Commentary

Keelan: Vermont institutions are disappearing

by Don Keelan

There seems to be a rash of closings of Vermont’s long-time institutions. The latest is in Plainfield, Vermont, announcing that the nearly 90-year-old Goddard College will close at the end of the semester. 

It includes colleges and other institutions, such as churches, stores, fire/rescue facilities, schools, and companies. What will soon happen are the closings of organizations operating at or close to the margin of being unable to exist. This includes health care, nonprofit, and business/retail organizations. 

At one time serving over 1,900 students, Goddard College’s closure joins the others: Green Mountain College, St. Joseph’s College, Southern Vermont College, Marlboro College, and Burlington College. 

Vermont continues to have vital centers of higher learning, with institutions such as Bennington College, Norwich University, Middlebury College, the University of Vermont, and several more. Nevertheless, other institutions find sustainability to be highly challenging. 

Don Keelan

In addition to colleges, scores of Catholic churches have closed in Vermont since 1990; an internet search notes over 20 between 1990 and 2019. The reasons given were the inability of the Catholic Diocese of Burlington to provide priests, the lack of parishioners, and the fallout from the pedophilia crisis that brought financial and negative public opinion upon the Church. 

The closing of churches has not only been associated with the Catholic Church but also many of Vermont’s Protestant houses of worship. As reported by the Guardian, this follows a national trend: in 2019, over 4,500 churches closed their doors due to declining membership.

This is the case with the closing of a 100-year-old Catholic Church, once a reservoir of joyful and sorrowful emotions emanating from the thousands of baptisms, weddings, and funerals. 

In addition, there are the service, fraternal, and veteran establishments that once were in almost every Vermont town. Due to a lack of members, they, too, are in financial instability and cease to provide the many community services they once were noted for. 

The closing of schools will be on the table. Institutions are the heart and soul of a community. Schools with low student-to-teacher ratios, such as Woodford, with 21 students; Sunderland, with 53; and Roxbury Village, with 47, have to feel threatened that their institutions could disappear. 

The regionalization of fire-houses and rescue services, institutions with enrollment constituting generations of family members, will see closings in the future. Towns can ill afford their cost, and volunteer members have declined for years. 

Today, the former Orvis Co. headquarters in Sunderland and the 92-year-old Sam’s Outdoor Outfitters establishment in Brattleboro are unoccupied. While these companies continue to operate, they are not where they once were. 

The intangible loss resulting from the closing of institutions is not a vacant building(s) but the loss of a place. In some instances, a sacred place where so much emotion was once expressed. 

The six colleges noted above have provided generations of emotional experiences for many students, staff, faculty, and their families, especially at first-semester drop-off and commencement ceremonies. 

I am no expert on the matter, but social media is filling the vacuum of what once was a more physically connected society. There is less person-to-person interaction now, even in this small State of Vermont.

If additional evidence is needed, one only needs to calculate the audience at the annual Town Meeting. This two-hundred-year-old institution is slowly losing its significance. 

Of course, we can put our smartphones and computers aside for one or two nights a week, re-engage with our neighbors, and realize that we can’t afford to stand by and watch our long-existing institutions close because no one cares.

The author is a U.S. Marine (retired), CPA, and columnist living in Arlington, VT.

Categories: Commentary

9 replies »

  1. Another thoughtful and seminal column by one of our most important and caring voices in Vermont.

  2. maybe you should stop dancing in the puddleofpiss in vermont and pay more attention as to what pickpocketpowell and grammy smellen yellen are doing at the federal reserve and their interest rate scam/// these clowns will create more inflation and shut down the money supply and create another lock down////

  3. The Vermont I once knew has been centralized, consolidated, taxed and regulated out of existence. As local self governance is legislated away the state bureaucracy gets bigger, more expensive and more powerful while at the same time your voice in your so called “democracy” disappears. Vermont voters have been warned about this for decades and have scoffed at those trying to preserve your rights. They continue to vote for their own demise.
    Keelan, despite what he writes, seems to endorse this trend with his advocacy of closing rural fire and rescue squads which are the least expensive and most responsive government services still operating in the state.

    The most obvious fat that can be cut is the state education bureaucracy. Every last bit of it.

    • I would suggest that there is a fair amount of “fat” making decisions under the “Golden Dome”. Do we realy need 180 legislators ? New York State is how many times more populous than Vermont, and yet they have a total of only 213 total legislators, and they still manage to spend plenty of taxpayer money ! Let’s get real, and take back Vermont !

  4. Personally I was glad to see it go. I often wonder if it was not there, or at least if it had closed down before 1965 or so, would we have had Bernie Sanders, and all the Commie crap that he pushed on the drug addled, impressionable minds that made up that institute of high learning, and the people of Burlington ? We’ll never know for sure, but I think I’d be happier today with the politics, if all those that came here because of that alternative learning institution, had received their education elsewhere, and stayed there .

  5. Mr. Keelan, you forgot to mention all the dairy farms , Mom and Pop country stores, Residential Care Homes, group homes and nursing homes. We have so many well established businesses that have closed in Franklin County. I do not see them being replaced. When business owners complained that they couldn’t afford all the rules and regulations, taxes ect… they were told ,”Well if you cant afford to be in business you don’t deserve to be in business. We don’t need you.” It is clear to me that Vermont is dying.

  6. Our with the Republic, in with Marxism…..there is a simple little step in between, it’s called getting people to believe we are a democracy, massive use of propaganda…

    see Yuri Bezmanov videos for Subversive tactics used in Color revolution. Implement through community organizers…..

    Voila…..

    You will now own nothing and be happy.

    Eat your bugs and shut up, we are ruling now. We pigs are more equal than you.