Thank you to our Diamond Cinderblock Level
Sponsor:
May 16, 2018- Community
Dinner
(This
not an official part of Cinderblocks event but fun to attend.) The
Appalachian Wagon Train will have a community dinner at the Grantsville Stock
Yard 1060 Springs Rd,
Grantsville, MD 21536 from 4-7 p.m. the cost is $5 per person. All
are invited to eat hot dogs grilled over an open fire and see the Conestoga
wagons with horses, as they get ready to head west Thursday morning.
Thank you to our Silver Cinderblock level sponsor:
Cinderblocks4: Conference Day 1
On Thursday, May 17 we will meet at 9:00 am at Penn Alps
Restaurant and Meeting Center in the Alpine Room. Coffee is provided.
9:00 Opening remarks are by Regina Holliday, conference
planner and founder of the Walking Gallery of Healthcare.
Caronne Taylor Bloom, Allentown, PA
Children’s Integrated Center for Success (CICS) is a
multidisciplinary treatment center in the Lehigh Valley committed to
creating a path for success for children and their families. We serve the
needs of children and adolescents living with Autism Spectrum Disorders, ADHD,
Anxiety, and Mood Disorders. They will present on how data helps inform strength-based narratives for our families
and their children.
Ruth Chisholm is a Registered Dietitian Nutritionist with
Garrett Regional Medical Center. Ruth provides nutrition counseling for chronic
disease management and prevention. She strives to help individuals establish
habits that can be maintained for a lifetime.
Ms. Chisholm and Miranda Kessel, also of Garrett Regional
Medical Center, will give a brief overview of the nutrition and diabetes
services that GRMC offers (diabetes prevention program, outpatient nutrition
counseling, outpatient diabetes clinic.)
11-11:45- Heather Hanline, Oakland, MD
Executive Director of the Dove Center will present on the
correlation between health disparity and trauma/sexual violence. Ms. Hanline holds a Master’s degree in Counseling Psychology and
is a Licensed Clinical Therapist. She has over 25 years of
experience in the human services field, working with trauma victims in a
variety of settings. For the past 20 years, she has followed her
passion to end domestic violence and sexual assault with the Dove Center, where
she began as a counselor and has spent the past 18 years as the Executive
Director. She is a past recipient of the Governor’s Victim
Assistance Award, for doubling the number of individuals served by the Dove
Center in her first year of leadership. She also spearheaded the
building of the Dove Center’s combined counseling and shelter offices, which
now stands as a permanent symbol of safety and healing. She has
written guest blogs for several statewide organizations, and has originated
many innovative programs within the Dove Center’s programming.
Lunch is at noon.
12:30-1:00 Sandeep Pulim, Chief
Innovation Officer, Medici, Washington, DC
Medici is a next-generation HIPAA-compliant messaging app that enables
medical providers and their patients to communicate virtually via text or
video. Medici enables patient communication with their existing medical
providers, creating an efficient channel for patients and their doctors that
allows for more customized and timely medical care through a single app. Medici
is an app that is revolutionizing the doctor-patient relationship and it is now
available in all 50 states.
Prior to joining the Medici team, Sandeep worked to enable cognitive technology at the point of care for HCPs and patients, to positively impact clinical learning and quality measures for health care organizations and payers. Previously as co-founder of Health Recovery Solutions, he helped empower patients to better manage their health and improve quality of life using evidence-based interventions.
Prior to joining the Medici team, Sandeep worked to enable cognitive technology at the point of care for HCPs and patients, to positively impact clinical learning and quality measures for health care organizations and payers. Previously as co-founder of Health Recovery Solutions, he helped empower patients to better manage their health and improve quality of life using evidence-based interventions.
1:00 to 1:30 Mary Anne Sterling, CEA, Ashburn,
Virginia Disrupting the Caregiver Experience
MaryAnne was a caregiver and healthcare advocate for her parents for 20+
years. She is a speaker, writer, and educator on the challenges of family
caregiving and the brutal impact of dementia, a mission that began as she and her
husband struggled with 3-out-of-4 parents diagnosed with the disease. She works
tirelessly to advocate for other families and you will often find her on
Capitol Hill or speaking at healthcare events around the country. MaryAnne is
EVP of Caregiver Experience at tech startup Livpact, Co-founder of
teamiCARE.org, and CEO of Sterling Health IT Consulting.
1:45-2:00 Robb Fulks, Reading, PA will be telling his Patient Story
2:00-2:25 Ashley Elliott, Grantsville, MD
“Opioid Epidemic in the Community: What is REALLY
happening? What can WE do to change it?”
2:30-3:00
Janice Lynch Schuster, Riva, MD
“Prove It: How Poor Pain Management and the
Opioid Can Upend A Life”? Janice Lynch Schuster is a poet, writer, artist and
curious person. Her career writing about public health issues for federal
contractors did not prepare her to live with them.
As a journalist she has frequently contributed to The Washington Post, including the Health and local opinions sections. She is a coauthor of an award-winning book on end-of-life care. After minor oral surgery in March 2013, she developed a chronic neuropathic condition called burning mouth syndrome, followed by a host of autoimmune disorders.
Since then she has joined the nation of pain patients, just in time to find herself in the cross hairs of the current battle about whether or not to treat people with chronic pain with opioids. In the course of these public skirmishes, Lynch Schuster has written about her struggle to find appropriate treatment, and what it's like to be over treated, undertreated, and mistreated, sometimes on the same day. Her website is www.janicelynchschuster.com
As a journalist she has frequently contributed to The Washington Post, including the Health and local opinions sections. She is a coauthor of an award-winning book on end-of-life care. After minor oral surgery in March 2013, she developed a chronic neuropathic condition called burning mouth syndrome, followed by a host of autoimmune disorders.
Since then she has joined the nation of pain patients, just in time to find herself in the cross hairs of the current battle about whether or not to treat people with chronic pain with opioids. In the course of these public skirmishes, Lynch Schuster has written about her struggle to find appropriate treatment, and what it's like to be over treated, undertreated, and mistreated, sometimes on the same day. Her website is www.janicelynchschuster.com
3:00
-3:30 Joshua Rubin, JD, MBA, MPH, MPP, "Democratizing Health Together: The Moral
Imperative of Our Time"
Mr. Rubin serves as Program Officer for Learning Health
System Initiatives at the University of Michigan Medical School’s
first-of-its-kind Department of Learning Health Sciences. He also serves as
Executive Director and Vice President of the Board of Directors of the Joseph
H. Kanter Family Foundation. Previously, Rubin served as a Senior Policy
Fellow at eHealth Initiative (eHI) and as a Senior Consultant at IBM
Global Business Services, working at the intersection of the health information
technology, health policy, consumer engagement, and public health arenas in
both roles.
Rubin has conducted research related to
and played instrumental leadership roles in developing the concepts for and
convening cross-disciplinary meetings that have galvanized multi-stakeholder
communities of interest to advance important collaborative efforts to
innovatively address critical societal challenges at national and global scales
— inside and outside of
healthcare. Examples include: the 2010 International Working Meeting on
Electronic Medical Records and Outcomes Research, the National eHealth
Collaborative (NeHC) Consumer Consortium on eHealth, the 2012 Learning Health
System Summit, the 2013 National Campus Sexual Assault Summit convened by
Promoting Awareness, Victim Empowerment (PAVE), and several National Science Foundation
(NSF) funded inter-disciplinary workshops aimed at coalescing a scientific
community of interest to advance the research agenda to underpin a
high-functioning Learning Health System.
Rubin serves as an active founding member of
the Interim Steering Committee of the Learning Health Community, an
international multi-stakeholder grassroots movement dedicated to realizing
the Learning Health System vision on a national (and ultimately global) scale.
He also serves as its President and CEO on a pro bono basis. Rubin
has presented on the Learning Health System vision and the need for
multi-stakeholder, trans-disciplinary collaboration to realize it at
conferences and meetings nationwide. He serves as Director of Policy for the
Opioid Research Institute of the United States, a project funded
by the Joseph H. Kanter Family Foundation. Rubin also serves pro bono in
board or advisory capacities to PAVE (as President of the Board of Directors),
to the Vlasic & Roth LLC Lab (as Executive Director), to the Learning
Health Systems open access scientific journal, to the Trans-disciplinary
Collaborative Center for Health Disparities Research: Health Information
Technology Policy Project (TCC HIT) convened by Morehouse School of Medicine,
to the Global Alliance for Genomics & Health (GA4GH) eHealth Task Team, to
Philanthropy for Active Civic Engagement (PACE), and to the Healthcare
Information and Management Systems Society (HIMSS).
Rubin has published and presented extensively
and has served as Guest Editor of a special theme issue of the Learning
Health Systems open access scientific journal about patient empowerment
and the Learning Health System. He has been recognized as a Disruptive
Women in Health Care “Man of the Month” and an inaugural National Association
for Trusted Exchange (NATE) “Champion of Consumer Access”. A valedictorian, a
life member of MENSA, and a graduate of Georgetown University’s College of Arts
and Sciences (Summa Cum Laude, Phi Beta Kappa), Rubin holds a Juris Doctor (JD)
law degree from Georgetown University Law Center (Cum Laude) and is a member of
the Virginia State Bar and the District of Columbia Bar. He also holds a Master
of Business Administration (MBA) and a Master of Public Policy (MPP) from
Georgetown University, and a Master of Public Health (MPH) from the Johns
Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health, all with healthcare
concentrations (and all with high honors/distinction).
Ileana Balcu is a Healthcare IT Project Manager for Dulcian,
Inc. She manages The Chronic Care Management software used by hundreds of
primary care practices and a budgeting and reporting system for the Office of
Alcohol and Substance Abuse in the state of NY. Since 2003 when she had
preeclampsia, Ileana became an empowered patient and a patient advocate. She
was a volunteer IT Director for The Preeclampsia Foundation and Board Member
and Communications Lead for the Society for Participatory Medicine. Ileana
teaches the New Media and Health Communications course at The College of New
Jersey. As a caregiver, she helped Paul Dorsey manage his cancer
journey.
4:00-4:30 Steve Daviss Senior Medical Advisor, Office of the CMO at Substance
Abuse & Mental Health Services Administration (OPPI/SAMHSA/HHS)
4:30-5:00 Mark Johnson, MHA, RN‑BC, CPHIMS, FHIMSS, Blue Ridge, South Carolina “The Danger of Sepsis. “
Mark
Johnson is a Senior Director at Iatric Systems. Mark joined Iatric Systems in
2007 and has served in various software solutions roles during his time with
Iatric Systems. Mark’s nursing background includes psychiatric, cardiac and
oncology practice. Mark is currently serving on the board of directors for the
American Nursing Informatics Association and has previously served on HIMSS
national committees and taskforces, including the Connected Patient committee
and the PGHD taskforce.
The daily educational conference session ends at 5:00pm.
Feel free to explore the grounds, rest and grab a bite to eat before the
evening program begins.
7:00pm
to 10:00pm Dedication to those we have lost in the past year at Salt and Pepper
Studios
On
Thursday, May 18th at 7:00pm a dedication will be held at Salt
and Pepper Studios: the home of the Walking Gallery, 189 Main Street in
Grantsville. Conference attendees and members of the public are
invited. Refreshments will be provided and the dedication is free
and open to the public. From 7:30-8:30 Paul Zimmerman and Greg Hays
will play guitar. At 8:00pm perform a
dedication in honor Aaron Richardson, friend of the Walking Gallery, who
attended the first gathering in 2011. He
was an amazing person who loved Doctor Who, computer technology, and his
friends and family.
We will
also honor Lori Marx-Rubiner who died August 2, 2017. She was a member of the Walking Gallery and
an amazing breast cancer advocate.
Conference Day 2,
On Friday, May 20th another conference day
begins! At 9:00 am we meet at Penn Alps Restaurant and Meeting
Center for breakfast and our general session. Coffee is provided.
9:00am Opening remarks Regina Holliday
9:05-9:35 Paul
Edwards,
Grantsville, MD County
Commissioner for Garrett County will present on the state of the county and the
history of Grantsville.
9:45-10:00 Danny van Leeuwen,
Boston, MA Speaks on the many things we do to improve healthcare: playing, speaking,
blogging, clinical care…
An action catalyst empowering people traveling together toward best
health, wears many hats in healthcare: patient with Multiple Sclerosis, care
partner for several family members’ end-of-life journeys, a nurse for 40 years,
an informaticist and a QI leader. A patient and caregiver activist writing,
speaking, and advising on learning what works for people in their health
journey: informed decision-making, patient-centered research, communication at
transitions of care and technology supporting solutions created by and for
people. Serves on the Steering Committee of AHRQ’s Patient-Centered Clinical
Decision Support (PCCDS) Learning Network and as patient expert for CDS
Connect. Reviews PCORI research funding applications and serves as co-chair of
PCORI’s Clinical Effectiveness and Decision Science (CEDS) Advisory Panel.
Active in the Society for Participatory Medicine as editor of their newsletter.
Member of the Health Information Systems Society (HIMSS) and the Academy of
Communication in Healthcare (ACH). Technical expert for the CMS-funded
Supporting Efficiency and Innovation in the Process of Developing CMS Quality
Measures. Blogs weekly (www.health-hats.com) and recently published in BMJ and
JoPM. Plays baritone saxophone.
10:05-10:40 Lisa Skipper, Mountain Laurel Medical Center, Oakland, MD
Certified Navigator with MD Health Connection and Project Coordinator with RAEN (Rural Action Enrollment Network) at Mountain Laurel Medical Center in Oakland, MD since 2013.
“I love what I do in assisting, not only our patients, but others from the community in need of health insurance. We go beyond just helping them with enrollment; we offer benefits counseling and education, as well as answering questions in an ever changing insurance world for those in Medicaid and health plans with monthly premiums.”
Married with 2 sons, who are both Volunteer Firefighters with Bittinger VFD. Lives on the family farm near Bittinger and is a member of St. John’s Lutheran Church at Red House where she currently serves as Council President and on other committees.
10:45-11:00 Colin Hung, #HCLDR, Toronto, Canada
Results-driven marketing professional with extensive experience building
and leading high-performance teams for large and start-up companies.
Consistently over-achieved growth and revenue targets through innovative
marketing strategies. Extremely resourceful leader that knows how to combine
social, digital and traditional marketing into cohesive strategies that
outperform competitors and open new markets. Proven change agent who builds
bridges across teams, companies and countries through openness as well as
mutual respect. Passionate about patients, #HealthIT and
healthcare. Specialties: branding, digital marketing, demand generation,
event marketing, content marketing, ABM, social selling, client retention,
product innovation, alliances, partnerships, international expansion
11:05-11:30 Mike Mittleman, Philadelphia, PA Speaks about
Living Donation
Michael Mittelman is
currently the Co-Founder and VP of Patient Advocacy and Strategic Partnerships
of the American Living Organ Donor Fund, a patient rights group focused on
helping living organ donors in their quest to become a donor. Michael has also
worked as a payer when he served as a Product Development and Capability
Manager at Independence Blue Cross. He is the former Patient Editor at The BMJ,
and he currently sits on the International Patient Advisory Panel. Prior to
that he was the CEO and Co-Founder of PHmHealth, a digital health company focused
on post-acute care and compliance. His experience as a patient spans over 3
decades. He is a 3-time kidney transplant recipient with other chronic
conditions, including a rare disease. Michael was invited to testify/advocate
before the FDA and serves as PCORI (Patient-Centered Outcomes Research
Institute) patient representative. Additionally, he serves on the steering
committee of a PCORI-Funded initiative. He has also overseen the mobile app
development taskforce and the data governance taskforce for the same
PCORI-funded initiative, the NephCure Kidney Network. Michael is a tireless,
independent patient advocate and a healthcare strategist. He strongly believes
that patients should play integral roles in healthcare companies and government
agencies. Michael holds an MBA in Healthcare Management from the Fox School of
Business at Temple University. He also has a BA in Biological Basis of Behavior
from the University of Pennsylvania. He is a published author with recent
pieces in the American Journal of Transplantation and the BMJ.
11:30-12:00 Jade Kenney and Kendra Brill speak about Rainbow
Bridge Home in La Vale, MD
Jade has
such a unique story, with such incredible experience on so many different
levels. From parenting skills to trauma, she has journeyed upon
so many different avenues, which has molded Jade into a
true warrior who has fought relentlessly to overcome adversity, in the
face of oppression. Jade's stories will leave you breathless yet coming back for more.
Not only is she is a gift to our team, she is an asset to everyone who comes
into her presence, especially with those who seek out her services, and what
she can offer which comes selflessly. Jade, wants nothing more than to help
those who are struggling and suffering so that they
never have to go through hell feeling lost, and broken, all
alone. Jade and the rest of the staff at the Rainbow Bridge
Home are here to keep our torches lit, in order to help other's find their
way back into the light!
Kendra Brill is a certified
facilitator trainer for transgender support groups. She brings her knowledge and experience as a
lifelong transgender advocate and business woman to oversee
LGBTQIA coaching groups internationally.
As a business owner in the
cosmetics industry, she is in a unique position to empower LGBTQIA
Youth to embrace their identities and accentuate their gifts in
Rainbow Bridge's life groups and support programs.
“For the LGBTQIA community,
everyday tasks can bring seemingly insurmountable challenges to overcome as we
transition to our authentic selves. Sometimes, these challenges will threaten
to overwhelm us, and at these times, we’ll feel the need to reach out to
friends, peers and charities for support. It’s for this reason that I
envisioned the Rainbow Bridge Home as a safe space and feel the desire and
the passion to share this venture with the Cumberland, Maryland community. To share the experience and
trust in their inner strength. I
passionately believe across America, the time has come to create a movement. A
movement that advocates for equality of rights and respect for diversity at a
local and national level. A movement which has the compassion and network to
support our community on a personal level where it is so often needed. It’s for this reason that you should consider joining,
too. As a LGBTQIA community, we’re
already knocking on and breaking glass ceilings. We are the police, the doctors
and nurses, the soldiers and politicians that society turns to in times of
needs. Our time is coming! Join us on
our path.”
Jade Catherine Kenney is
not only a certified life coach and a Survivor, she is the mother of 2
beautiful children, Hayden 13, and Ellie Grace, 3. She has been in
recovery since 2014 and has fought diligently to restore her
life, obtain custody of her children, and give them a home and a place
where they can finally plant their roots and grow into a life they once
never could have imagined would be possible.
As
a life coach, Jade encourages and counsels her clients on a range of
professional and personal issues. Jade has a distinct ability
to connect with her client's through advice, consulting, counseling,
mentoring and therapy. Her coaching technique takes on
specific professional projects, personal goals and transitions by analyzing the
current situation, identifying existing and potential challenges and obstacles
and devising a plan of action designed to achieve specific outcomes.
The
life coach/client relationship is a creative partnership which seeks to:
·
Identify, clarify and create a vision
for what the client wants
·
Use coach’s expertise to modify goals as
needed
·
Encourage client’s self-discovery
·
Nurture and evoke strategies and a plan
of action based on what fits best with the client’s goals, personality and
vision
·
Foster client accountability to increase
productivity
These aspects of the process
all work together to allow the client to maximize his or her potential, and
research shows that coaching and training is a far more potent combination than
training alone. In fact, training alone can increase productivity by 22.4%, but
when combined with weekly life coaching, productivity is boosted by 88%.
Jade's association with the
Rainbow Bridge Home has quite a twist. Before this house became a healing home
it was once a house of horror for her. This is something she
shares personally in her sexual abuse recovery groups, which are open to
the public, and to survivors and victims of sexual abuse, rape, or molestation.
12:00-12:30 Lunch buffet
12:30-1:00 Mark Scrimshire, Baltimore, MD from Center for Medicaid and Medicare Services in Baltimore will present a discussion on patient empowerment and Blue Button.
Entrepreneur-In-Residence at NewWave Telecoms and Technologies (newwave.io), currently on assignment as Medicare Blue Button 2.0 Innovator at the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) where I have designed and implemented the new API to enable 53 million Medicare Beneficiaries share their claims information with the applications, services and research programs they choose to trust. This HL7 FHIR-based API is being held up as a model for adoption across the HealthCare industry. Co-Founder of Medyear, a Salesforce accelerator company. Previous Health sector experience has included designing a platform for chronic diseases during the early days of the Internet, working with CareFirst on the implementation of the NPI, and establishing the first cloud-based ICD10 computer-assisted coding platform for 3M as part of the transition of its entire product line to a cloud-based architecture.As the founder and Chief Instigator of HealthCa.mp, an international series of “un-conferences” breaking down silos and bringing people together to reinvent health care I have consistently advocated for patient engagement and empowerment. This passion for patient empowerment coupled with a diverse expertise across multiple Web and Health technologies provides me with a unique perspective in reengineering healthcare, from Strategy to development and deployment, with the patient/consumer at the centre.
1:00-1:30 Karla Robeson, Optimal Health Care
Karla J. Robeson,
BSc, Director of Marketing and Business Development for Optimal Health Care,
Inc.
Graduated from
Univ. of Maryland in College Park, emphasis of study in Family Management,
Community Development and Gerontology.
Upon graduating U
of MD, I spent several years working in the home health field as an assistant
director and trainer. After taking time out to spend raising my children,
I went back to work with Frederick County Schools, providing support to the
Special Education programs, including instruction in the pilot program for
Dyslexia Services. I then went to work for a non-profit agency (The Arc
of Frederick County) under contract with the Developmental Disabilities
Administration of Maryland, serving people with developmental disabilities
throughout Frederick county. Within that agency, I worked with families and
individuals meet their personal goals through community resources, in home
supports, equipment and supplies, as well as educational and medical advocacy.
In addition, I helped develop programs for Transitioning Youth and Futures and
Estate planning. I came to work for Optimal Health Care, Inc several years ago,
and have spent the last year working on developing our business opportunities
as we have grown to serve the entire state of Maryland in both Health care and
DDA Coordination.
1:30-200 Kistein Monkhouse on patient centered care
Seven years of direct care experience and passionate about changing the narrative of the modern day healthcare experience. So I founded Patient Orator with the intent of positively impacting the way we conceptualize, practice, and experience healthcare. In short, I’m excited to be leading the #PatientOrator movement and I’m looking forward to the road ahead. I’ll be featuring stories on Patient Advocacy, Patient Experience, Civic Engagement:Thoughts on US Healthcare System and Advancing Health Equity in the United States. Watch me have these discussions with key stakeholders all across the U.S via the Patient Orator Youtube channel & Website (www.patientorator.com).
Seven years of direct care experience and passionate about changing the narrative of the modern day healthcare experience. So I founded Patient Orator with the intent of positively impacting the way we conceptualize, practice, and experience healthcare. In short, I’m excited to be leading the #PatientOrator movement and I’m looking forward to the road ahead. I’ll be featuring stories on Patient Advocacy, Patient Experience, Civic Engagement:Thoughts on US Healthcare System and Advancing Health Equity in the United States. Watch me have these discussions with key stakeholders all across the U.S via the Patient Orator Youtube channel & Website (www.patientorator.com).
2:00-3pm Julia Musselwhite, DNR Healthy Parks, Healthy People: Finding Wellness in Your
Local Outdoors
Ranger
Julia Musselwhite has worked for the Maryland Park Service since 2006,
beginning as an AmeriCorps volunteer with the Maryland Conservation Corps and
eventually earning full time ranger status. Her career began near her
hometown in Harford County, but she has been a Garrett County resident since
2011 and is the current Assistant Park Manager at Rocky Gap State Park in
Allegany County. Whether for work, or in her personal life, Julia enjoys
time outdoors and helping others discover new opportunities and adventures. Attendees will go on a walking tour with Ranger
Julia.
The White Art House by The Cornucopia Cafe
(3:00-4:00 Facilitated Art Project sponsored by the Lilly Clinical Innovation team)
(3:00-4:00 Facilitated Art Project sponsored by the Lilly Clinical Innovation team)
The Walking Gallery Gathers 6:00-10:00pm
At 6:00 pm we will gather at
the Casselman River Bridge for a group shot of The Walking Gallery and the conference attendees. We
will then walk across the historic bridge to the Little Crossings field by
Spruce Artisan Village.
There we will have our evening event under the big tent; this portion of the conference event is open to the public and does not require tickets.
There we will have our evening event under the big tent; this portion of the conference event is open to the public and does not require tickets.
7:00-8:30Marsha Goodman-Wood,
Washington, DC, singer, songwriter and neuroscientist, will present “Music as
Medicine.”
Marsha Goodman-Wood is
a DC-based singer/songwriter, music and drama teacher, mom, and former
cognitive neuroscientist (BA in Psychology, Columbia University, 1994; MA in
Psychology/Cognitive Neuroscience, University of Missouri, 2000). Marsha’s
debut solo album Gravity Vacation contains fun original songs about science
& how the world works. Marsha performs regularly either solo or with her
band, The Positrons at venues and series in the DC/MD/VA area (and occasionally
further afield) that offer family entertainment, as well as museums (including
the Smithsonian National Air & Space Museum), libraries, schools, fairs and
festivals. Website: www.marshagoodmanwood.com
Marsha will dedicate a
few songs to the members of the Walking Gallery no longer with us.
8:30-9:00 Grab a stick and Make some smores around
the bonfire.
9:00-9:45: Terah Crawford, of The Terah Crawford Band based in Deep Creek
Lake Maryland. Combining their love for mountain music with classic rock,
outlaw country and just a touch a folk, they’ve created their own style of
playing. Check them out all over Garrett County, MD and surrounding areas to
enjoy their homegrown Appalachian Folk Rock ways
Conference Day 3
May 19, 9:00 am meet at Salt and Pepper Studios, 189 Main
Street. This day we will break into small groups to work on mentoring,
individual coaching sessions, poetry and painting Walking Gallery jackets until
noon. The Cornucopia Café and Little Crossings will also host
juried artists and local food venders for an Artisan and Epicurean Faire on
this day.
Thanks for taking part in our 5th Cinderblocks