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Not April Fools…it really is Spring!

March 30, 2021 by Tova

Grange Notes by Tim Swartz, Grange President (with everyone’s help), March 30, 2021

April meeting program takes a look at immigrant farmworkers in Vermont, and their struggle for legal status and rights

As we’ve learned in the last year, our food supply is brought to us by a previously unappreciated group of workers.   We found out that “essential workers” include people who grow, process and ship our food and grocery items, and those who staff the stores where we buy them.
This month, our bi-monthly Grange Program series builds on some of the discussion at our last program (about Hollister Hill Farm in Plainfield) about farming, small farms vs. large agribusiness, state regulation and farmers’ rights.   We’ll be looking at the community of immigrant farm workers who are a vital part of keeping Vermont’s hard-pressed dairy farms going.  These in turn support major Vermont dairy industries, like Ben & Jerry’s and Cabot Cheese, plus the milk sold to dairy processors and grocery chains.
As it  has been since the advent of the COVID-19 virus in our communities, our Program will be available via ZOOM.   Grange Lecturer Carl Etnier has been in touch with Migrant Justice, the organization of those farmworkers which has been working since 2009 to gain rights and better working conditions for them.   Carl has arranged for a showing of  two short films: “Milk with Dignity” and “Impact of Milk with Dignity”, about Migrant Justice’s campaign.    For several years, Migrant Justice has been putting pressure on dairy businesses to sign onto the Milk with Dignity pledge to require all milk they buy to be produced on farms that treat workers fairly.   Since the landmark agreement with Ben & Jerry’s in 2017, Migrant Justice has been campaigning to get other corporations–notably Hannaford’s Supermarkets–on board.
In addition to the films, Carl has arranged for a local farmworker to join us–via Zoom of course–to be part of our discussion.  We’ll have a chance to discuss the films, what the campaign means for the people most directly affected, and ways that Grange members and friends can be part of this effort.
For more info on Migrant Justice, please visit their website:   migrantjustice.net, to see info about the origin of the group, the injustices they work against, the awards they have received and the ongoing struggles they and their members face.
To join us on Saturday, April 3rd from 5:00 to 6:00 for the film and discussion, please go to:
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/82616664552

Meeting ID 826 1666 4552
To join the meeting, audio only from your phone, dial this number:  646 558 8656
Remember, Zoom link info is always posted on the Grange Website Calendar listing for Grange meetings & programs.

April Grange meeting–4:30 to 5:00

As usual in even-numbered months, we’ll have a brief meeting for Grange members and anyone else who would like to join us.   We’ll take a look at our finances, and discuss the changes in public health regulations and how they will change our ability to rent to some groups as vaccinations begin to be more common, and the warmer weather increases our ventilation possibilities.  We will also discuss plans for our display at the Champlain Valley Fair in August!

Join Zoom Meeting
www.zoom.us/j/91894580413
Meeting ID 918 9458 0413
(no passcode needed)
To join by phone for audio:  646 558 8656

March meeting: considering options for extending tax exemption

A small group of Grange members attended the Zoom meeting on March 3rd; we had a good discussion of how to proceed, now that Berlin has voted us only a partial tax exemption for the 2021 tax year.  Because of the Selectboard’s re-wording of the Article we had proposed for the Town Ballot, we were only able to ask for exemption from Town taxes, not from the much larger School tax segment of the tax bill.   We were very encouraged by the large margin of support we got from Berlin voters, who supported us by an almost 4:1 margin.
The complete tax exemption we were voted in 2016 for 5 years has been a huge boon, allowing us to concentrate on improving the community services we offer, and on ways to improve the Community Hall we provide for Berlin and the surrounding communities, rather than having to worry about how to pay the tax bill.   Our all-volunteer membership and building management team has done a great job using this time, and would like to continue to focus on these positive efforts.  Of course, the last year has cut the income we receive from renters to a trickle of support from just a couple of dedicated renters, who have continued to pay despite not being able to use the Hall.  Our finances are even more precarious than they used to be.   We have been able to survive because we have been able to keep our thermostats very low, substantially reduced snow-plowing during the winter, and have reduced electrical bills.   Contributions from generous members of the Grange community have kept us solvent, but hardly thriving.
We look forward to slowly improving health conditions in the later months of 2021–but it will be a slow process.   We expect that even after we are allowed to host events, it will take time for people to be willing to gather in groups.   The dance events that have been our biggest rental events will be among the last types allowed to re-open.   The close contact and aerobic activity which are central parts of the dances are among the best ways to spread viruses, so we will be looking to the CDC, the VT Dept. of Health and the national dance communities for guidance on how we can eventually open our doors for these events, in as safe a way as possible.
Given the continuing poor financial conditions we expect, we decided at our March meeting that we will need to apply for an abatement of the taxes we will be billed for the 2021 tax year.  The grounds for abatement that we will use is inability to pay, based on the great reduction in income we have experienced since March of 2021.  These decisions are “at the discretion of the Board of Abatement”, which consists of the Selectboard, the Treasurer, the Listers and the Justices of the Peace for the Town.  So there is no guarantee that we will be granted this form of relief.
We also expect to seek a 5-year exemption from all property taxes again, at the 2022 Town Meeting.  We will need to get signatures on petitions to get this specific wording on the Article for the Town Meeting, and will then have to advocate for why we deserve this.   As we did before, we will discuss the many ways we benefit the Central Vermont community, including the Town of Berlin, and the policy of providing free use of the Hall to Berlin residents and organizations we have continued since 2016.   We have talked about ways to elevate the profile of the Grange, especially once we can hold events there again, to make sure people know about the Grange, our improved facilities, and the range of events that take place there.  We will be looking to all Grange members and friends to help us spread the word, as we are gradually able to re-open and become an active community hub again.
We can expect more discussion of these plans as we get closer to time to get petitions signed.   Continued improvement in the public health situation will make all of this easier–and we urge all community members to comply with public health policies to keep the situation improving!

Champlain Valley Fair

It’s on:  CCG at the CVF.  At our  March meeting, and in email exchanges since then, we found several folks who will help with creating a display, staffing a table and promoting the work of the Grange at the Champlain Valley Fair, Aug. 27 to Sept. 5.  At this point (150 days away, according to the CVF website), the fair is scheduled to be open to the public, and we’ll be part of the action.  Stay tuned for more info!

April:  “scheduled shopping” at Kids Trade and Play

Erin Barry, lead organizer of the clothing exchange for kids, parents and families has been able to keep it going during the depths of the winter with “curbside service”.   In April, as the weather warms, we are going to try a restricted version of the “old tradition” of personal selection, on Saturday, April 10th from 9:30 to 11:30 AM.
Erin will be asking people to sign up for half-hour “shopping windows”, when a maximum of 10 people will be allowed to be in the basement selecting items from the many bins of clothes there.  We hope for warm enough weather that we can get extra ventilation in the basement by opening windows  and using fans.  If possible, we encourage families to send one person, to keep the numbers as low as possible.
Sign-up info for the shopping windows will be posted soon on the Facebook page:  https://www.facebook.com/kidstradeandplay, or email organizer Erin Barry:  birthsinnerlight@yahoo.com.  Masks will be required for everyone, of course.
There will also be an opportunity to bring in donations.  The KT&P volunteers ask that all items brought in be clean, with all clothing un-ripped and stain-free.   Items that don’t meet these standards just end up in the landfill, so please have high standards before you bring them in!   For large donations, please contact Erin at the email address above to arrange when to come in.  The small crew of volunteers will be very busy on the day of the exchange!

A “clerical” note:  new PO box

The truly alert reader may have noticed a new detail in red, in the header at the top of these Notes:  our Grange PO box has changed.  We realized that the large PO box we have used for years is overkill for the small volume of postal mail we receive, so we have rented a smaller one.   Please update your address books with our UPDATED mailing address:
PO Box 234
Northfield Falls VT  05664

The PO box is mostly for mail to the Treasurer, general inquiries about the Grange, and communications from State and National Grange.

Filed Under: Grange Notes

Berlin votes are in: partial tax exemption renewed!

March 5, 2021 by Tova

Grange Notes by Tim Swartz, Grange President (with everyone’s help), March 4, 2021

Our limited tax exemption is supported for the next year:  how can we build support for a full exemption and more permanent support by the Town?

Berlin voters show overwhelming support for extended tax exemption for the Grange

        According to the unofficial tally, the one-year extension of our tax exemption from Berlin town (but not school) taxes was approved by about 616 to 160–a very heartening show of support!
In this year of virtual or non-existent town meetings, we campaigned by Front Porch Forum, by putting an ad in the Washington World, and by appearing at the virtual Town Meeting Info session last Saturday morning.  We also put a “sidecar” sign on our Grange sign.  Evidently, voters recognize our efforts to provide a community gathering/celebration/etc. Hall for the use of this somewhat fragmented town, plus our overall community service mission, and the many events we–in normal times–host and support.
Based on this vote, once public health guidelines allow it, we will be extending our policy of free use of the Grange Hall by Berlin residents and non-profit organizations, as we had hoped.   According to our estimates, we will be excused from about $2,000 in town taxes, though we will still have to pay around $5,000 in school taxes this year.   This is a change from the complete exemption from both categories of property taxes we were voted in 2016, for a term of 5 years.   For reasons that are still not clear, the Selectboard changed our proposed Town Ballot Article to only request exemption from “Municipal” taxes.  We are very grateful to the donors who have given to the fundraising requests we and the Friends of the Capital City Grange Hall have made, which will allow us to pay the school tax bill for this fiscal year–but we don’t see this as a long-term strategy.
At our upcoming (virtual) meeting on Saturday, March 6th, starting at 4:30 PM, we will be discussing how to best arrange for complete exemption in the future, so that we can concentrate on best ways to foster community service and cohesion, rather than struggling to scrape together income to meet a large annual tax bill.  Our exemption over the last 5 years has allowed us to achieve a measure of financial stability, as well as catching up on deferred maintenance (like getting our septic tank pumped for the first time in about 25 years), upgrading from an old storage-type hot water heater to an on-demand one, and investing $5,000 in the basement renovations completed about a year ago!   We’d like to keep moving forward in ways like these, rather than living on the brink as we used to do.

The Phantom struck again this year…

       The last Grange Notes that I sent on Valentine’s day featured our sign, complete with the extra decorations provided by Montpelier’s Valentine Phantom.   Here’s a picture of our Old Entrance doors, also decorated–we just wish more folks could see these!   It’s nice to feel liked, isn’t it?

And it is meeting time again, this Saturday

       As mentioned above, we will be having a Grange meeting on Mar. 6th, from 4:30 to 6:00.   It will be virtual, via Zoom again as we follow VT guidelines for safety and health, so no need to brave whatever snow or wind may be our lot on Saturday!
We hope to welcome some new members to our meeting, as people have responded to my plea for renewals–and new members!   In normal times, we would have an “Obligation Ceremony” to welcome Phyllis Rubenstein, Stephen Wright and Janet Cathey to the Grange, but we will have to put that off like so many other things–I haven’t figured out how to virtually gather round new members and–especially–how to sing a welcoming song, given the limitations of Zoom!  There are so many things we look forward to doing…
We will be discussing the next steps we can take to campaign for full exemption from Berlin taxes, when we can make a presentation at an actual, in-person Town Meeting.  As described above, the large impact the property taxes place on us hinders our work to improve our Grange, our Hall and our community service work.
We have also been offered a chance to “toot our horn” by presenting a Grange display at the Champlain Valley Fair in August of this year; the State Grange is impressed with our progress in building links to our host community, and in our community service to the public.  We’ll discuss how–and who–might like to participate in this.
Another topic will be taking a look at the scheduling of our meetings, programs potlucks–originally planned to allow people to attend before dances.  We have been getting feedback that the Saturday afternoon/dinnertime schedule does not work well for some folks, especially families with children.   The changes wrought by COVID have of course taken away the evening contra-dances around which our plans were built.   What options could we/should we explore?  We welcome constructive suggestions!
Remember, anyone is welcome to join us and our discussions–but only Grange members can vote on policy changes, expenditures, etc.!   All can join using this Zoom link:

https://www.zoom.us/j/91894580413

Meeting ID 918 9458 0413

A “clerical” note:  new PO box

       The truly alert reader may have noticed a new detail in red, in the header at the top of these Notes:  our Grange PO box has changed.  We realized that the large PO box we have used for years is overkill for the small volume of postal mail we receive, so we have rented a smaller one.   Please update your address books with our UPDATED mailing address:
PO Box 234
Northfield Falls VT  05664

Note that membership checks should still be sent to our Secretary, as detailed below.   The PO box is mostly for mail to the Treasurer, general inquiries about the Grange, and communications from State and National Grange.

Join the cool kids in the Grange!

       As I’ve mentioned, it’s the annual renewal time at the Grange–and you are welcome to join at any time!  Annual dues of $30 make you a full member of the Grange, able to vote in Grange meetings, and show your support for our local Community Grange.   The dues go also to support the VT State and the National Granges, under the rules of the Grange charter.
Being a Grange member also makes available some benefits negotiated by the National Grange, everything from prescription discounts to hearing screenings and discounts.   You can read all about them by clicking this link to Grange member benefits.
If you aren’t yet a Grange member and want to join, we ask you to go to this page:  https://capitalcitygrange.org/grange-membership-application/, print the PDF membership form there, and mail it with your check to our Grange Secretary:
Charles Martin
639 Minister Brook Rd.
Worcester VT  05682
If you are ready to renew your existing membership, please mail your check to Charles Martin at the address above.  We don’t yet have an electronic way to fill out and deliver these payments.   Maybe you can help us set them up for the folks who no longer routinely use checks!  Our all-volunteer organization needs help in lots of ways, and we welcome your energy!  Please email me with any questions:  swartztim15@gmail.com.

March will again feature “Curbside Service” by Kids Trade and Play–and donations are needed!

       Erin Barry, lead organizer of the clothing exchange for kids, parents and families has been able to keep it going during the depths of the winter, and the heights of the Coronavirus curve in VT.  In March, Erin and one other volunteer will again bag up “pre-requested” items of clothing, games, books, etc.  They will match size, color and gender (if that is important) requests to the best of their ability.   Pickup will be outside.
Erin tells us that they have begun to use up the donated clothing for kids (newborn through Junior 12 sizes), since they have not been open for the usual service, so she is requesting that people bring in donations–at specific times when volunteers can take them in:
  • Saturday, March 6th, 10:00 AM to 12:00 PM
  • Friday, March 12th, 4:00 PM to 7:00 PM
  • Saturday, March 13th, 9:00 AM to 11:00 AM (this is also PICKUP DAY)
Working safely in the lower level of the basement with social distancing and masks, Erin and her helper have done their best to meet the requests transmitted through private messages to their Facebook page, or by email to Erin:  birthsinnerlight@yahoo.com.  The Facebook page is the best way to keep in touch with KT&P.

Filed Under: Grange Notes

Love the Grange for Valentine’s Day 💕

February 15, 2021 by Tova

Grange Notes by Tim Swartz, Grange President (with everyone’s help), February 14, 2021

It’s that time again–to get our tax exemption renewed

Our regular readers will remember that we have had an exemption from property taxes from the town of Berlin, where our Grange Hall is located; it was voted for a 5-year period in 2016.   Well, guess what…that time period is up.  So now it’s time to ask for your help to get it renewed!
Think about people you know in Berlin, in all parts of your life.  Ask them to please vote “YES” on Article 5 on the Berlin Town Ballot.   The best lobbying is done by people we know!   This Article will exempt the Grange Hall from property taxes, in return for continuing free use of the Hall by Berlin residents and organizations.  This will help us stay solvent, and will allow our wonderful Grange Hall to support Berlin family and official gatherings, as it has for the past 5 years.
This year, there will be no in-person Town Meeting in Berlin, so this vote will happen on the mail-in ballots which were sent out this week by the Town Clerk.  This Article will renew our tax exemption for one year; next year, we will be able to advocate for a 5-year exemption when we can discuss it at the 2022 Town Meeting.
Besides appealing for your help, the Grange is placing an ad in the Washington World, posting in the Berlin and Northfield Front Porch Forums, and we’ve put a page in the Berlin Town Report describing what we do, and the ways we benefit the Town.   We are always looking for other ways to reach the voters of Berlin.   If you have suggestions, by all means contact us!
Remember, personal contacts are the best way to get people to act–so check your address books and reach out to Berlin residents if you want to help the Grange in these hard times!

And it’s time to renew your Grange membership, too!

With the new year comes the need to “re-up” your membership in Capital City Grange #469.  Annual dues of $30 make you a full member of the Grange, able to vote in Grange meetings, and show your support for our local Community Grange.   The dues go also to support the VT State and the National Granges, under the rules of the Grange charter.
Being a Grange member also makes available some benefits negotiated by the National Grange, everything from prescription discounts to hearing screenings and discounts.   You can read all about them by clicking this link to Grange member benefits.
If you aren’t yet a Grange member and want to join, we ask you to go to this page:  https://capitalcitygrange.org/grange-membership-application/, print the PDF membership form there, and mail it with your check to our Grange Secretary:
Charles Martin
639 Minister Brook Rd.
Worcester VT  05682
If you are ready to renew your existing membership, please mail it to Charles Martin at the address above.  We don’t yet have an electronic way to fill out and deliver these payments.   Maybe you can help us set them up for the folks who no longer routinely use checks!  Our all-volunteer organization needs help in lots of ways, and we welcome your energy!
You don’t need to be a Grange member to attend meetings (in person or virtually), and anyone can also come to all Grange events–but we’d love to have you join us as a member!   email me with any questions:  swartztim15@gmail.com.

“Back to the Land Again” program captures new faces of farm life

Our February 6th virtual program began a little late, but was a great hit, drawing about 40 participants.   It featured the new owners of Hollister Hill Farm in Plainfield, Neil & Catherine Dunlop, telling us about how they came to purchase the farm from the previous “back to the land” owners, the Lights.
The Dunlops first stayed at the farm’s “bed & breakfast” 14 years ago–and the Lights offered to sell them the farm then!  Though they dismissed the idea then, further stays followed, and last year they said yes.   Taking over a farm that incorporates about a dozen different “businesses” has been an adventure–but a welcome one for this family.
Neil worked as a journalist prior to their purchase of the farm, and Catherine still works for Network for Good, a company that provides software and coaching for non-profit groups.  The farm, besides taking in guests at the B&B, milks a few cows, sells beef, raw milk, sells local products ranging from bread to locally-roasted coffee, plus their own syrup, yogurt, pork, chicken, eggs and orchard produce in the farm store.
The Dunlops also described some of the history of Bob and Lee Light, who owned the farm before them, having come to Vermont as part of the “back to the land” movement of the 1970s.   The Lights at one point had 70 or 80 Holstein cows to milk, before “the bottom fell out of milk market”–a story familiar to many VT dairy farmers.   The Lights were part of the origin of Rural Vermont, a farmer/activist organization advocating for locally-based farmer involvement in making agricultural regulations, farmer-based sales of farm products including raw milk, and community-scaled farming.
The audience for this program included quite a few folks who are friends of the Lights, as well as dedicated customers at the farm store, helpers with farm projects–and proud owners of descendants of the barn cats.   One of the fascinating parts of the program was hearing stories from audience members, some new to the Dunlops!
If you missed this Zoom event, you can still view and listen to it.   Just click this Grange website Calendar listing for the event, and click the link there for the recording.  There is lots more that I haven’t tried to include in the description above.
To find more info on the farm and their activities, check out the HollisterHillFarm website.
Thanks to Carl Etnier, the Grange Lecturer, who produced and emceed this interesting Program!   Our next one will be on Saturday, April 3rd.

“Curbside Service” keeps Kids Trade and Play going!

Erin Barry, lead organizer of the clothing exchange for kids, parents and families has been able to keep it going during the depths of the winter, and the heights of the Coronavirus curve in VT.  In January and February, Erin and one other volunteer have filled bags with “pre-requested” items of clothing, games, books, etc., to the best of their ability.  Working safely in the lower level of the basement with social distancing and masks, Erin and her helper have done their best to meet the requests transmitted through private messages to their Facebook page, or by email to Erin:  birthsinnerlight@yahoo.com.  The Facebook page is the best way to keep track of plans for next month’s KT&P, as Erin and the Grange coordinate plans in relation to public health guidelines.

Filed Under: Grange Notes

February program this Saturday: Back to the Land–Again!

February 3, 2021 by Tova

Grange Notes by Tim Swartz, Grange President (with everyone’s help), February 3, 2021

Hollister Hill Farm:  the next chapter

This month, Grange Lecturer Carl Etnier brings us the story of the transition of a farm to a new “Back to the Land” family:
Neal and Catherine Dunlop left their home in Washington, D.C. with their four kids to take over Hollister Hill Farm in Marshfield, Vermont. Their previous farming experiencing consisted of being guests at the Hollister Hill Farm Bed and Breakfast. Neil says his life reminds him of the Chevy Chase movie “Funny Farm.” They’ll talk about their reasons for wanting to get back to the land, how they were inspired by previous generations of back-to-the-landers, and what they’ve found since they took over in November 2020.
Hollister Hill Farm used to be owned by the Light family, who like the Dunlops started with little or no farming experience when they moved to Vermont in the 1970s.  You can see pictures of the farm and the bed and breakfast at their HollisterHillFarm website, where they say:  “This is a real farm, with real farmers, real animals, real tractors, haying equipment and manure spreaders. We make our living farming and inn-keeping.”
After the presentation, there should be time to ask some questions of the Dunlops and discuss the whole question of passing on farms.  As Vermont’s farm economy continues to change, with stresses from environmental regulations to pandemic market changes to generational shifts, the motivations for transferring stewardship of farms affects all communities, and all of us who like living in a rural landscape.

To join the Zoom meeting starting at 5:00 from your computer or smart-phone, use this link:

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/82616664552

Meeting ID 826 1666 4552

To join the meeting, audio only from your phone, dial this number:  646 558 8656

Before the program:  an informal Grange meeting from 4:30 to 5:00

All are welcome to the Grange meeting as well as the program.  We’ll have brief discussions of a few things:
  • A quick look at our finances, as we make our funds stretch with income only from a few tenants.
  • Berlin Town tax exemption:  we submitted an “Article” for the Town to vote on (by Australian ballot only) on March 2nd.   Unfortunately, the Selectboard decided to amend our request for complete property tax exemption to be only a request for Municipal–not School–tax exemption, and only for one year.   We will still need to campaign!  and to plan for more tax relief next year.
  • Several comments have been received about the timing for our Grange Programs being a bad time to attend, even virtually.   We should discuss this, too, if we have time–I hope we can have a couple of volunteers to come up with possible alternatives, for a more relaxed discussion at our March meeting.

Please follow this link to join us:

Join Zoom Meeting
www.zoom.us/j/91894580413
Meeting ID 918 9458 0413
(no passcode needed)
To join by phone for audio:  646 558 8656

A good time was had by all, at the 5th Saturday House Party!

We were so glad to have 70+ people tune in to the Zoom (and YouTube and Facebook) “Thank You” concert put on by the Friends of the Capital City Grange Hall last Saturday evening.   Combining live music from Joanne Garton and Aaron Marcus with recorded pieces from Jaige Trudel and Adam Broome, our Tech-Master Oliver Scanlon also provided “breakout rooms” for people to chat and share memories and news with each other before the concert.   We know the opportunity to see our friends face-to-face but only in the virtual rooms was bittersweet–but better than not seeing them at all.
In addition to music played live, we also got to see some Highland Scottish dancing from Joanne, Appalachian flat-footing from Aaron, and also  heard a poem by Montpelier poet and musician Susan Reid, read by Sam Sanders with music by Aaron.
A slide show of Grange Hall activities–from dances to building improvement projects to Kids Trade & Play to Valentine’s Day hearts on the doors, and much more–was also put together by Oliver from pictures sent in by various folks–a reminder of our active Grange in less pandemic-y times.  We all can’t wait to open up again!
If you missed this concert, you can see everything but the Zoom breakout rooms at:YouTube: https://youtu.be/KdAnA6fZr60

And on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/768818083987580/

Below, one moment captured, with a variety of faces in the Zoom boxes!

Filed Under: Grange Notes

Saturday is the House Party–sign up if you haven’t

February 1, 2021 by Tova

Grange Notes by Tim Swartz, Grange President (with everyone’s help), January 29, 2021

If you haven’t RSVP’d, now is the time!
       Saturday (tomorrow!) is the day for the
5th Saturday House Party
on
Saturday, January 30th, 7:30 to 9:00!
       The end-of-year fundraising campaign by the Friends of the Capital City Grange Hall brought generous contributions to help support the Grange while rentals can’t be allowed.
The online concert is part of how the Friends are saying THANKS!
All you need to do to get connected is to send an email to fccghvt@gmail.com, and we’ll send you the Zoom link.   See below for YouTube and Facebook live-streams for the music!
Starting at 7:30, you’ll have a chance to connect directly with other folks who are attending, using Zoom breakout rooms!  Tell all your friends to join too!  There will be more socializing after the music!
From 8:00 to 9:00, local musicians will perform; all of them are regulars at the contra dances held at the Grange.
  • Aaron Marcus Montpelier-based piano, keyboard, accordion and banjo player will play for you.
  • Joanne Garton, also a Montpelier resident, plays fiddle–and may do some Scottish dancing!  Joanne & Aaron often play together, as The Turning Stile.
  • Jaige Trudell & Adam Broome, Quebec residents, will send pre-recorded performances.   Jaige’s fiddle and Adam’s guitar and jaw-harp are also dance favorites at the Grange, where they perform as Maivish!  We may or may not get a glimpse of their son Aubrey, visible (in his younger years) on Jaige’s back in the photo below.

No charge for this event!   Three ways to particpate
All you have to do is RSVP to:  fccghvt@gmail.com to get the event link for Zoom, starting at 7:30 PM.

OR:  join on the FCCGH YouTube channel, where the music will start at 8:00 PM:  YouTube: https://youtu.be/KdAnA6fZr60
OR:  join on Facebook for the music at 8:00: 
https://www.facebook.com/events/768818083987580/

   P.S.–the FCCGH is paying these fine musicians, plus Zoom and Sound tech Oliver Scanlon to put on this event!  Much planning and behind the scenes work by Joanne has gone into this event, as well.   We are grateful to everyone for joining us to celebrate generosity and this new year!

P.P.S.–if you are on the CDU email list, this may be the second reminder you are getting…we’re glad you are interested in both newsletters!

Filed Under: Grange Notes

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Contact Us

Tim Swartz, President, CCG#469
802-225-8921 (cell)
grangepresident@capitalcitygrange.org

 

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