Episode 6

Vermont's Annual Town Meeting, more than just a meeting - OR - How do we define ourselves?

February 20, 2026: Annual Town Meeting is around the corner. It's a day wrapped in traditions, stories, civic engagement, potluck lunches, and discussions about dollars and cents. But it is also an annual gathering that raises questions about how we ensure access, practice self-governance, build community, and the health of our local democracy.

Writer and educator, Susan Clark, has studied town-meeting styles of government across New England and in Europe. She returns to the show to discuss why Annual Town Meeting still matters, brain research, and Brattleboro's Representative Town Meeting. 

Clark is co-author of "Slow Democracy" with Woden Teachout, and "All Those In Favor," with University of Vermont Professor Frank Bryan. Both books are available for free download.

Slow Democracy: http://slowdemocracy.org/

All Those In Favor: https://vtinstituteforgovt.weebly.com/

Annual Town Meeting from the Vermont Secretary of State: https://sos.vermont.gov/elections/election-info-resources/town-meeting-local-elections/

Voice LIVE: Who Governs Brattleboro and How panel on Brattleboro's Representative Town Meeting (voters will consider doing away with the meeting structure): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Ct8p0xb2Yk


Theme music by Red Heart the Ticker: http://rhtt.net/

About the Podcast

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The Montpelier Happy Hour
A show about how things in the State House shake out for the rest of us

About your hosts

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Olga Peters

Producer and host Olga is a journalist by day and a screenwriter by night. On the Montpelier Happy Hour she combines a newshound's doggedness with a fiction writer's sense of "what if...".
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Emilie Kornheiser

Regular contributor Emilie Kornheiser represents Windham District 2-1 in the Vermont House of Representatives (that’s Brattleboro.) She always appreciates an opportunity to unpack the stories that drive us and hopes her gravestone will read “she asked good questions.” You can find more about her and her work in the legislature at emiliekornheiser.org.