Author of the article: Marie Conboy
Publishing date: Apr 26, 2021 • 7 hours ago • 4 minute read •
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In conjunction with National Volunteer Week, FCSS hosted the Mayor’s volunteer recognition event for those nominated in the Canmore community This year’s virtual celebration recognized approximately 50 Canmore Volunteers both from 2020 and 2021.
Canmore Mayor John Borrowman opened the evening welcoming the 80 viewers who tuned in at home munching on goodies on Zoom on April 22.
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He opened with this year’s theme “
The Value of One, the Power of Many building a vibrant community starts with one volunteer, but takes the power of many.”
The Queen of Happiness - Cathy Speck sactownmag.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from sactownmag.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
It seemed like a case of very bad timing that a small Cache Valley womenâs choir dedicated to comforting terminally ill patients in their final hours was formed last spring just before the cornavirus pandemic.
The all-volunteer group, called the Cache Valley Threshold Singers, had only visited one patient before their unique service became impossible to perform. Choir members could no longer safely gather to sing together, and even had they chosen to risk it, local care facilities were no longer allowing visitors.
Turns out the impossible had a workaround in the form of technology that has allowed the choir to record their songs without meeting in one place to sing. And now families wanting to comfort a dying loved one with this groupâs intimate choral music can simply download it and play it on a phone placed by a pillow.
‘A sense of peace’
Before the pandemic, hospice volunteers could hold patients’ hands and talk with them face-to-face. They’re still finding ways to keep patients comfortable and that connection helps the volunteers, too. By Amy Halpern |
December 21, 2020
Musician Nina Falk from the nonprofit A Musical Heart performs outside Casey House in Rockville. Photo by Lisa Helfert
In February 2016, Tom Hall turned to his wife, Lisa, after dinner in Dupont Circle and told her he couldn’t figure out the 20% tip. They both knew
right away that something was terribly wrong. Tom, a high-ranking CIA executive, was “brilliant a Ph.D.-level mathematician,” Lisa says.