Art by Gary Blomgren
Volume 33 Issue 2
Spring ~ 2023
Point / Counterpoint
Is Town Meeting Best for Dummerston? The Views Staff
PHOTO BY BILL HOLIDAY
to print both articles At the time of this side by side, and invite year’s town meeting, Dummerstonians to Bill Holiday and send letters to us with Paul Normandeau their thoughts on the submitted an article subject, which we will to the Views, copied print in the next issue to the selectboard, in of the Views. So please support of in-person read and consider these town meetings. Selectopposing viewpoints, board member Zeke Goodband asked if he The selectboard’s view of the 2013 town meeting. a n d s e n d u s y o u r thoughts, written as could write a response with his personal thoughts about deciding succinctly as possible, to articles@viewsoftown business and budget matters by a town dummerston.org. Please keep your letters to meeting vote. We generally avoid contentious a maximum of 150 words, about the length issues, but this one seems very fundamental of this introduction, and get them to us by to our town identity. We’ve therefore decided June 20th.
In Favor of In Person Town Meeting
Another View of Town Meeting
By Bill Holiday and Paul Normandeau
By Zeke Goodband
A recent Board of Civil Authority meeting had approved additions and deletions to the voter list and were given the schedule of assignments for the upcoming town meeting day. BCA members and a few approved members of the community were at the town clerk’s office throughout the voting period to oversee activities. This is state law. As a result of the Covid pandemic, there has been no in-person town meeting recently. At the conclusion of the BCA meeting some members chatted about the lack of a town meeting. Most were in agreement that they would like to see a return to the in-person variety as soon as possible. Why have a town meeting? The Greeks are credited with the founding of the pure form of democracy—democracy in which the continued on page 16
I’m going to start by saying that although I am a member of the selectboard, I am speaking for myself and not the board. I love almost everything about town meeting; catching up with old friends, meeting new neighbors, thoughtful, respectful discussions, amendments to articles and line items, the beauty of Robert’s Rules of Order, the crafting of the town’s future for the coming year. There’s no better place to tell jokes as far as I know. I am concerned that if we settle for accepting that our present town meeting system is the height of democracy, we may be less inclined to find ways to improve and make it more accessible to all voters. There are 1,570 registered voters in Dummerston. For in-person town meetings continued on page 17
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“Trees Were Coming Down from Everywhere!” By Roger Turner Linda and I were headed to Florida on March 13th, hoping that we would be able to fly out of Bradley Field before the forecasted snowstorm moved in. Our daughter Liz was coming up from Boston that day to spend a week in our house, so we felt fortunate to have somebody at home during what was projected to be a heavy snow. Don Mills, operations supervisor for Green Mountain Power, went to his office at 2 a.m. on Tuesday and realized this storm had much heavier snow than the storm we got back in December. GMP was already prepared for a mess; conference calls with other power companies in the northeast, which essentially form a mutual aid society, resulted in an armada of service vehicles assembling in Brattleboro. “We started with crews from Quebec, Riggs-Distler, a contract outfit from Rhode Island, and Alliance crews from the Boston area. Then we had crews come in from Tennessee and New Brunswick. There was also a crew from Oklahoma,” Don told me. In Dummerston, road foreman Lee Chamberlin had arranged for his crew to come in at 5 a.m. on Tuesday, “But when I got up at 4 there was already four inches of snow on Kipling Road and about five inches in Dummerston Center. We could keep up with it when there were no trees down, but we couldn’t keep up with it up high (way up Stickney Brook, Hill, and Sunset Lake Roads) because the snow countinud on page 10