Last Mile Ride raises $110,000 for end-of-life care for Central Vermonters

Vermont Business MagazineChip Milnor is a big man, in stature and in heart.Saturdayafternoon, beneath the Last Mile Ride (LMR) tent in Gifford Park in Randolph, friends, family and fellow bikers cheered him as he stood to be recognized as the event’s top fundraiser with $8,525, bringing the 13thannual Last Mile Ride fundraising total to $110,000 to support end-of-life care for central Vermonters—and the grand total to more than $760,000 since the inaugural LMR in 2006.

Milnor, who owns Chip’s Auto & Tire on Weston Street, was visibly overcome with emotion, as were many of the 154 bikers and their supporters who sat down to a barbecue lunch at Gifford after an 80-mile ride through Orange and Windsor counties. Many wiped away tears, embraced, and held hands while listening to remarks from event organizers. For them, it’s clear that Last Mile Ride is more than an excuse to get out on the open road, and as much as it’s a fundraiser, it’s about more than money.

Marie and Chip Milnor. Photos courtesy Gifford Health Care

“I think what encourages me is that I’ve lost some good friends up there, and getting to see what everyone puts into [Last Mile Ride],” said Milnor during a phone interviewMonday, referring to the support LMR provides dying patients and their grieving families.

“I’ve always said, everyone congratulates me, but it’s really about the good people who give,” he said. “I’m just the collector. I do it because of the cause.”

That cause drew a record-breaking 415 participants to this year’s two-day Last Mile Ride event, which beganFridaynight with a 5K and 1- and 2.5-mile walks. Riders, walkers and runners wore Last Mile Ride T-shirts with the event’s signature orange color, while others had custom T-shirts printed in memory of family members and friends they had lost to cancer or other advanced illness. They were there for their loved ones.

“Thanks to you, in addition to supporting palliative care services, Last Mile Ride helps make ends meet for families, covering necessities such as estate planning and travel expenses, and also fulfills unique final wishes,” Gifford Development Director Ashley Lincoln told the crowd in her remarksSaturday. “Our team members have served as wedding planners, travel agents, spa managers and in other unexpected roles, and we’ve loved every minute of it. We mean it when we say, ‘we care for you, for life,’ and Last Mile Ride is an extension of that promise.”

The weekend was not only a celebration in memory of lost loved ones, but also of new beginnings—bikers Bobbi and Tom Young, there on their honeymoon, were presented with a wedding cake—and of old friends coming together and sharing a fair amount of ribbing. “This year, we have two chase vehicles,” David “Gunner” Eckert of the Combat Veterans Motorcycle Association told the assembled bikers before hitting the road. “That’s for the non-Harleys that break down.”

And, of course,Saturdayprovided a good opportunity to show off polished chrome, such as on Milnor’s custom candy-apple red 2012 Harley-Davidson Street Glide.

“It’s pretty impressive,” he said.

By the Numbers

Joining Milnor among the top motorcycle fundraisers announcedSaturdaywere Todd Winslow with $2,175; Elizabeth Longworth with $1,945; John Holmer with $1,295; and Michael Whitaker with $1,230. The top overall fundraiser for theFridayevents was Emma Korrow with $2,512. Tina Grant was the top walk fundraiser with $2,030, and Carrie Baker was the top 5K fundraiser with $1,210.

Despite a dismal weather forecast, participation in the 5K and walks was up over last year.Fridaynight saw 71 runners in the 5K, up from 62 in 2017, and 190 walkers, up from 160 in 2017. Top 5K finishers were David Mattern (overall male) with a time of 19 minutes 11.6 seconds, and Jessica Benedict (overall female) with a time of 22 minutes 59.4 seconds. Full race results are available at802timing.com/results/18results/18results.html.

In addition to the scheduled Last Mile Ride events, funds were raised through raffles for a motorcycle from Wilkins Harley-Davidson in South Barre and a quilt made by Gifford nurses. Katie Vinton won the motorcycle raffle, and Dr. Mark Jewett took home the quilt, handmade by Dawn DeCoff and Betsy Hannah in memory of Gifford friend and colleague Fred Staples.

Fifty-threelocalbusinesses supported the 2018 Last Mile Ride, including the following majorsponsors: Frankenburg Agency, Kinney Pike/MEMIC, Lucky’s Lease/Trailer Sales, Mascoma Savings Bank, Neagley & Chase Construction, New England Air Systems, Northfield Savings Bank, VTDigger, Rural Vermont Real Estate, and Wilkins Harley-Davidson. To ensure safety along the motorcycle route, riders, led out of town by Orange County Sheriff Bill Bohnyak, were escorted by Combat Veterans Motorcycle Association volunteers with the help of local police departments.

The 2019 Last Mile Ride is slated for Aug. 16-17. For more information, visitwww.lastmileride.com, follow onFacebook, or call 802-728-2380.

Gifford is a community hospital in Randolph, Vt., with family health centers in Berlin, Bethel, Chelsea, Randolph, Rochester, and White River Junction; and specialty services throughout central Vermont. A Federally Qualified Health Center and a Top 100 Critical Access Hospital in the country, Gifford is a full-service hospital with a 24-hour emergency department and inpatient unit; many surgical services; a day care; two adult day programs; and the 30-bed Menig Nursing Home, which was named byU.S. News & World Reportas one of the best 39 nursing homes in the country in 2012. The Birthing Center, established in 1977, was the first in Vermont to offer an alternative to traditional hospital-based deliveries, and continues to be a leader in midwifery and family-centered care.Thehospital’s mission is to improve individuals’ and community health by providing and assuring access to affordable, high-quality health care in Gifford’s service area.