
|
Events
are free and open to the public unless otherwise noted. |
Seminars
Thursday, September 24, 2009, at 7:30 p.m., Memorial
Lounge, Waterman Building, UVM
"Counting
Vermont in the Twenty-First
Century: The 2010 Census and the
Changes Being Made to the Data on Our State and Communities"
by
Frederick Schmidt
and
William Sawyer,
Center for Rural Studies at
the University of Vermont
Wednesday, September 30,
2009, at 7:30 p.m.,
Memorial Lounge, Waterman Building, UVM
"The Tour
Buses Don’t Stop Here Any More: Social, Economic, and
Environmental Changes in Small Vermont Towns" by
Karl Decker,
Photographer and Writer, and
Nancy
Levine, Writer
Thursday, October 15, 2009, at
7:30 p.m.,
Memorial Lounge, Waterman Building, UVM
"Imagining
Vermont: Process and Results
of The Council on the Future of
Vermont"
by
Paul Costello
and
Sarah Waring,
Vermont Council
on Rural Development
Wednesday, November 4,
2009, at 7:30 p.m., Memorial Lounge, Waterman Building, UVM
"War
and Social Transformation in the Champlain-Hudson Borderland, 1609-1816"
by
Andrew Buchanan,
History, University of Vermont
An
earlier version of this paper was presented to an
international symposium on Samuel de Champlain and the French presence
in the region, held at Champlain College, Burlington, Vt., in July 2009.
Tuesday, November 17, 2009,
at 7:30 p.m., Memorial Lounge, Waterman Building, UVM
"Lake Studies:
Meditations on Lake Champlain" by
Daniel Lusk,
Poet
Program
Descriptions
Research-in-Progress
Seminar #222:
Counting
Vermont in the Twenty-First Century:
The 2010 Census and the
Changes Being Made
to the Data on Our State and Communities
By
Frederick Schmidt
and
William "Chip" Sawyer
Center for Rural Studies, University of Vermont
Thursday, September 24,
2009, at 7:30 p.m.
Memorial Lounge, Waterman
Building
University of Vermont
In April 2010, every
person and
housing unit in Vermont will be counted by the United States Census
Bureau. The decennial census, America’s largest non-military
mobilization of workers, has been a part of our history since
1790. Every decade Vermonters have eagerly awaited the
updated
counts of people and housing units in our state, counties, and local
communities. However, this decade will be a little different. For the
2010 Census, government workers will fan out across the nation to
perform basic headcounts, and then that will be all. No longer will our
ten-year census provide data on income, employment, poverty, education,
migration, ancestry, disability, language, transportation, and the cost
and condition of housing. Vermonters and all Americans will now get
these valuable data points from a new source: the American Community
Survey.
Beginning in 2010, we will have access
to
American Community Survey data on our state, counties, and communities
in annual releases. This new arrangement will take some getting used
to: the data for our towns and villages will be released in rolling
five-year averages. Every data point will be accompanied by a margin of
error. The rules of what type of resident can fill out the survey have
also changed.
What do these changes mean, and why
were they made? What data can we expect from the 2010 Census,
and
for what information will we now have to turn elsewhere? This
presentation will discuss the many changes that we can expect from the
data on our state and its communities from the new American Community
Survey. The presenters will also discuss areas that have not changed as
well as the preparations being made for the twenty-second U.S. Census.
Frederick
Schmidt
of Shelburne, Vt., is University of Vermont (UVM) Associate Professor
of Community Development and Applied Economics Emeritus. He is the
former Co-Director and founder of the Center for Rural Studies at UVM.
William “Chip” Sawyer
of St. Albans, Vt., is a Senior Outreach Professional at the Center for
Rural Studies where he specializes in community development and
planning and provides support and technical assistance for local
decision-makers and entrepreneurs in Vermont. As Manager of
the
Vermont State Data Center, Sawyer acts as a liaison between the U.S.
Census Bureau and data users in Vermont.
Research-in-Progress
Seminar #223:
The
Tour Buses Don’t Stop Here
Any More:
Social, Economic, and
Environmental Changes
in Small Vermont Towns
By
Karl
Decker, Photographer and Writer
and
Nancy Levine,
Writer
Wednesday, September 30,
2009, at 7:30 p.m.
Memorial Lounge, Waterman
Building
University of Vermont
Rural Vermont towns have
a strong
sense of community as well as a beloved sense of place. However, these
values exist within the growing challenges of infrastructure failure;
rising property values and taxes; generational poverty; crime;
domestic, alcohol, and drug abuse; school closings; access to jobs and
job loss; aging population; lack of medical care; agriculture failures;
disparities between the wealthy and the poor; environmental or civic
disasters; and land use issues. How do small towns deal with the impact
of these social, economic, and environmental forces?
For
the past six years, Karl Decker and Nancy Levine have visited some
thirty-five Vermont communities where they have interviewed residents
about serious issues their towns have faced. In this seminar they will
report on their findings from a number of these communities and discuss
how these problems were recognized, faced, maybe solved, or have yet to
be resolved.
Nancy
Levine, from Shelburne, Vt., is a poet, short story
writer, and a pediatric neurology nurse at Fletcher Allen Health Care.
Karl Decker,
from Monroe, Conn., and Townshend, Vt., is a photographer, a former
small-town newspaper editor, and an English teacher for more than four
decades. Together they have visited thirty-five small Vermont towns,
met, and interviewed nearly three thousand people. As co-writers, they
have written and photographed for thirty-five articles on these towns
for a series that appeared in every issue of Vermont Magazine for the
past six years. An appearance by Vermont’s troubadour,
Jon Gailmor, will
introduce and conclude the presentation.
Research Seminar:
Imagining Vermont:
Process and Results of The Council
on the Future of Vermont
By
Paul Costello
and
Sarah Waring
Vermont
Council on Rural Development
Thursday, October 15,
2009,
at 7:30 p.m.
Memorial Lounge, Waterman
Building
University of Vermont
Community,
Environment, Hard Work, Independence, Privacy, Small Scale—these
are the identified common values of Vermont residents that the new
report “Imagining Vermont: Values and Vision for the Future” describes.
In this seminar, Paul Costello and Sarah Waring will share the
results of the two-year Council on the Future of Vermont
project.
Following in the path of statewide public dialogue projects from
decades past, the Council on the Future of Vermont combined many months
of public forums, focus groups and listening sessions, with
statistically significant polling data and trend line research. The
finished product is a reflection of Vermonters’ values, concerns and
priorities, which compares and contrasts the trend lines and history of
Vermont public policy issues with the common understandings of
Vermonters today.
The final report of the Council, “Imagining
Vermont,” will be available to all attendees of the seminar. Costello
and Waring will overview the process of the project, including the key
findings from public dialogues, the historical background to the
project, and the significant changes over time uncovered in research
and polling. The results of the project are categorized into six topic
areas: Vermont Community, Vermont Economy, Landscape and Natural
Resources, Youth and Education, Health/Transportation/Safety, and
Vermont Civic Culture.
Paul Costello
has served as the Executive Director of the Vermont Council on Rural
Development (VCRD) since 2000. He is a University of Vermont alumnus
and holds a Ph.D. in intellectual history from McGill University.
Costello is a member of the Housing Vermont Board of Directors and
president of Partners for Rural America, the national association of
state rural development councils.
Sarah Waring
was born and raised in Vermont’s Northeast Kingdom. She joined the
Vermont Council on Rural Development in 2007 to manage the Council on
the Future of Vermont following positions in Montana and Washington,
D.C. She is an alumna of Haverford College and has a master’s degree in
applied anthropology from the University of Maryland. She serves on the
boards of the Ninevah Foundation and the Corporation of Haverford
College.
The Council on the Future of Vermont was a project of
the Vermont Council on Rural Development, a non-profit, non-partisan
organization dedicated to assisting Vermont communities develop their
capacity through effective use of public and private resources. The
Vermont Council on Rural Development works as a neutral facilitator for
public policy research and community development programs across
Vermont.
Research-in-Progress
Seminar #224:
War and Social Transformation
in the Champlain-Hudson Borderland, 1609-1816
Andrew Buchanan
History, University of Vermont
Wednesday, November 4, 2009,
at 7:30 p.m.
Memorial Lounge, Waterman Building
University of Vermont
An earlier version of this paper
was presented to an
international symposium on Samuel de Champlain and the French presence
in the region, held at Champlain College, Burlington, Vt., in July 2009.
The near-concurrent exploratory missions of Samuel de Champlain and
Henry Hudson in 1609 signaled the opening of an axis of contact,
commerce, and warfare through the borderland between New France and the
Dutch and English colonies to the south. Over the next two centuries,
the Champlain/Hudson corridor was the avenue for the recurrent military
campaigns, the commercial and cultural exchange, and the advancing
dispossession of the Native Americans, that transformed an
indeterminate “middle ground” into a clearly defined
spatial-territorial border. This seminar will re-examine the region’s
turbulent military history in the context of this broader social and
economic transformation.
Andrew Buchanan
teaches American military history at the University of Vermont. While
his work has focused primarily on World War II, he has become deeply
interested in social and military history of the Champlain Valley since
moving to Essex, N.Y., three years ago.
Research-in-Progress
Seminar #225:
“Lake Studies: Meditations on Lake Champlain”
is research designed to generate a book-length poem cycle based on
historical, archeological, and scientific inquiries, coupled with
legend, insight, and first-hand experience.
Historians have
written about military battles and the important role Lake Champlain
has played in the commerce of our region since the eighteenth
century. But what relics of this historic legacy lay beneath Lake
Champlain, and where those relics might be, was largely rumor until
recently. Lake Champlain Maritime Museum mapping surveys identified
more than 300 wrecks—steamboats, canal boats, horse ferries,
schooners—on the lake floor. Treasures such as a prehistoric ceramic
jar, discovered in 1995 and identified by the late UVM archeologist
James Petersen, also have been found. The natural history of the lake
is equally tantalizing. Two of its largest native fish, the lake
sturgeon and long-nosed gar, are descended from ancestral species
millions of years old.
Lake Champlain’s history, seasonal
phenomena, tragedies, and hidden treasures offer compelling materials
for poetry. Selections from the research, with a few poems
completed to date, will be accompanied by lake photos and underwater
video footage.
Daniel Lusk’s most recent books are Kissing the Ground: New & Selected Poems and Onion River: Six Vermont Poets. His poems have appeared in Poetry,
North American Review, New Letters, The Southern Poetry Review, Nimrod,
The Louisville Review, The Iowa Review, Indiana Review, North Dakota
Quarterly, American Poetry Review, and many other journals. He teaches poetry and creative writing at the University of Vermont.