something wonderful about feeling connected to our neighbors. I think Front Porch Forum fosters community in a very real and valuable way. FPF is such a simple, brilliant idea, and I really appreciate it! If you do, too, consider supporting it with your donation: http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Elizabeth Bluemle, CharlotteHey neighbors! It always feels good to support an organization that makes the world a better place. Two organizations I support every year are NPR and FPF. Why? Because they are the two sources that help me stay connected with my state, city, and neighborhood. We are SO LUCKY to live in a place where we can get a variety of perspectives about important local issues. Study after study shows that the American people know far too little about current affairs and are increasingly less connected with their community. Front Porch Forum is a cutting-edge innovation that is challenging this trend. Support FPF for community! Support FPF for democracy! http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Dan Kent, BurlingtonSo where else but on FPF would you expect to find such a posting? As many of you know, I am a partner at a small, socially responsible law firm in Burlington. The firm has a proud history of representing non-profit organizations and labor unions. My practice consists primarily of estate planning and probate, and family law (both litigation and collaborative). For many of my clients, it is more convenient to meet locally, which I am happy to do, and I often meet with my clients at their homes, at On the Rise Bakery in Richmond, or at Koval’s in Hinesburg. So, if you’ve been putting off getting your Will done, my rates are very reasonable, and now you have one less excuse. And on an equally serious note, if you have never before thought about donating to Front Porch Forum to keep this unique community-based bulletin board up and running, please consider doing so. I am. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Brian K. Valentine, HuntingtonThis first year of Middletown being a part of Front Porch Forum has been an interesting experiment for our household. We’ve learned much about events in this town that we would not have otherwise and been able to spread the word about a couple things that are important to us. We never knew how FPF is paid for, but it looks like they need our help so they can keep us connected. We recently pledged a small amount, and we encourage all of you who appreciate this community building tool to think about donating, too. To learn more about those people who keep FPF ticking, go to: http://frontporchforum.com/about-us To donate, go to http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Ellen and Dan Secord/McKeen, Middletown SpringsGreetings, neighbors! This is the time of year when we can show our appreciation to Front Porch Forum by giving a donation of any size affordable. Just go to http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members for information on where and how to give.
– Lisa Schamberg, BurlingtonYou Get What You Pay For… Hi Essex West residents, This sometimes sleepy list might hide the fact that Front Porch Forum is a unique resource for us all. I’ve sold some stuff, and alerted folks to my business. I’ve been kept up to date with police and community announcements. Once a year, we’re invited to support the effort . I’d like to humbly recommend that we do!
http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Steve Fuchs, EssexOnce again FPF demonstrates its worth to the community in yet one more political exchange in Colchester.
Most of the back-and-forth between the opposing positions took place in the Colchester Sun, but many of the residents of Colchester no longer have the weekly delivered so we never see what is printed. For those of us in the outlying areas FPF was our channel for sharing our opinions and thoughts. Town officials also recognized the opportunity and posted there as well.
Last week we were visited by friends from Frederick, MD. The wife inherited a daily newspaper for Frederick many years ago and has been in the business for decades. We began to discuss FPF with her and she said their paper did the same thing then we did some comparisons. Her first complaint was that people jumped on and posted some of the most rude comments. I mentioned that you will never see that on FPF. She then said that postings were “comments” to any given article in the paper. I said that FPF was a community forum where we exchanged everything from political opinions, to town notices, to window cleaning recommendations. She looked baffled and never really registered the difference between an unmonitored comment forum and the likes of FPF.
Clearly the difference is the PEOPLE. While FPF staff review the postings, determine their urgency then broadcast accordingly, most other forums remain sparsely monitored at best, dumping whatever arrives into the Ether without review or temperance. FPF is truly a thread in the fabric of our community and it is appreciated.
http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Jim Minetti, ColchesterHi Neighbors – I’m sure we all agree about how wonderfully helpful Front Porch Forum is to our lives, and I hope you all will join me in supporting this service. Just go to http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members to make a donation. Thanks.
– Mima Tipper, BurlingtonI think FPF is an amazing community resource. I have been a sustaining contributor (small amount from my credit card every month) for about a year. This is a really easy way to contribute to keep FPF going strong, and it helps me feel I am doing my part. There is a button at the bottom to get you to the contributions page. If you can, won’t you consider an automatic monthly contribution?
http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Lisa Barrett, HuntingtonHello neighbors! We are all very reliant on our Front Porch Forum to communicate a lot of relevant community information. Please consider a donation for this remarkable service. It is convenient to make a monthly contribution. Just set it up and you’re all set.
http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Lisa Lillibridge, BurlingtonFriends and Neighbors – Today is the day to put the check in the mail to support our neighborhood Front Porch Forum during their annual appeal. FPF helps us all keep connected and builds the wonderful sense of community that brings us to our neighborhood and keeps us here. If everyone gives something it ill make a real difference. The link below will make your contribution a breeze. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Suzy Comerford, BurlingtonDo We Need This? YES! I am a monthly contributor to Front Porch Forum. I believe this is a great service where I can find out many things I otherwise wouldn’t hear about; and so can you. I beg any of you who can spare even a little change – especially on a monthly basis – to help in paying for FPF. Here’s the link: http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members To quote Bill McKibben: “The only way to heal our increasingly broken world and communities is to come back together, to play together, think together, plan and act together.”
– Joan Knight, BurlingtonHaving connected to FPF since its inception, it’s the first item in my in email inbox that I open. I want to know what is happening here in the South End of Burlington and there is NO better way to find out than through FPF. I read about the good things that are happening–new neighbors joining in, happy events, and candidates running for office–and the bad things such as break-ins, thefts, vandalism, etc. that alert me to be more watchful. In order to do my share to help keep the Forum going, I’m sending a contribution and I hope everyone else will as well: http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Marcia Mason, BurlingtonI love the way FPF lets me stay in touch with what is going on in my neighborhood. To support FPF on an on-going basis I donate $5.00 a month. It’s not much, but it’s my small way of helping to keep it going and growing. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Susan Alden, BurlingtonWow!! Front Porch Forum #400!!! Seems like it just started a short time ago and issue 400 already!! Kudos to the FPF staff and for all of our participating neighbors!! Keep it alive.
http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Martin Thompson, BristolFront Porch Forum has launched its annual appeal, and this is our chance to pitch in and support it. There was a time when I saw my neighbors up and down Prindle and Roscoe Roads regularly, but the increasing busyness of daily has crowded out those serendipitous face-to-face encounters. I value Front Porch Forum for providing another way to keep in touch with neighbors in East Charlotte, so I donate a little something to let the people who make this online space available know I appreciate their contribution to community-building. You can donate here: http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Mel Huff, CharlotteWhat Will It Be? Loaf of Bread or Tank of Gas? Support FPF!
A loaf of bread costs $5 – $7
A creemee, small with extras $3
A pound of cheese $7-$20
A full tank of gas $50-$75
A half gallon of Paul Newman’s lemonade $2
A summer pass at the beach $45
A roll of 100 stamps $47
A small bottle of Mansfield Chocolate yummy milk $.99 (At Kinney Drug)
A Bite Me Pizza $20
A custom hair cut with added color $100-$175So how many of these do you buy in a week? Can you add just $10 a month to keep Front Porch Forum alive? For one year, that equals 2 FULL tanks of gas for your car. Or 6 Bite Me pizzas. Or my heavens, 120 bottles of yummy chocolate milk. For me, it means lots and lots of interaction between my neighbors about yard sales, lost cats, sick people in need of a meal, a house for sale, finding a good roofer, all year.
Please mail your check to:
Front Porch Forum
PO Box 64781
Burlington, VT 05406-4781Or sign up for a monthly $10 bill on your credit card: http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
And add your testimonial to your local forum.
Thank you each and everyone for all you have given to me through FPF. It makes working at home so much more alive. It makes walking down the street so much more friendly. It makes my life so much more alive.
– Carolyn Bates, BurlingtonMany thanks to Front Porch Forum. I am just about to post a pair of nice leather gloves that I found and think its great that we now have such an easy way to connect with our neighbors. This is one of my favorite fundraising posts for FPF. Let’s all pitch in and keep the service coming! http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Joan Shannon, BurlingtonGreetings Neighbors – It is hard to believe that FPF might be getting so established that we take it for granted. If you’re like me, you’ve found it incredibly valuable — a simple (and free!) way to connect with neighbors, find lost dogs, stay informed about local issues, get roofing and plumbing recommendations and so much more. It has certainly enriched our lives. But the Forum is not managed by elves, and we should not take it for granted. While FPF sells advertising and has some grants to support operations, it relies extensively on donations to keep on keepin’ on. That’s why I’m encouraging everyone to join me in making as generous a donation as you can to support FPF. You can do that right here: http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members Think of it as paying for a service or sharing the cost of a neighborhood block party!
– Deb Bouton, CambridgeHi Neighbors! If you find FPF as useful and helpful as I do, please consider making a contribution to keep it going. I’m encouraging everyone to make as generous a donation as you can to support the FPF. You can do that right here: http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members Remember that it’s run by people, not elves, and like public radio and TV it’s free but we need to provide financial support from time to time. Thanks from all of us who love FPF!
– Julia Blake, JerichoDear Neighbors – Over the years, our Front Porch Forum has been such a great source of advice (contractors, fruit flies), free stuff (boots, rides) and lively discussions (politics, noise) that it’s made our neighborhood an even better place to live. It’s such a part of life, that it would be easy to take it for granted. But remember that FPF needs our financial support, as well as all the wonderful content: http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Ann Curran, BurlingtonPlease consider joining my family in supporting this great resource. FPF is a wonderful tool, it keeps us informed about what’s going on around us, we use it to buy, sell, and give things away, and we can communicate easier and faster to our neighbors via the Forum. Even if that communication comes from Jack, reminding people that scraping dog poop out of cleats at the park is not much fun. Thanks. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Lori and Jack Myers, BurlingtonI hope everyone will support FPF. It is simply the best!! http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Linda Parry, BurlingtonHope you’ll join Karen and I in making a donation to the Front Porch Forum this month:
http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Mike Egan and Karen Downey, BurlingtonI’ll be sending my contribution today to FPF. With their help we found our son’s stolen bike, let everyone know about our missing cat (later found) and grabbed some plants for my garden. They give me the buzz on the street and keep us linked to our friends and neighbors. Thank you, thank you! http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Linda Jones, BurlingtonHello Neighbors – For those of us interested in “local” it doesn’t get much better than Front Porch Forum. I have met many people at the park and walking down the street whose voices I have read on the forum. It helps me to feel connected to my community. A friend recently commented that it’s “co-housing without the meetings.” I feel blessed to live in a community with such a respectful and active community forum. Although I donate annually to many different causes, Front Porch Forum is the only organization that I support on a monthly sustaining basis. Please join me in putting our money where our mouth is to support our values. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Jasmine Walker, BurlingtonHas everyone remembered to send their contribution to Front Porch Forum? It is the least we can do for all the info and connections they provide. Think about it. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Len and Bev Brown, South BurlingtonI really enjoy FPF. It’s such an easy way to stay connected to the community and know what’s going on around town. It’s also an easy way to buy or sell an item. Let’s not take Front Porch Forum for granted. Support them at http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Bettyann Morse, WestfordSupport FPF, Please… Front Porch Forum is a unique and painless way to participate in the neighborhood information loop. They often provide useful and interesting items that keep us up-to-date about our local happenings and issues. So, I urge my fellow FPF readers to make at least a small annual contribution now, to insure FPF’s place in our future. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Vicki Margolis, BurlingtonWhat is free but still requires your support is our Front Porch Forum. I urge you to take a minute to show your appreciation at: http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Scott Michael Mapes, BurlingtonI, too, would like to encourage us all to support Front Porch Forum. Richmond South currently has 384 members, with more joining all the time – a great service to our community. I’m sure even small contributions add up to a lot for this service. Thank you FPF! http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Steve Bower, RichmondSend an annual contribution to a resource that is working to build community within our neighborhoods? You bet we did! Please join us and send yours. Thank you, Michael and Valerie… and your staff. Front Porch Forum is an asset to neighborhoods throughout northern Vermont. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Pam and Bruce MacPherson, South BurlingtonWhat would we do without Front Porch Forum? Consider making a donation to keep it up and running. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Kathleen Ryan, BurlingtonAm relieved to hear that our neighbor’s kitty, Jelly Bean, was not testing a new method for chasing squirrels. I am also grateful for Front Porch Forum. This fabulous “community-building service” has broadened my sense of neighborliness and deepened my appreciation of community. Thank you, Front Porch Forum! You serve us all. Now, friends and neighbors, we have the chance to help our Forum. Please add your support to ours by clicking right here: http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members It will take one minute – and your helpfulness will keep us in touch for a whole year. Thank you!
– Ralph and Kathleen Dodge, BurlingtonI just made a gift to support Bristol’s Front Porch Forum…I hope my Bristol neighbors will join me! http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Sue Kavanagh, BristolI too have recognized how great it is to have Front Porch Forum as another venue for information sharing. It is a little neighborly network, an avenue to voice, a connection. These are only a few reasons I have donated to FPF. Will you too? http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Carin Hoffman, StarksboroHello, Neighbors. Please join the many of us who are showing our support for FPF with a donation. Any amount is not too small to help. FPF provides a great service by allowing fast communications to each other. Centennial feels such an impact from institutional neighbors, traffic, and baseball. We are lucky enough to back up on Centennial Woods and want to know about any threats to that wonderful neighbor. FPF is the way to stay on top of what is happening. Isn’t that worth a few bucks a year? It’s so easy to donate via Paypal – just go to http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members. Thanks for your support. It takes a village.
– Jeanne Keller, BurlingtonIt takes a village…and Front Porch Forum is like our village. So, let’s all do our tiny part to help keep FPF sustainable!These are the ways I have benefited from Front Porch Forum over the years: spread the word about events that are important to me, found my cat who I thought I had lost forever (you know, the one stolen and dyed pink at the age of 21!), learned about cool things in my neighborhood, debated issues, and actually met my neighbors! Front Porch Forum has become a focal point in how I get and give info about everything from my own little street to the whole world.Even the smallest donation is tremendously helpful. Please ponder the importance of Front Porch Forum in the connections we make and then give today at http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Megan J. Humphrey, BurlingtonHi Neighbors – When I started our Fairview Farms neighborhood forum on FPF way back in 2007, I thought it would be a neat way to keep in touch. Four years later, every single home in our development (I believe) belongs to our forum, and we use it all the time. FPF is an essential part of my life now, keeping me up to date on what’s going on in our neighborhood and our Village. Thanks to all of you who use it. Front Porch Forum is run by an extremely dedicated and tiny little staff. All the work they do can’t happen without generous donations from FPF’s many users. If you can, please help with a small donation. You can visit http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members for information on where and how to give. It’s easy (they take PayPal), and it will make you feel all warm and fuzzy inside. Thanks,
– Elaine Sopchak, Essex JunctionDear Neighbors – We have appreciated being connected to you all through Front Porch Forum. In addition to hearing about interesting events and such, we have ourselves benefitted personally. One time, we put out a plea about a visitor’s lost pet, and another time about a lost set of keys (which today cost their weight in gold to replace) -““ both stories have happy endings. And so, we have contributed to FPF out of gratitude and enthusiasm, wanting to help keep this community connection alive. Please join us in offering financial support. Big, tiny, in-between, whatever. it’s all good. Here is a link http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members. Thanks,
– Nancy & Steve Wright, HinesburgI hope folks will consider joining Deb and me in supporting the work of Front Porch Forum. Their work brings all of us a little closer together. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Jason Cadwell, ShelburneLet’s Get Motivated to Give to FPF. Front Porch Forum has been important to me too. I just moved to Jericho from Burlington where I also followed FPF. I want to give back too. FPF has been something I want to have stay with us. I’m a new consultant for Thirty-One, a fast growing bag/home organizing company. I want to contribute 20% of my sales to FPF. If you go to my website www.mythirtyone.com/Vermont and click on FPF – It will give both of us a chance to give. I don’t mean to advertise, it is more my desire to give back to the community. I hope I can help as that is my real intention. Lets find ways to give!! http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Rebecca Lemire, JerichoWelcome home, Boomer! Our Front Porch Forum is doing a great job connecting us these days. Thanks to all who help get the word out. I’m sending FPF a contribution in honor of Boomer and hope many more of us will, too. The new format is clear and efficient, and keeping us connected in this way takes human and material resources. Let’s contribute! It’s easy to do at http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Edorah Frazer, CharlotteI think Front Porch Forum is a wonderful resource, so I just made a contribution to keep it going and I hope everyone will think about doing the same. Take 2 mins and go to http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members and you’ll have that same good feeling you get when you give to VPR (which you should also think about doing now because they are having a fund-drive). OK enough nagging. Have a good day.
– Michael Carrese, JerichoAs a frequent user of Front Porch Forum for myself (poetry sometimes bursts forth after gazing at the night sky), a variety of organizations (library, scouts, newspaper, farmers market, town office announcements), passing along news of others, and our family’s business (the greenhouse in the spring) – and an occasional opinion usually typed with a forceful hand- I encourage you to join me in your support of this invaluable service for “getting the word out.” Think about how much you use FPF – and read it! Surely, this is worth a monthly donation of $5 or $10 or even a one-time donation, if you are strapped for cash. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members Think about your health! Make a donation instead of buying a bag of chips once a week – your body (and neighbors) will thank you!
– Heidi Racht, HuntingtonHello Neighbors – I have for sale 4 STUDDED! p205-55-R16 Firestone snow tires for sale that have only been used 1 winter and are in excellent condition! They came off a Honda Civic which we no longer have and they are too big for my Ford. These almost new studded tires are $495 and I am going to donate 10% of this sale to FPF! (Michael and buyer will confirm this!) email query and we can set up time for viewing…thanks! http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Peter Baldor, RichmondWe recently purchased a beautiful old piano that needs to be tuned and have a few sticky keys addressed. If you know of a good tuner/technician we’d love to hear about them. Also, if you know of a children’s piano teacher, we’d love to hear about them as well. We fully expect this post to result in excellent recommendations, as usual. This is just one of the wonderful services of Front Porch Forum and the reason why we donate every year to support this service. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members If only I’d used FPF to ask the neighborhood about a mover. If I had, I probably wouldn’t have been so terrified by the process of getting the piano down the 15 steps from its old home and my lower back would probably not be as sore from having to pitch in with a lot more heavy lifting than I should have.
– Greg Fanslow, BurlingtonHello Neighbors, Just a quick post to say thank you to Michael and the staff of Front Porch Forum for all that they do, and to encourage anyone who’s thinking about it to donate to FPF. It’s a invaluable source of neighborhood news and I’d hate to lose it! http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Donna Spielman, CharlotteI have been reading all the “Support FPF” posts, and I find myself wanting to put out yet another one! Yes, yes, yes to all the others, I agree! I have been a bit shy about asking for things at times, and don’t always follow-up with events and reminders that I see on FPF – it is a process that is still evolving for me, and others too! One thing for sure, it has been a steady and reliable source of communication within our community for several years now – I think I joined two years ago exactly. I have been supporting FPF with a small monthly auto payment that I never even notice is gone from my account, and yet it gives me such a good feeling to support such a valuable tool for us here in Huntington. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Guthrie Smith, HuntingtonDear Birchcliff neighbors — By my lights we’re lucky to have a smart service like Front Porch Forum available. All we have to do is sign up. I’d be hard pressed to list all of the household conundrums FPF has helped me resolve. And it’s right in our inboxes.
Here’s a shocker: I really like the ads. These are local, often fledgling businesses that know who and where we are and they want our business. I’ve made some interesting discoveries in those ads.
FPF is another one of those “only in Vermont” stories. The point is they are young and need our support. I say send them a few dollars. It doesn’t have to be a lot, but if enough of us chipped in it would allow them to grow and become that much better.
If you have a PayPal account it’s easy to do (or send a check). It’ll take maybe 2 minutes. Here’s the link for all the details: http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
Do it. Thank you.
– Michael MacCaskey, BurlingtonI hope you’ll join me in supporting our Brennan Woods “bulletin board” ~~ Front Porch Forum. I clicked on http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members to find that I could make a donation with either a credit card or a check. I did the latter, and just received a nice thank you note from Michael Wood-Lewis, one of the founders. I’m betting you’ll hear from him, too, in return for your donation, no matter the size. We never know which day it will become important to post a message to our neighbors ~~ we might hope to sell some furniture, or it could be something especially worrisome (e.g., a missing cat, or an alert to a pending neighborhood concern). Let’s keep our FPF going!!
– Patricia Read, WillistonNeighbors: I love FPF and think every community should have this service! I just thought I’d write and say please support them in their fundraising efforts. I think it’s a great way to stay aware of local activities, learn about issues that effect our towns and meet new neighbors over the fence! Thanks for all who work to get our postings in the daily digests and keep us informed! http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Holly Stadtler, HuntingtonHi Neighbors, I just got my donation in before the deadline! If you haven’t done so yet, please consider it. I love this Forum and all the news we get to pass back and forth, it’s a great resource. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members Best,
– Martha Seyler, CharlotteI just made a donation to Front Porch Forum. I read all the neighborhood posts and have found the service to be so useful. I hope you’ll consider making a donation too. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Linda Waite-Simpson, Essex JunctionWe sent in a check to support Front Porch Forum. What a great service this is for our community and a wonderful way to stay connected. Please help keep this wonderful electronic bulletin board going. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Robert Compton, BristolFPF is worth some of our discretionary cash—hope you think so, too! http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Jim and Polly Larkin, Essex JunctionHello neighbors – I find Front Porch Forum really useful and depend upon it for information. Like my cell phone I wonder how I got along before having it. They do depend upon the public for contributions though and any amount is welcome. You can contribute by snail mail or online. The online contributions address is: http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members The snail mail address to send a check to is:
Front Porch Forum
PO Box 64781
Burlington, VT 05406-4781Sincerely,
– Jane Hendley, BurlingtonIt is so nice to be a part of this neighborhood and Front Porch Forum. I sent in my donation today. Thank you to all who help make this possible! http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Margaret Paul, BurlingtonI’m a regular supporter of Front Porch Forum because it’s such a great way to keep my finger on the pulse of the goings-on in my neighborhood. I’ve found free furniture, heard about car break-ins, and sent invitations to events. How else can you be in touch with so many people in your neighborhood so easily? It’s definitely worth paying for. Consider doing a regular payment through PayPal – it’s easy and painless! http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Charlotte Norris-Brown, BurlingtonI just made my annual donation to Front Porch Forum. What a great way to connect with others and other events in our community. Let’s keep it going! http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Marijke Niles, StarksboroPlease help our “newspaper” keep on being published. Please send in a donation to help support our own neighborhoods. How many of you have benefited from this publication? Every little bit helps! http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Lois Farnham, BurlingtonRalph and I just made a contribution to FPF. We think it is a bargain. If you can, please donate, too. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Michele Patenaude, BurlingtonI’ve just made a donation to the Front Porch Forum. I recently moved to Middlesex and FPF’s been my resource for everything local. It’s a great way to get connected to the community. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Pat Hoffman, MiddlesexPlease join me in making a financial contribution to support Front Porch Forum. I’ve found it to be a great networking tool. Please use the attached link: http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members Cheers!
-Tom Conners, UnderhillHate to tell you, neighbors, but the snow will be flying soon. Enosburg residents say it’s going to start this Friday! That’s okay though because the Front Porch Forum will keep us connected and informed no matter what the weather may be. FPF deserves our community’s support. Please make a donation by contacting http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Barbara Lyman, HinesburgIt is great time to support FPF with a small or perhaps a quite large donation. I did and I can already feel the difference in my physical and spiritual well-being! http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Rich Arentzen, BurlingtonI feel so lucky to be part of not one but two Front Porch Forums. How else would I stay connected to community? There is nothing else like the community spirit expressed in this forum. So please give what you can in support. And, huge thanks to Michael Wood-Lewis and his support team for making this possible. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Ginger Hobbs, BurlingtonI gave what I could afford because Front Porch Forum has given me information, income, and, best of all, the first real feeling of connection to this town after living here for 22 years! Please go to this link to make a donation: http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Anne Howland, MiddlesexI will be dressing up as Mary Poppins this Halloween (for those of you who know me, I have been told this is a fitting costume!) and I am missing a few key elements. I am hoping to borrow these items for a few days. I will be sure to keep them in excellent condition! I am looking for a large black, sturdy umbrella (with or without a snarky talking bird head), a carpet bag with ample space for lamps and other essential items, and a pair of white (leather?) gloves. Your help is greatly appreciated!
Also, I would like to encourage all of you to become supporting members of Front Porch Forum. I give a small amount monthly via PayPal; it’s automatic, easy and secure, and I know my money is living locally, helping to maintain this awesome service! http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Sarah Coonrod, BurlingtonJust wanted to share the message that Front Porch Forum is worthy of your support. I just made a donation to FPF because I rely on it to connect with my neighbors and to communicate with my community about education-related issues in my role on the ETSD school board. I hope you will consider making a donation to FPF today. It took me just two minutes! http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Brendan Kinney, Essex JunctionFPF is a prize, to be sure, and will be up near the top of my list if I ever win the lottery. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Betty Little-Royer, BurlingtonI LOVE getting your messages. Very informative and I always read them, no matter what. Be glad to make a donation to see this continue. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Robynn Albert, Essex JunctionI just had the privilege of signing up as a monthly supporter for Front Porch Forum. It is a privilege for me because FPF adds so much benefit to our community. FPF keeps me truly connected, and is a ready source when I want to get information dispersed. Please lend your support in whatever way you can to this vital community service. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Linda S. Cooper, BurlingtonFriends – Join St. Paul’s Cathedral in supporting our local community through Front Porch Forum. Help keep the community connected and make your contribution now!
http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Sarah Gallagher, St. Paul’s Cathedral, BurlingtonWhat’s happening in the neighborhood? I bet you know a lot more about that than you did a 10 years ago. Think about it…10 years ago, where would you have gone to find used exercise equipment, a Christmas house-sit, advice on organic skunk control? Not to your neighborhood, at least not very easily. My life and the life of the neighborhood is so enriched by the sense of community that Front Porch Forum has brought. I’m proud of FPF and proud that I can support them. Think about this: Where will FPF be in 10 years if we don’t support them? http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Diane Montgomery-Logan, BurlingtonAs one who got involved in local gov’t out of curiosity for how it works, I rely on FPF to keep me informed of what’s going on with residents all over Essex.
As one who has stayed involved in local gov’t, believing that better communication makes for a more democratic process, I rely on FPF to keep residents informed of Town activity.
As one who joined FPF in 2008, I’m grateful to folks who serve the public by staffing FPF, as well as to my neighbors who follow the action here.
Despite the economic uncertainties facing us, I hope you will join me in sending FPF a token of thanks today. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Irene Wrenner, EssexSometimes it’s nice to be a follower, and we just joined many of our fellow neighbors by donating to Front Porch Forum. I recently got rid of a set of perfectly nice sliding glass doors via FPF, something I had tried to do unsuccessfully on craigslist for weeks. Coincidentally, they were picked up by a woman who gave me some very nice rhubarb plants early this spring, also via FPF. It was nice to return the favor! We have also started a Neighborhood Watch Program on our street in response to some concerns neighbors had, also a result of communication that started on FPF. Hopefully we can all find a way to help support this valuable service. Every little bit helps!
http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Denise Dean, JerichoPlease support FPF They helped me find my darling dog, Willie. They are a great way to spread news of any kind FAST. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Sally Lembcke, BurlingtonHi neighbors – Please join me in supporting FPF. It’s a wonderful resource and we would be worse off without it. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Christian Verry, BurlingtonWe have THREE 8 foot long, 4×4 pressure treated fence posts, recycled from another project; they have decorative end-caps. Also one additional post that is a 4-foot length. Free to first taker, on our front lawn.
I’d like to take this opportunity to express my appreciation for FPF over the past 11 years (has it been that long?) I have learned so much about our community, connected with neighbors, and sold, found, and given away countless items. FPF helps me feel a sense of potential and possibility in the power of connection. Thank you so much Michael, Valerie, and the rest of the FPF crew! I’m happy to be a supporting member, and encourage others to sign on with a contribution of any size.
http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-membersThanks also to all Five Sisters neighbors for your participation in FPF – it wouldn’t be the great service it is without all of us taking part in it!
– Melanie Brotz, BurlingtonI really do appreciate Front Porch Forum – actually *wanted* to send them some money – how often does that happen? So I sent them a little something – which they graciously received – no laughing at the teensy amount! and asked that I point you guys to this link below to make a contribution, too – if you can afford to. http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
There you have it.
And PS – wasn’t the Blues Brothers wicked fun? I miss it… and miss seeing my neighbors in my back yard – looking forward to next summer’s potluck season already – xo to my neighbors –
– Sam Colt, CalaisOnly a few weeks ago, someone mentioned FPF, we are so glad they did. It is truly a wonderful support and service for our community, bring us all that little bit closer together as neighbors. When we saw the item on support for FPF it was a “no brainer” to contribute. Rock on FPF: http://frontporchforum.com/supporting-members
– Iain Fletcher, Shelley & BoBo Cat, Winooski
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