Supervisors of the Checklist Meeting

The Supervisors of the Checklist

will be in session

Tuesday September 6, 2022

5:30 - 6:00 PM

Orange Town House

To accept Voter Registration

Applications.

No additions or corrections shall

be made to the checklist after this

session, until election day.  

Absentee Ballots Now Available for Sept. 13 State Primary

If you are unable to make it in person to vote at the Townhouse on September 13, 11:00 am-7:00 pm, you can request an absentee ballot by submitting an absentee ballot request form to the town clerk office.

Absentee ballot request forms may be filled out and submitted in-person during office hours, or by mail to Orange Town Clerk, PO Box 37, Canaan NH, or scanned and submitted electronically to orangetownclerk@myfairpoint.net.

As soon as your request form is received and processed, your ballot will be sent to you by mail.

You may also submit an early request for an absentee ballot for the November 8th General Election, though ballots for the general election will not become available until after the primary.

More information on absentee ballots —> https://www.sos.nh.gov/elections/voters/absentee-ballots

Update from the Friends of Mascoma Foundation

The foundation does great work in our area. They’ve asked us to post this update:

Friends Feeding Friends Schedule Summer Schedule Starting in June: 

We will be CLOSED the week of May 30th 


Enfield Pantry: We will reopen in at Huse Memorial Park on Tuesday, June 7th.  Note the schedule below.    


Summer Pantry Days and Hours will be Tuesdays from 3pm to 5:30pm at Huse Memorial Park and Wednesdays from 3pm-5:30pm at the FOM headquarters behind Canaan Hardware Store, 9 On The Common Way. 

Our pantries are open to anyone in need of a 3-day supply of groceries that lives in one of the 5 Mascoma Valley Towns: Canaan, Dorchester, Grafton, Enfield, and Orange. Our public pantries are open to all residents in need. If your budget (or someone you know) is tight because of rising fuel costs or other expenses shopping with us can make a big difference. We have a great mixed selection of fresh produce, pantry staples, dairy, and bread items each week.  We also have personal care items available.   

 

NH Gives! June 7th-8th 

We are pleased to report that we have once again signed up to participate in NH Gives!  This year’s event will kick off at 5pm on June 7th.  

NH Gives – an initiative of the NH Center for Nonprofits - is a powerful, statewide 24-hour online fundraising event that is designed to build community, connect donors to local nonprofits and generate excitement about the nonprofit sector.  

This year, our friends at the New Hampshire Center for Nonprofits have added a new giving incentive: a bonus pool!  

 

What's a Bonus Pool you ask? 

A bonus pool is a proportionate match that is determined by the overall amount that you raise online. We believe that this will result in a more equitable distribution of funds. Site-wide matching dollars will be distributed as a bonus pool this year. 

 

How does the Bonus Pool work? 

Every organization that raises $300 or more between 5pm June 7 and 5pm June 8 will receive a proportionate amount of the bonus pool. FOM's portion of the bonus pool depends on a few things. 

  • Final total of the bonus pool. 

  • Final total of online donations by organization raising $300 or more 

  • The amount that your organization raises online 

The formula for the bonus pool is: (FOM’s Amount Raised online / Total Amount Raised online by all organizations raising $300 or more) x Total Amount in Bonus Pool = FOM's Share of Bonus Pool. 

 

What does this mean for you, our loyal friends, and donors? 

It means that every donation really counts this year. EVERY. SINGLE. DONATION. COUNTS. The higher FOM’s total online donations, the higher percentage of the bonus pool FOM will receive. 

How you can help NOW: We are hard at work trying to secure internal matches, fundraising champions, and we’ve initiated a friendly rivalry amongst MVRHS alumni classes to raise money.  If you are interested in providing a match, becoming a fundraising champion, or helping your class compete please email us at info@friendsofmascoma.org  

 

Mascoma Matters Project:   

 

At our April meeting we discussed having an event for families with young children this summer.  We heard from the NH Children’s Trust and brainstormed ways we could bring more resources and programming for families to the Mascoma Valley. We are looking for those who can help our community with issues around isolation. 

 

Our next meeting will be on June 16th from 12-1 PM.  

Mascoma Matters Coalition Meeting (online) – Come and learn about opportunities to help your community thrive. Existing and new partners welcome. This meeting will focus on priority areas including supporting families with young children. If you have questions or would like more information please contact Sue Cagle at sue.cagle@unh.edu.  

  

Date: Thursday, June 16th, 2022 

Time: 12:00 – 1:00 PM 

Zoom Link: https://unh.zoom.us/j/95078708536  

 

If you know of or are associated with an organization or town department that would like to present during our meetings, please let us know.  

More information on our past meetings is available on the Padlet

If you have any questions about our project or future and past meetings, please don't hesitate to reach out to Alyssa Lemmermann at Alyssa.Lemmermann@unh.edu.  

 

~A Note from Eula~ 

 

Dear Mascoma Community, 

 

As many of you may know by now, I have made the decision to leave my role as Executive Director of the Friends of Mascoma Foundation. This was not an easy decision, and I will greatly miss the FOM team and this community.  

At every job, my goal is to leave an organization in a better place than before my arrival. The last three years have not been without challenges, but I firmly believe I, along with our Board and volunteers, achieved this goal. We weathered the pandemic, unprecedented shutdowns, and other changes to our local and global community. We expanded our donor base, strengthened existing partnerships and forged new relationships.  

Not only did we survive these unusual times, but our organization thrived during this time. Friends of Mascoma has grown over the last three years and is poised for continued success in the years ahead. This organization has a lot of heart and I know that FOM, with its team of volunteers, staff, Board members, and loyal donors will, continue to do good work and achieve great things. 

Thank you for allowing me to serve as FOM’s Executive Director these last three years. It has been an honor and privilege to play a small part in this wonderful organization’s story. 

All my best, 

Eula Lee Kozma  


Thank you,  

Friends of Mascoma, Board of Directors 

Bridget Labrie

Supervisors of the Checklist Meeting

The Supervisors of the Checklist will be in session Tuesday, May 31, 2022, from 7 to 7:30pm, at the Orange Town House.

For additions and corrections to the checklist.

This is the last day for voters already registered to change or declare a party and vote on primary election day.

Preservation Workshop

Cemetery Trustees of Orange are hosting a NH Old Graveyard Association workshop on how to straighten, clean and repair stones.

Location:  French Cemetery, Cardigan Mountain Rd (south side of the road and west of the Town House)

Date:  Sunday, May 22, 2022

Time:  1:00 pm

Bring spade, work gloves, outdoor wear, water/snacks for yourself

For more information, contact Anita Garland: (603) 523-7141

All are welcome!

Cemetery trustees meet tomorrow

The Cemetery Trustees will meet 6:30pm Thursday, December 16, in the Town House, to follow up on a plan for tree work in the Orange Common Cemetery.

The Town House Gets a Time Capsule

Dave built the capsule with concrete blocks and a concrete floor, measuring 32x32x24 inches.

Dave Stacy has built a time machine—well, capsule—under the Town House, to give future Orangeites a glimpse of life today. While he made it “bombproof,” our descendants will be able to remove a block to get to the contents. The Orange Historical Commission is ordering a plastic plaque.

Interesting in contributing to the future? Talk to Sharon Proulx, (603) 523-4590. You need to provide your own small waterproof container.

Please take this speed test to help bring broadband to Orange

Nik Coates, the Bristol town administrator, reports that the Grafton County Broadband Committee recently received grant funds to support high-level design work for Orange and other towns to connect into the “middle-mile network.” This is the backbone of the Internet.

Meanwhile, the committee applied for a $26.2 million grant from the National Transportation Infrastructure Agency (NTIA) to fund the construction. The agency has been asking follow up questions about the project that “we believe to be encouraging,” Nik says. The committee should learn this month about grant approval.

To improve the chances, the committee needs some additional data by Monday. Please help bring real broadband to Orange!

  1. Go to www.speedtest.net and note your current upload and download speeds.

  2. Complete this 5-minute survey.

Even if you’ve filled out the survey before, it would help to do it again. The more responses NTIA get from our county—particularly our corner of it—the better.

Learn About Our Trees (and then eat hot dogs)

The Orange Conservation Commission is hosting a special event Saturday, November 6, from 3pm to 5pm: Naturalist Michael Wojtech, author of Bark: A Field Guide to Trees of the Northeast, will give us a walking lecture through our woods.

We’ll meet at the Heinrichs place, 148 Cardigan Mountain Road; the drive is just opposite Tuttle Hill Road. Dress for a walk in the woods—shoes that can get wet, November-friendly outer gear—as well as something orange for hunting season. A hot dog roast will follow. Bring money if you want to buy a book!

Let Sandi Pierson know if you’re coming: 603-523-7936.

Orange Planning Board Notice of Public Hearing

The Orange Planning Board will hold a public hearing at its regular meeting, 6:30pm Tuesday, October 19, to receive public comments on proposed amendments to the Town of Orange Driveway Regulations. The meeting will be held remotely on Zoom. You can find link and call-in details on the Calendar.

You can find the draft revisions here, and the current regulations here.

Cemetery workshop

Gulley Dunlap asked us to post this:

The Orange Cemetery Trustees will be hosting a workshop on the proper care and maintenance of old gravestones. John Lord of the New Hampshire Old Graveyard Association will lead the workshop on September 18, 2021, 2-4pm, at the Orange Common Cemetery on Tug Mountain Road. Interested in helping preserve this important piece of Orange’s history? Please RSVP to Anita Watson Garland (523-7141/anitawats at hotmail.com) or Gulley Dunlap (ecossaise at comcast.net).

News from the Friends of Mascoma Foundation

Eula Lee Kozma, the foundation’s executive director, asked us to post this:

The Friends of Mascoma Foundation has been working with the UNH Extension on a project called Mascoma Builds Community Resilience. UNH Extension received a grant to facilitate this project in three rural NH communities; Mascoma was selected as one of the three. While this is different from the Enfield Master Planning process that a group is undertaking in Enfield, we will be working collaboratively.  

As rural communities emerge from the Covid-19 pandemic, we working together to gather information, make organizational connections, apply lessons learned, and re-emerge stronger than ever.

We are working to:


- Build a regional team of partners and community members interested in building resiliency in the Mascoma region.
- Come together as a community to learn about each other, our assets, and where to go from here.
- Begin to identify ways to build resiliency in community and to take action as part of a regional team.

Ways to get involved today:

  1. LAST CALL FOR THE SNA: As part of the Mascoma Builds Community Resilience project, we are conducting a Social Network Analysis (SNA) to better understand what organizations are currently collaborating with each other in the region and at what level. Please fill out our quick survey to help us see who you are already connected to in the Mascoma region: This survey will close on Friday August 6th.

  2. We are trying to get a better understanding of what ‘community’ means to folks generally and specifically what they like (or do not like) about the Mascoma Valley Region. Please answer the three questions on this form.

  3. Help us spread the word! Share information about this project with your friends, neighbors, and co-workers. The more folks who know and participate, the better the results !

If you have any questions, please don’t hesitate to reach out to Eula at elkozma@friendsofmascoma.org

Here's Where to Get Vaccinated

At this point, 57.7% of New Hampshire residents are fully vaccinated against Covid-19—well above the national rate of 49.1% but behind all our New England neighbors (Vermont leads the nation at 67%). The Upper Valley Public Health Emergency Preparedness team is pushing ahead with more vaccine clinics on our side of the river.

Here are some of the walk-in clinics being scheduled. Some offer vaccination to anyone aged 12 and over; others require a minimum age of 18. For more information, go to Vaccines.gov.

July 22, 4-7pm

Lebanon Farmers Market, Colburn Park, Lebanon
Hosted by Lebanon Fire
Offering J&J and others based on availability

Open to anyone aged 12 and older

 

July 23, 10am-1:30pm

Listen Thrift Store, 387 Miracle Mile, Lebanon

Offering J&J and Moderna, based on availability
Open to anyone aged 18 and older

 

July 23, 3-6pm

MTD Building Contractors, 9 on the Common, Canaan
Offering J&J and Pfizer, based on availability

Open to anyone aged 12 and older

 

July 27, 12-3pm

Orford Congregational Church, Rt. 10, Orford
Offering J&J and Pfizer, based on availability

Open to anyone aged 12 and older

 

August 7-8

Orford Flea Market, On the Common, Orford

More details to be determined

 

August 20-22

Cornish Fair, Fairgrounds, Cornish

More details to be determined

Supervisors of the Checklist Notice

New Hampshire law requires that the Supervisors of the Checklist verify the checklist every ten years. Any person on the checklist who has not voted in the past four years must re-register to remain on the checklist. 

The Supervisors are sending notice letters to these voters at the address the voter provided when registering.

 

The Supervisors of the Checklist for the Town of Orange will hold a session for re-registering voters who have not voted since April 1, 2017, accepting applications for new voter registration, accepting requests for the correction of the checklist, and or change of political party affiliation on:

 

Date: Monday, June 21, 2021

Time: 6:00 p.m. – 6:30 p.m.

Location: Orange Town House

Cardigan Mountain Road

Orange, New Hampshire

      

Voters may check party affiliation on-line:

https://app.sos.nh.gov/Public/PollingPlaceSearch.aspx

 

Help Get a Grant for the Town House Roof

Doug and Trish Weekes have been working diligently on grants to be used to restore our historic Town House’s roof. They are applying for a Moose Plate grant, a competitive process that includes getting a letter of support from as many residents as possible.

If you see someone at the Town House, please consider stopping in to sign the letter of support which is posted on the bulletin board in the foyer.

You may also send a letter of support by snail mail (P.O. Box 37, Canaan) or email (townoforangenh@gmail.com). Your letter of support should read something like this:

The Orange Town House is critical to our small, rural community and we want to be sure it is restored so it can continue to be the seat of government and place for meetings and community gatherings. As residents of Orange, NH, we strongly support our town’s pursuit of Moose Plate Grant funding for help in restoring our historic Town House’s roof.

100-Mile Relay Race Coming Through Orange August 14

The Loco Races 100 on 100 Relay, traditionally run in Vermont, is being moved to New Hampshire this year because of Vermont’s continuing Covid restrictions.

With a start line in Lebanon on the Northern Rail Trail, the course covers 46 miles to Franklin, then heads back 54 miles through Danbury to Lebanon. Our stretch of the course takes the runners down the length of Tuttle Hill Road from Grafton, turning left onto Cardigan Mountain Road.

The race organizer originally asked permission to go through Orange via Burnt Hill and Cardigan Mountain Road. But the Selectboard, road agent, and emergency management folks deemed the course too dangerous. The intersection with the access road to the state park, along with the dirt portion of the state road, gets a lot of traffic on a Saturday afternoon in August.

So expect to see as many as 150 teams of up to six runners, with a support van for each team. One racer per team will be running at a time. The race begins at 5:00am with most participants finishing around 11:00pm. We can expect to see them in Orange between 3:00 and 7:00pm.

Here’s a screen shot of the course. You can see the full interactive map in detail on the race site.

Race Course.png

Loco 100 by 100 Relay

Cemetery Trustees Meet Next Wednesday

Gulley Dunlap reports:

The Cemetery Trustees will meet at the Church Cemetery on Wednesday, May 12, 2021, 6:00-7:00 p.m.

Action items include approving the April 20, 2021 minutes, surveying the condition of cemetery headstones in the Church Cemetery, discussing flag placement responsibilities, and general long-term planning.

The meeting is open to the public.