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The First Congregational Church of Chappaqua (FCC) Now “Open and Affirming!”

March 6, 2014 by The Inside Press

FCCSpring2010Throughout its 100 year history, FCC has prided itself on being welcoming to all who wish to pursue their faith journey with others who believe in the liberty of conscience. Over 25 years ago, the United Church of Christ created an Open and Affirming commitment and encouraged their congregations to proclaim themselves as such. The Open and Affirming designation is intended to express a church’s affirmation of all human beings and their welcome into the life of the church.It is especially focused on the inclusion and welcome of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender folks, who have been the subject of much discrimination and prejudice. FCC decided a year ago that it wanted to consider taking the important formal step of intentionally becoming Open and Affirming.

On January 24, 2013 at its Annual Meeting, after a year of open discussion, information sessions and thoughtful consideration, the FCC congregation joyously and overwhelmingly voted to become Open and Affirming. The congregation adopted the following all inclusive statement:

  • Taking scripture as our guide, and mindful of our mission to be a caring community, we acknowledge, accept and affirm that all people are equal children of God. We welcome into the worship, work and fellowship of this congregation 
all people.
  • People of every race and mixture of races.
  • People of every ethnic background and nationality.
  • People who are lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and straight.
  • People in any economic situation.
  • People, regardless of physical or 
mental prowess or limitation.
  • Trusting in God’s grace and with the hope of guidance from the Holy Spirit, we commit ourselves to strive to fulfill this affirmation.

Building on our commitment to be Open and Affirming, it is FCC’s hope and intention to be a place where everyone is welcome, where we celebrate our differences and where we find strength in the things we share. We encourage you to join us as we enter our second century and affirm our commitment to be as understanding, accepting and inclusive as possible of all of God’s children!

Filed Under: Sponsor News! Tagged With: church, FCC, Open and Affirming

Assemblyman David Buchwald Announces Marriage to Lara Samet

March 4, 2014 by The Inside Press

Photo by Sarah Merians Photography & Video Company
Photo by Sarah Merians Photography & Video Company

State Assemblyman David Buchwald (D-Westchester) is pleased to announce his marriage to Ms. Lara Samet on Saturday March 1st at the Tarrytown House Estate in Tarrytown, NY.

Mrs. Buchwald, a litigation attorney at Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP, is a native of New Jersey and a graduate of Duke University (magna cum laude) and NYU School of Law (cum laude). Assemblyman Buchwald is a native of Westchester County and a resident of White Plains, where he served on the City’s Common Council for three years prior to his election to the State Assembly in 2012. He represents the towns of Bedford, Harrison, Lewisboro, Mt. Kisco, New Castle, North Castle, North Salem, and Pound Ridge and half of the City of White Plains. Assemblyman Buchwald is a graduate of Yale University, the John F. Kennedy School of Government, and Harvard Law School (cum laude). For the six years prior to serving in the State Assembly, he was an attorney in the tax department at Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP.

“Lara and I are thrilled to be married, and we feel blessed to have shared this special occasion with the people we love” said Assemblyman David Buchwald. “We are partners in every sense of the word, and Lara’s kindness and intelligence make me a better representative for the Westchester communities I serve.”

Their wedding was officiated by Rabbi Alan Silverstein, and was featured in Sunday’s New York Times: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/02/fashion/weddings/lara-samet-and-david-buchwald.html

Filed Under: New Castle Releases

Think Fit For Kids, Family Fitness & Fun Festival

March 1, 2014 by The Inside Press

ThinkFit_logoRaising funds for children’s brain tumor research

Sunday. March 16th, 2014, Club Fit, Briarcliff Manor

1:30 pm: Check In, Silent Auction opens

2:00 – 3:00 pm: GaGa Trounament (new) Zumba, Basketball, Drum Circle, Mommy & Me

3:00 – 4:00 pm: DJ, Food, Face Painting, and lots more!

www.thinkfitforkids.org
contact@thinkfitforkids.org

Did you know that:

  • Brain tumors are the most common cause of solid tumor cancer death in children?
  • Every day 15 new families learn that their child has brain cancer?
  • There are at least 3 children in the Town of New Castle that have recently received this diagnosis?

Taking a stand for our youngest victims by funding targeted pediatric brain cancer research is the goal of A Kids’ Brain Tumor Cure Foundation and on Sunday, March 16th, 2014 (from 2:00 – 4:00pm) we will be holding our 4th Annual “Think Fit For Kids” Family Fitness and Fun Festival at Club Fit (Briarcliff Manor) to raise funds and awareness for this insidious disease.

Over the past 4 years, this event, which is attended by nearly 500 participants and volunteers, has raised over $550,000 in monetary donations and has received over $100,000 in ‘in-kind’ contributions (food, beverages, merchandise, gift cards, etc.) from local Town of New Castle individuals, families, merchants and celebrities. Think Fit For Kids illuminates the collaborative and committed community in which we live and work, and of which we should all be proud to be a member.  But, as you know, research is expensive!  As such, we aim to make Think Fit For Kids 2014 our most successful fundraiser to date!  If we reach our goal of raising $350,000 in 2014, together, we will have raised over $1 MILLION to fight pediatric brain cancer.  That’s pretty amazing.  It takes a village and this village really rocks!!!  Please see the invitation and join us for what is sure to be a day of hope and inspiration for all who attend (and if you have attended in the past, you know we always have a few surprises up our sleeve!)

Filed Under: Happenings, New Castle Releases

“Legally Blonde” Composer Lawrence O’Keefe Returns to Greeley High School

March 1, 2014 by The Inside Press

Laurence O'KeefeHorace Greeley’s Senior Class Musical, Legally Blonde, is thrilled to announce that Class of 1989 alumnus Legally Blonde composer Lawrence O’Keefe will be coming back to his Alma Mater for a special event tomorrow, March 2nd from 1-3 pm in the Greeley Auditorium.  Mr. O’Keefe, composer of Legally Blonde and Batboy: The Musical comes to Greeley to discuss his latest project, Heathers: The Musical, with the cast of Greeley’s Senior Musical Legally Blonde.

O’Keefe, along with his co-writers, collaborators, and cast members of Heathers, will discuss the process of mounting a new production, as well as preview numbers from his new show, opening in NYC later in March.  Members of the Senior Class Musical cast will also have the opportunity to preview numbers from their production of Legally Blonde for Mr. O’Keefe.

Travis Amiel, a student producer and performer for the Senior Musical said, “Mr. O’Keefe is a part of the theater world I hope to join one day, and having this opportunity to learn from him is a total dream.”  Said fellow student producer and performer, Ella Vanderbilt-Fried, “I’m so excited to see what Mr. O’Keefe is working on now.  It’s a great opportunity for the cast to be able to meet the person who wrote the music we’ve been singing for months.”

The Senior Class Musical production of Legally Blonde will be April 3, 4 and 5.  Proceeds from ticket sales go to the Horace Greeley Scholarship Fund.

Filed Under: New Castle Releases

Victorious Change for Women in DMV Policy

February 19, 2014 by The Inside Press

Assemblyman Buchwald DMV Press Conference1In a victory particularly important for women, Assemblyman David Buchwald (D-Westchester) announced at a press conference that, in response to his inquiry and subsequent efforts, the New York State Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) will now provide a much simpler process to change middle names to maiden names on an individual’s driver’s license upon marriage. The DMV will only require a marriage certificate to make this change. Previously, the process had proven to be costly and time consuming.

“This is a victory for women and married couples across New York,” said Assemblyman Buchwald. “I am pleased the DMV has modernized their procedures to the benefit of newlyweds, especially the growing number of women who choose to keep their maiden name as their middle name. We do not need to be filling up court dockets with routine name change applications. Clarifying this long-standing policy will not only make this process easier and more affordable for couples across the state, but it will reinforce the equality of both partners in a marriage while simplifying the lives of professional woman.” .

This is a practice that has grown over the past few decades, with famous examples including former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and civil rights leader Coretta Scott King. The trend has particularly increased in recent years. The new policy recognizes that middle names now often change at the time of marriage, and such changes should be just as easy for newlyweds as altering their last name. Prior to Assemblyman Buchwald’s inquiry, the DMV often only recognized a change of middle name when the individual pursued one of two difficult pathways. One possibility was to provide a series of documents that was sometimes impossible to obtain. Alternatively, an individual could change their name legally through the court system, a burdensome process that would take several months and cost at least $100 in fees. Assemblyman Buchwald’s inquiry updates the much-needed system so that a middle name can be changed to a maiden name simply by providing a valid marriage certificate.

According to a recent Chicago Tribune article,[1] the practice of women keeping their last name as a middle name after they marry has quietly taken hold in the U.S., where studies show that 90 to 95 percent of married women take their husbands’ last names. Studies indicate that between 3 and 25 percent of married women nationwide are using their maiden names as middle names. And about 18 percent of women at the marital-name-change website, MissNowMrs.com, have taken their maiden names as middle names in the past six years.

“I’ve been waiting for this moment for 40 years,” said Danielle DiBiase Esposito, a resident of the 93rd Assembly District. “After I married my husband, I was able to change my middle name to my maiden name in every aspect of my life – in business, on travel documents and on my credit cards – except on my New York State driver’s license. My daughter-in-law, recently married to my son, has also been successful in changing her name in all other facets of her life except her New York State driver’s license. The State policy was confusing, burdensome, and quite frankly, too much of a hassle for working parents like myself and my daughter-in-law to continue pursuing. Because of the efforts of Assemblyman Buchwald, New York State will finally recognize my maiden name, and in doing so, simplify my professional life and honor the legacy of my family.”

“On behalf of the Professional Women of Westchester, we would like to thank Assemblyman Buchwald and the DMV for addressing this practical issue that affects professional women in Westchester and across the State,” said Professional Women of Westchester Vice President Rose Colonna. “As professional women, many of us start our careers while we are single and, in many cases, it becomes a dilemma as to which name to use professionally once we are married. With this sensible change in State policy, we can focus our time and energy on our businesses, career and families. This is one less cumbersome obstacle for professional woman.”

“I personally recall arguing with an employee at the DMV forty years ago trying to use my maiden name as my middle name, and being told that it was simply not possible, and illegal,” said League of Women Voters of Bedford, Lewisboro and North Salem Co-President Katherine Flannery Dering. “It’s hard to believe that it has taken this long to resolve the right of women to carry their own maiden name as their middle name. I express my thanks to Assemblyman Buchwald and the DMV that this change has finally happened in New York.”

“This is a no brainer,” said Women’s Enterprise Development Center Executive Director Anne Janiak. “My daughter, who works part time and has two small children to raise, recently tried to change her middle name to her maiden name on her driver’s license, and she found the process was just too time-consuming and burdensome.  These are the kinds of common-sense policy changes our legislators should be focusing on, and I thank Assemblyman Buchwald and the DMV for simplifying and streamlining this process for women.”

“Today is a great day for women in New York,” said American Association of University Women Westchester Branch President Jane Pendergast. “This change in State policy, prompted by Assemblyman Buchwald and implemented by the DMV, is a reflection of the increasing number of women in our contemporary society who wish to hold onto their family identities as a student, in the workplace and at home. Times have changed for women in New York, and I’m proud our state policies are changing with it.”

“The fact that a married woman is now able to use her maiden name as her middle name on her driver’s license without a court order process and a hefty fee is an important victory for women,” said Woman’s Club of White Plains Co-President Cathy Schauber. “Thank you Assemblyman Buchwald and the New York State DMV for updating this long-needed policy.”

“The League of Women Voters of New Castle heartily supports this new streamlined procedure making it easier for married persons to change their name on their driver’s license,” said League of Women Voters of New Castle Co-Presidents Sheila Miller Bernson and Jennifer Mebes Flagg. “We thank Assemblyman Buchwald and the DMV for adopting this new simplified system.”

Assemblyman Buchwald heard of these unnecessarily burdensome requirements regarding name changes from personal friends who shared their marriage stories. The Assemblyman and his fiancée, Lara, are set to be married this March.

Filed Under: New Castle Releases

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