Category Archives: Vermont

Online Forum Yields Face-to-Face Community

Posted on Monday, May 7, 2007 by 1 comment

From a not-quite-yet-mature neighborhood forum in South Burlington… C.L. is welcoming long-time neighbors who just subscribed…

Welcome Nancy and Dick! It is kind of sad that this is how we have to communicate! Hope you are doing well and we do need to catch up! XOXO C.L.

As counterintuitive as it seems, people report that their online forums lead to MORE face-to-face time with neighbors. In fact, this is the most valued aspect of Front Porch Forum by members in neighborhoods with active and “full-grown” forums.

When enough folks join a given neighborhood forum and start using it, people seem to start organizing more block parties, street-wide yard sales, Green Up Day efforts, community action to get a new stop sign or potholes filled, etc. Lots of small things too… dog and toddler play groups, school and work carpools, support groups to lend a hand to an elder neighbor with yard chores, a regular poker game, etc.

A generation or two ago, it seems, most homes had a stay-at-home mom who was in the neighborhood all day and family size was larger and the little ones were home all day… lots of bodies in the neighborhood all day. Now, many neighborhoods are ghost towns during the weekday. The face-to-face neighborhood grapevine that thrived over back fence, around the kitchen table over coffee, and, dare I say, on the front porch, has withered in many places. Enter the virtual Front Porch Forum. Not to replace face-to-face… but to help folks rebuild the neighborhood grapevine and connect in person more.

It’s working in many places! A neighborhood forum seems to require 50-100 members to really get rolling. The one above has about 20 members (out of about 300 households) and three local officials who tune in. A simple door-to-door flyering and/or sign-up sheet on a clipboard will push those numbers up toward the critical mass needed.

Vote for Winged Monkey

Posted on Friday, May 4, 2007 by No comments yet

With thousands of Front Porch Forum subscribers posting messages to their nearby neighbors across greater Burlington, VT, there’s always something interesting popping up.  Here’s today’s surprise from the Lakewood Neighborhood Forum in the New North End…

Our three minute winged monkey video is a finalist in the International Contest Sponsored by P.A.N.D.O.R.A.

I write to ask for your vote.  The results will be announced on May 12th.  Please click on this link,  read the instructions, and cast your ballot accordingly.  When you’re done (thank you very much), please pass this along to your friends, associates and email list and ask them to do the same.  Time is of the essence.

You’ll learn something, I guarantee it.  They’ll learn something too, same promise.  Turning the tides of modern medicine is no small task.

Rik Carlson

Neighbors take “Mud Walk”

Posted on Wednesday, May 2, 2007 by 1 comment

Yesterday I joked that one way to build community locally would be to hold a “Mud festival… a day full of mud-themed games, food and good clean fun.”  (Spring in Vermont is commonly called “mud season” for obvious reason.)

So, imagine my surprise when John wrote to his Huntington Neighborhood Forum this morning…

Actually we’ve been doing something like this for about 15 years up on East Street. We call it our annual Mud Walk. It’s a movable brunch. We pick three houses each year to host–first house does coffee, muffins, etc.; second house does main courses; and the last house does desserts. Neighbors are assigned things to bring to the appropriate stop along the way. We spend the day munching, talking & walking with our neighbors! This year we did on April 1st. It’s great and I’d encourage other neighborhoods in Huntington to do the same!

Local Officials join Neighborhood Forums

Posted on Friday, April 27, 2007 by No comments yet

More than 100 local officials have joined Front Porch Forum spread among the various 18 towns and cities that make up Chittenden County (don’t forget Buells Gore!). We always envisioned city councilors, selectboard members and school commissioners joining and having access to the multiple neighborhood forums within their districts. This is a great way for elected local officials to listen to their constituents and to broadcast out announcements… and even to have constructive back-and-forth discussions. And it’s been broadly supported and appreciated by our members.

However, we now also have many appointed local officials, that is, department heads (public works, park and rec, zoning, etc.), police and some elementary school community resource people. In general, these folks sign on and simply “listen in.” If something comes up relevant to their area, they may respond to the neighborhood forum or the person who wrote in originally, or may do nothing… or something else all together. They occasionally post announcements.

One or two FPF members have complained about this latter group, saying it gives them too much power around political issues… if a neighborhood is fighting a development that the city is pushing, for example. I have yet to witness any outright abuses of this set up.

For their part, the local officials seem mostly grateful for the service, but also a little unsure about how best to put it to use… fair enough, Front Porch Forum is a new beast. One official complained just today that “we have well-established public processes for public input on issues… now I’m supposed to monitor all these neighborhood forums to learn what our citizens are focused on?”

With 20% of Burlington participating across 38 neighborhood forums – many hopping with hot issues (e.g, historic preservation, graffiti, car break ins, heroin, homelessness, taxes, traffic planning, stormwater, snow plowing, etc.) – our subscribers increasingly include a line in postings like… “if our public works department is reading this, will you please… ” So there does seem to be a degree of public expectation.

At the same time, other folks are adamant that the neighborhood forum be limited to residents only.

One last thought, some years ago the Five Sisters Neighborhood Forum (our flagship forum) essentially defeated a proposal to build an indoor tennis building in South Park. A few neighbors stated strong opposition based largely on false or missing information about the proposal. The developers, including King Street Youth Center, immediately backed out and the project died before the public even knew what it really was. One person declared that the neighborhood didn’t support the project, based on the forum postings, to which my neighbor Larry replied… Front Porch Forum is “a soap box, not a ballot box.” And I think he’s right… and that’s an important point for “listening in” local officials and contributing members to keep in mind.

A few folks have used their neighborhood forum to great effect… raising their issue on the forum and rallying support among the neighbors. Then, when interest is up and the local officials are starting to tune in, they use their forum to get a critical mass of neighbors to engage the municipality through existing channels… e.g., by turning out a crowd at a commission or council meeting.

Neighborhood Blog Count shines Spotlight

Posted on Wednesday, April 25, 2007 by No comments yet

Outside.In’s Top 10 Bloggiest Neighborhoods was very interesting today. How inspiring to learn about the level of online community going on in these neighborhoods (including some former stomping grounds of mine!). I wonder how our little Five Sisters compares? I’d love to see the data. (Does anyone know if that’s available? I couldn’t find it.)

The Five Sisters (Burlington, VT) was named a top ten neighborhood in the United States in 2006 and many residents credit Front Porch Forum, a kind of neighborhood blog (to stretch the term), for contributing to the incredible sense of community here.

The Five Sisters forum has an astounding 340 members out of the 350-household neighborhood. Another 20 local officials (city councilors, state reps., school commissioners, police lieutenant, etc.) participate. In the past six months, 50% of the members have written… 630 postings total. Since these folks are actual nearby neighbors, a vast majority of the follow up occurs offline on the sidewalk or over the fence (that’s the point!). In this model, only residents of the neighborhood may read and write postings… it’s all about helping neighbors connect and foster community within the neighborhood.

The Five Sisters is the flagship of 130 contiguous neighborhood forums covering all of metro-Burlington and hosted by Front Porch Forum. In its first six months, about 20% of Burlington has subscribed to this free community-building service. Everyday folks, not just heavy web users, are making wonderful use of it. Front Porch Forum garnered a couple more community-leader awards last month and will be featured at the Personal Democracy Forum in New York City on May 18, 2007.

Social Network Training Video

Posted on Tuesday, April 24, 2007 by No comments yet

Thanks to Lauren-Glenn Davitian and crew at the Center for Media and Democracy (Channel 17 CCTV).  She invited me to address her Media Mavens training series for local nonprofit leaders.  We focused on social networking and online community last week.

The video (117 minutes) is available here.  My portion begins at the 32-minute mark.  I was glad to share some of the lessons we’ve been learning from Front Porch Forum with this group.

Grape Vine Advice

Posted on Tuesday, April 24, 2007 by No comments yet

Today’s grape vine advice on Front Porch Forum drew a smile…

Hi all – We have some grape vines and since we’ve moved in we’ve commiserated with many neighbors that we have no idea how to prune them. I found a good resource for this and thought I’d pass it along. The gist of it seems to be that you can prune the crap out of ’em without much risk. That’s my kinda plant. Happy Grapes! –Joanna, The Addition Neighborhood Forum

And that’s my kind of advice! 😉

Neighborhood Lullaby

Posted on Monday, April 23, 2007 by 1 comment

Isaac is our youngest and, at ten months, not much on sleeping… up with a wail every 30 minutes all night long.

This evening, after awakening number one, I carried him to the front porch for some pacing. What a gorgeous night! Warm, breezy, bugs chirping away… did I mention that we had a snow storm last week? We’ve endured a painfully long winter. Welcome sweet spring!

Isaac and I moved our barefoot back-and-forth to the sidewalk and picked up something new… the faint strain of a fiddle. The sirens’ song set to work immediately and we trundled across the street, through a couple of dark backyards strewn with toys, over an old rock wall, brushed past some brambles… the music getting closer.

Finally, we came upon a couple of neighborhood dads. Bill (violin) and Andy (guitar), barely visible still at ten paces, were playing a string of Appalachian tunes. They stopped the music to say hello and Isaac burst into tears. As soon as they revved it back up, he calmed… eventually snuggling in against my chest and falling asleep as we swayed in time.

I could have stayed there all night… an unexpected treasure of a moment. A bit later the smell of skunk wafted over the fence and broke the spell. I bid our musical neighbors a good night and ambled back to tuck my baby boy in his crib. May everyone live in such wonderful and real community with those around them.

Need Movie/Book Review? Ask Neighbors

Posted on Wednesday, April 18, 2007 by 1 comment

Here’s a new use of Front Porch Forum’s service from a member in the Oakledge Neighborhood Forum…

I’ll bet some of the folks in this neighborhood are reading some good books and seeing films and plays regularly.  It would be really interesting if folks would write a few words for the neighborhood forum about a book or film they have really enjoyed and think others shouldn’t miss.  -N.A.

Our mission… helping neighbors connect and foster community within the neighborhood.  This message certainly fits the bill!  Now, I hope she gets some folks to give it a shot.

Neighbors to the Rescue!

Posted on Sunday, April 15, 2007 by No comments yet

This afternoon a Jericho Corners member posted a call for help from her neighbors. Problem solved in a few hours! She just sent in this follow up message titled “We’re Saved!”

The neighbor’s have come to our rescue! Thank you Tina and John for the emergency load of firewood since our furnace broke down and another storm is due tonight. And thanks to the others of you who called with concern. – Can’t tell you how much it means to my daughter and me. That false (but scary) perception of “isolation” has been lifted. We feel a lot better… and a lot warmer! Thanks again. -P.M.

Another great use of Front Porch Forum.