N E W S

F E A T U R E S

C A L E N D A R

ANNOUNCEMENTS

O P I N I O N

P H O T O S

A R C H I V E S


R E S O U R C E
D I R E C T O R Y

R E A L  E S T A T E

C L A S S I F I E D S


A D V E R T I S E !

C O N T A C T  U S


E-MAIL L I S T S

VOICE • B L O G S

C O M M U N I T Y
L I N K S

Features

Care about the folk festival? Join the grassroots rally behind it

Does the Takoma Park/Silver Spring community want the Folk Festival to continue? If so, it's time to step up and be counted. We can't continue taking it for a given.

For 27 years, the Takoma Park Folk Festival has been a source of community pride. It's genuine and it's home-grown. While maintaining free admission, the festival raises thousands of dollars each year to support local youth organizations.

The festival will take place this year, as planned, on September 12 at Takoma Park Middle School. There will be more than 100 performers at eight music and dance stages, 20 food vendors, a juried crafts show with more than 40 artisans, more than 90 information tables set up by community organizations, and myriad children's activities. We expect the usual huge crowd of 6,000 to 12,000 folks.

However, I fear that as a community, we have started taking for granted the existence of the festival. At this point, the future of the festival seems quite uncertain to me.

As most of you probably know, our beloved chairperson, Lenore Robinson, was taken from us suddenly and tragically in April of this year. We on the festival committee are struggling to overcome the personal loss, as well as the loss of Lenore's leadership and inspiration, and her 27 years of experience and encyclopedic memory of festival details. We have committed ourselves to making the Festival a success this year, to honor Lenore's work. We are dedicating this year's Festival to Lenore's memory, and, since dancing was her particular passion, we have renamed the dance stage "The Lenore Robinson Dance Stage."

When I began volunteering as Community Tables Coordinator five years ago, I was amazed that this huge, well-organized event could be put on by a bunch of "unqualified" volunteers, and was curious as to how that was possible. I found out. Although the hundreds of volunteers who pitch in on the weekend of the festival are absolutely vital, the engine that drives the festival is a small cadre of highly committed folks who are responsible for planning, promotion, logistics, and organization in the months leading up to the great day.

I found that there were 10 or 12 hard-working folks shouldering significant continuing responsibilities, but Lenore was the one person whose commitment, vision, attention to detail, and enormous input of time and energy inspired and energized the festival organizers and made the whole thing work.

In addition to the enormous personal loss we are all feeling, there is the practical matter of filling the huge hole Lenore's passing left in the nuts-and-bolts of putting on the festival. Over the past few years, as folks dropped out of the festival for various reasons, we have had trouble filling the jobs. Lenore typically stepped in to fill the void. She assumed specific responsibility for coordinating the food vendors, parking and traffic control, and chairing the Program Committee (coordinating performers, stages and related logistics) this year–in addition to her regular overall responsibilities of planning and running the festival; interfacing with the City of Takoma Park, the county, the middle school, and sponsors; and coordinating the efforts of all the other festival organizers. This year, we also lost our volunteer coordinator and beneficiary coordinator (interfacing with the youth organizations which benefit from the festival) prior to Lenore's death.

Right now, we simply have too much work for the organizing committee to reasonably undertake. We are stretching as far as we can, but we are desperate for the community to step forward and show that it values the festival and wants it to continue.

We need people who are willing and able to devote at least a few hours a week for the months leading up to the 2004 Folk Festival, and to take personal responsibility for an aspect of the organization. No experience with events is necessary. All you need is the desire and commitment to help make the festival a success and the time to devote to do the necessary planning, coordination, and work. We will work together to help new people find a suitable job, and to figure out how they should do it.

Of course, we would also welcome the return of folks who have been involved previous festivals, who could bring their experience and knowledge to bear. At this time, several important jobs are unfilled: Food Vendor Coordinator, Volunteer Coordinator, Beneficiary Coordinator, and Parking Coordinator. If you have interest in any of these jobs, or just want to find out what you can do to help, please attend our next festival committee meeting on June 8 or the following one on June 30. Both are at 8 p.m. at the Municipal Building.

If you have questions or want to find out what the responsibilities of the specific open jobs are, please send an email to info@tpff.org, or leave a phone message at 301-589-0202. You can find general info on the festival at our web page: www.tpff.org. You may send me an email at tables@tpff.org or call me at 301-891-2549. It's time to show what the community is made of.

 
 

HOME NEWS FEATURES OPINION CLASSIFIEDS CALENDAR CONTACT US
Copyright 2004, Takoma Publishing, Inc.