Area 3 Board of Directors Election Instructions for
Members with Voting Privileges
As per Area 3 By-Laws, Area 3 is holding its general election for Board members for the classes of 2025 and 2027. We are electing the next Chair-Elect (2027), Treasurer (2025), and 3 At-Large Board members (2027).
Chair-Elect Candidates: Vote for one
The Chair-Elect position is for two years before becoming Chair. As the “Chair-in-training” the Chair-Elect will perform duties as assigned by the Board or as specified in the Area’s Governance document. The Area Chair ensures the integrity of the Board and its processes and ensures the Board acts consistently with its own rules as it works to meet the needs of the Area.
Robert Aughtry
Debbie Henning
Board Members At-Large: Vote for three
The primary job of the Area Board is to establish policies that connect membership needs and desires with the output of the organization. The Board governs with an emphasis on outward vision rather than internal preoccupation, collective decisions, and being future oriented and proactive.
Wendy Cheng
Teri Gregory
Patricia Lane
Alan Payne
Kevin Quick
Treasurer: Vote for one
The Treasurer handles all the financial matters of the Area including routine banking functions, budget planning, regular status reporting, and meeting annual IRS requirements.
Kylie Johnson
Karen Strausser
- Please carefully read the biographies below to familiarize yourself with the candidates.
- You will need to access your online member account in order to vote.
- Voting opens May 1, 2023 at 9 AM and closes May 30, 2023 at 11:59 PM.
- If you need assistance logging into your online member account follow the instructions for retrieving your user name or password.
- If you experience problems with the electronic voting process, contact National office during regular business hours, Monday – Thursday, 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM Eastern Time, by phone at 937-438-0085. Assistance via email is available on Fridays from 9:00 AM – 5 PM EST.
- Results will be announced on the Area 3 website on or before June 12, 2023.
- Follow the link at the bottom of the page to connect to the electronic ballot.
Thank you for helping to further the work of Area 3 by participating in this election.
Candidates for Chair-Elect
(Vote for One)
Robert Aughtry has been Handbell Director at Burke UMC (Burke, VA) since August, 2011. Prior to that, he was the Director of Fairfax UMC (Fairfax, VA) for 6 years. At both churches, Aughtry has directed Adult, Youth and Children’s choirs. He currently directs 3 choirs from 4th graders to adults. The Celebration Ringers of Burke UMC have consistently been a Bronze Choir at the Area 3 spring festivals during Aughtry’s tenure. He is retiring this summer as a Master Sergeant in the US Army after 23 years of active duty service as a flutist in The United States Army Band, “Pershing’s Own”. He has served as Group Leader of the US Army Woodwind Quintet, producing weeklong collegiate tours, educational outreaches, and community concerts. As Flute Section Leader, he was responsible for managing personnel for all concerts, forward planning for future jobs, and working across different musical elements to staff ceremonial work as needed. Robert completed the coursework for a Doctor of Musical Arts degree in flute performance from the Louisiana State University. He holds a Master of Music degree and a Bachelor of Music in a Music Education degree both from the University of South Carolina. Robert would like to be Chair Elect because he is a forward thinker who is always concerned with logistics, detailed planning, working together to reach goals and prefers collaborative approaches to problem solving.
Debbie Henning has been involved with handbells for over 50 years as both a ringer and a director. Besides ringing with the Westminster Ringers & directing Accelerando – both ensembles of Westminster Ringer, Inc., she is the Director of Music at Grace UMC in Gaithersburg, MD and coHandbell Director at the Westminster Church of the Brethren in Westminster, MD. Debbie serves as Managing Director and Treasurer for the Westminster Ringers, Inc. In the past she served Handbell Musicians of America Area 3 as their Maryland State Chair, Treasurer, and Coordinator of Events for over 10 years. In addition to her musical activities, Debbie loves to quilt, sew, cross stitch and care for her three young grandchildren.
Candidates for Board Member At Large
(Vote for Three)
Wendy Cheng was introduced to handbells in 2015 when her church started a handbell choir for a brief period of time. When the handbell program ceased after the music director left, she filled the void in her life by starting a handbell choir at the federal agency where she worked. She is grateful to Area 3 for the support they have provided to her as she learned to conduct a choir and select repertoire. When not ringing handbells or directing her community handbell choir, Wendy enjoys taking viola lessons and running a small nonprofit focused on providing support to adult musicians who have hearing loss.
Teri Gregory has been ringing since the Fall of 1992 when her church acquired their first set of handbells and a call went out for ringers. She had no idea what a handbell was but she missed the opportunity to play her flute and piccolo and was looking for other musical outlets. Handbells quickly became a passion. In 2009, Teri attended her first Distinctly Bronze East. The high level bronze ringing and handbell community found at the event was transformative and she has attended nearly every Distinctly Bronze East since then. Teri has also participated in several Distinctly Bronze West events, Virtuoso 2019, International Symposium 2022, and many Area 3 and Area 1 festivals. Teri currently rings with Capital Carillon, as well as continuing to ring with her church choir, Jubilate Bronze, as one of only 2 founding members of the choir still active in the group. Over the years, Teri has also expanded her handbell experience to include solo, duet and quartet music and she has recently developed a passion for bell trees. To support her handbell habit, Teri is the lead thermal systems engineer for NASA’s Exploration and In-Space Services Division at the Goddard Space Flight Center and she keeps busy with her wonderful husband and two children.
Patricia Lane Music has been a hugely important part of her life since she started playing trombone in 1967. While she still plays trombone in her church orchestra today, handbells are her passion now. Patricia first saw handbells in 1980 at a post chapel on Fort Ord in California, but with one bell per person (she thinks she got an accidental that didn’t play at all in that first rehearsal), she didn’t see the appeal (pun intended) and didn’t go back. Fast forward to 2004; Pat was invited to ring when her church started a second bell choir and she was hooked!! She was fortunate enough to start out ringing next to someone with good technique and teaching skills. Looking for more ringing opportunities, Patricia put her name on the Area 3 substitute list. This turned out to be an excellent strategy, as she now rings with two of the groups that called her to substitute from that list. Contacts in those groups got Patricia involved in three additional ensembles, Distinctly Bronze, and other Handbell Musicians of America events. Patricia currently rings with two community groups, two church choirs, a small ensemble, Area 1’s bronze orphans, and at Distinctly Bronze. That makes de-conflicting Christmas concerts a real challenge, but her normal week is filled with bell rehearsals and she’s happy. She gets to play on White Chapel, Malmark, and Schulmerich bells in various positions, so she is always being challenged. Ringing bells has broadened Patricia’s musical experience and knowledge in so many ways that it is hard to imagine life without them. Patricia’s life is richer for being part of the bell-ringing world, an experience she wants to share with as many people as she can talk into joining her there!
Alan Payne started his handbell journey about 18 years ago when his kids were playing handbells at Fairfax United Methodist Church. Church policy required a 2nd adult present for all youth-related activities and Alan became bell-dad. Since he had played instruments before, the director often asked him to fill in when a ringer was absent and that was all he needed to get hooked. Alan soon began ringing with the adult choir at the church and slinging the low bass bells. After his 3rd child left for college, Alan auditioned for a community group in Northern Virginia. He rang with them for 4 seasons and also served as Vice President and President. In September of 2020 Alan formed Music To Free, a 501(c)(3) organization with a mission to teach handbells at low/fixed income senior living centers. These programs are provided at no cost to the residents or the facilities. In 2022, to help fund these programs, Alan formed Bronze Unlimited, a new community ensemble for advanced ringers. In addition to doing public concerts, Bronze Unlimited does private events and community outreach events. Bronze Unlimited’s May concerts, Hope & Remembrance – a concert for those affected by cancer, will help raise money for Music To Free as well as local cancer support groups.
Kevin Quick is a Minister of Music and commissioned Deacon in the United Methodist Church. He comes to Raleigh from Allen, TX, home of the Allen Eagles. He was exposed to music in his church’s graded children’s choir, which his parents saw as free babysitting. He was a Park Scholar at NC State University (GO PACK!), where he earned three degrees in psychology, sociology and public policy with minors in music (composition emphasis), Spanish, and ethics. While at NCSU, he directed a 6-octave handbell choir in the Raleigh Wesley Foundation, in addition to a 24-voice choir and a 11-person praise band. Now at Highland UMC, he directs the 6-octave handbell choir, the weekly chancel choir, the weekly orchestra, and the praise band. Kevin is excited about the prospect of promoting handbells and encouraging fellowship between all musicians.
Candidates for Treasurer
(Vote for One)
Kylie Johnson is a transplant from the Pacific Northwest where she was a member of Bells of the Cascades for several years before relocating to the DC Metro area where she rings with Virginia Bronze. She served in many roles on the Board of Directors for Bells of the Cascades, as well as Treasurer for Area 10, before joining the Executive Committee of Virginia Bronze where she has served as both Secretary and Treasurer. Kylie began playing handchimes in high school with her church choir in Wenatchee, Washington, and received a handbell scholarship while completing her Bachelor of Arts in Piano Performance and Finance at Concordia University in Portland, OR. She went on to receive a Master of Arts in Music at Portland State University, and an Executive Certificate in Transformational Nonprofit Leadership and Management at the University of Notre Dame. Kylie uses these skills in her role as Executive Director at Capital Church in Vienna, VA, and as Music Director at Our Savior’s Way Lutheran Church in Ashburn, VA. Outside of her church jobs, she also bartends at a local steakhouse. In her spare time, Kylie enjoys traveling, home-improvement projects, doing jigsaw puzzles, obsessing over anything and everything Disney, and cuddling with her cat, Critter, while watching true-life crime documentaries.
Karen Strausser began ringing bells in 1982 when her church started a handbell group for youth and was hooked instantly. She remembers the first time they played in church, the run started in the bass and ended there as well – learned, don’t listen to your neighbors but watch the director! Karen tried all the bells from bass to treble and liked the challenge of ringing more than one bell at a time. She then branched out into solo and ensemble ringing and still does that as often as she can. Karen is the crazy ringer that only missed one rehearsal after the birth of her twins (her third daughter was born in the summer). Karen has rung with Charlotte Bronze Handbell Ensemble and subbed in various groups across NC. She currently directs at two churches in Winston Salem, NC, and also a handbell rotation in a summer music camp. The rest of Karen’s time has been spent working in office management in the private sector and finance for a non-profit as well as state and local government agencies. Karen is married to Dave (who prefers being a roadie to ringing) and they have three adult daughters (all bell ringers) and one son-in-law.
VOTE NOW (Link will be active May 1 – May 30)