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The Inside Press

Namaste

April 24, 2017 by The Inside Press

The Team at the Center for Health and Healing
Front Row (L-R)): Joy Matalon, Jodi Baretz, Alice Pan, Dana Canneto; Back row (L-R): Claudia Gukeisen, Beryl Hay, Dr. Kurt Beil, Judie Kaplan, Dr. Larry Stern, Melanie Ryan, Andy Steigmeier, Dr. Karen Faccenda, Deborah Amjadi-Fusco

At a late March Open House at the Center for Health and Healing in Mount Kisco: Anyone stopping by had a chance to ‘sample’ a healing art, whether exploring your inner self through art or in a guided meditation of love and kindness. Visitors learned about a full range of healing modalities practiced at the Center. The treats were all healthy and delicious, too. To learn more, visit center4healing.net

Lyme Disease Prevention

The Center’s Open House was held in collaboration with the newly formed New Castle Task Force on Health and Wellness—which provides educational resources and support to the community in connection with a wide variety of Health and Wellness matters. To that end, on May 17th, from 12:30-2:30, a special Lyme Disease Education and Prevention Program will be held at the Chappaqua Library. For more information, please contact health@myNewCastle.org.

At the Center’s Open House: Town of New Castle Health and Wellness Task Force members (L-R): Lynette Zinberg, Derin Edip Walden with Mindfulness expert Jodi Baretz.

Filed Under: Chappaqua Community Tagged With: Center for Health and Healing, Chappaqua library, Health and Wellness, Lyme Disease, task force, Town of New Castle

The Neighbors Link Safety Net: Supporting Local Immigrants

April 24, 2017 by The Inside Press

By Grace Bennett     Edited by Debra Hand

Carola Otero Bracco
PHOTO BY TODD SHAPERA

For the past 15 years, Neighbors Link of Northern Westchester has seen a growing acceptance of immigrants in the county, how they contribute and support other societal classes and bring a diversity of culture, food, music and thinking.  Neighbors Link (“NL”) focuses on its stated mission: “to strengthen the whole community through the healthy integration of immigrants” by providing programs that assist with English learning, education, empowerment, workforce development and partnership with local organizations.”

Many residents of Chappaqua and Armonk have also come to rely on NL, based in Mount Kisco, as a source for honest and capable help with everything from landscaping and masonry to painting and snow removal. That focus shifted on Election Day, 2016.

“I didn’t really imagine we would be back to this,” said NL Executive Director Carola Otero Bracco, noting a return to the hostility faced by immigrants until the early 2000s. After making major strides, “we’ve taken some major steps backwards, but are also seeing more people willing to be much more vocal and more supportive of immigrants in the community.”

“An Avalanche of Fear”

I recently had the opportunity to sit down with Bracco to talk about how NL’s role in integrating immigrants into the community has been altered in 2017.  Constant fear of arrest and deportation has become pervasive, and NL is working hard to address related needs. Not aware of increased activity by U.S. Immigrations and Customs Enforcement in Mount Kisco, she sees that news reports of “emboldened” ICE officers in the wider geographic area have had a ripple effect on the local immigrant community.

“People are afraid to sign up their children for free and reduced lunch, people are afraid to go to doctors’ appointments or pick up prescriptions. They are afraid to go to parents/teacher conferences. They are afraid to go to work,” Bracco said. “If there is a rumor that an ICE officer is in the area, they are disrupting their lives to keep their children home from school.”

“Our programming had to shift to help people understand better. People need greater legal support.” Bracco added that hundreds of people show up at presentations by the (state) Office for New Americans, ESL classes and “Know Your Rights” forums, and that her staff is working to help police departments, school districts, public officials and support organizations better understand what the immigrant community is facing.

She pointed out the new fear experienced by “folks who had been told in the past that they were not a priority for deportation because they were contributing members of our community, and had no criminal background, by far the majority of people in the area.” Bracco pointed to parents who work hard and who prior to these developments were able to focus on their children’s academic success without worrying about the potential for deportation. They are now terrified, she said, explaining that the immigrant families that live in our area actually have a variety of legal status, and that while “we think of people as ‘undocumented’ as a static thing, it’s really not,” with many on a path to a green card.

And the biggest challenge is what happens to American-born children of undocumented parents–four million nationwide– if those parents get deported.

‘Imagine you are sitting in a ‘Know Your Rights’ session, baby on lap and teen next you, and being told this is how you need to prepare because you can be yanked from your family and deported. These families live in close quarters, so children are hearing everything. It’s an avalanche of fear,” she said.

Despite NL’s hard work, “I don’t think any of us can imagine the pain that this will inflict on families and the ripple effect on children, how they are going to figure out how to get an education and live with one or both of their parents gone,” Bracco added of the expected increasing numbers of families ripped apart because of deportation.

Secondary Trauma: Can Staff Help?

The pressure on the NL staff has started to take a toll, too. According to Bracco, NL “works with families one on one, two immigration attorneys, family services, case managers,” and it’s becoming increasingly difficult to find ways to help families find solutions to the potential for deportation.

“Our staff is very professional and has to keep everyone calm, as it’s very difficult to make decisions if you start to panic,” she said, but the stress was starting to “impact the staff, a fear that we might be letting  people down and that we may not have the tools to help people.”     

“It’s chilling and heartbreaking and extremely difficult. Are we going to make a difference in all this?” Bracco said. But she strikes a note of optimism, too. “There’s an inner strength that we are certain is going to come through.”

Increased Need, Increased Budget, Increased Activism

In light of the expanded legal needs of the immigrant community it serves, NL has shifted its strategic plan to raise more money to support its initiatives. A luncheon last November featuring political strategist and CNN commentator Ana Navarro raised $65,000, and the Fiesta Latina Gala to Benefit Neighbors Link will be held on April 29 at the Brae Burn Country Club.

“Coming to our event and bringing friends is a great opportunity for people who want to understand the issues that immigrants face now, increase exposure to the issue, learn about Neighbors Link and meet some of our clients,” Bracco said. This year’s gala will honor Edward and Maya Manley, who have been with the organization since its beginning and have had major roles in building the programming. Of course, charitable donations via neighborslink.org are always welcome.

Nancy Strong of Armonk, originally an ESL teacher at NL, is now a member of the Friends of Neighbors Link, the fundraising arm of the organization. The Friends hold events to support the programs and build awareness. “I have learned so much about our immigrant community,” Strong said. “They are here to work hard, they pay taxes and they just want to make better lives for their families.”

The Friends know that more money is crucial to support immigrants and address fears set off by the current administration’s rhetoric and actions. “Children are scared that their parents will disappear. Even children whose parents are citizens hear the discussions and worry for their families and their friends’ families. Those who employ immigrants hear the stories of their employees or their friends who are worried that they will be arrested. And those who are trying to bring their families here often feel helpless. Neighbors Link provides legal assistance and help whenever and however they can,” Strong said.

“A True Lifeline”

Local residents are also trying to educate their neighbors about the plight of the immigrant community.  Jane and Rob Shepardson of Chappaqua hosted a March fundraiser in their home for 40 friends, during which a young woman (now an NL staff member) told her story as a Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) beneficiary. While DACA allows certain immigrants who entered the United States as minors to receive a renewable period of deferred action from deportation and work permit eligibility, it does not afford any legal status, according to Bracco, other than not being a priority for deportation.

The young woman, brought to the U.S. as a young child, did not know that she was undocumented until she was in high school and it suddenly became a barrier to her realizing her full potential: she would not qualify for college financial aid even though her family was at the poverty level. Applying for DACA, she was able to work as a waitress and earn enough to attend a state university.

“We organized this fundraiser as a way to take action in light of Trump’s Executive Orders/Travel Bans and the impact that the current political climate is having on hard working immigrants in our community,” said Jane Shepardson. She and her husband had donated to NL for years, and their daughter had both helped out in the NL child care center and volunteered as part of their synagogue “soup group” that would get together monthly to prepare meals for the NL day laborers.

“Our purpose was to raise money for and raise awareness of what we believe is a vital organization in our community, and to inform and educate our friends and neighbors about all the services Neighbors Link provides to these immigrant families,” Shepardson said.

“It is not only a “ home away from home” for many of the day laborers that gather there awaiting work, but also an organization that provides job/skills training, ESL classes, child care, and legal services that help these families deal with immigration and citizenship issues.

“Neighbors Link is not just a helping hand, it is a true lifeline to these families who are hard-working and valuable members of our community who are  now living under a cloud of fear,” she added.

Moving Forward

When I asked Bracco whether people were galvanizing in light of these new challenges, she responded that the community was “absolutely” coming together. Days after we spoke, she was planning on attending a large county-wide meeting of various groups interested in making a difference by being involved in county and state legislation: “We’re seeing people come forward from everywhere to start to take a role in this. More formal organizations are taking a leadership role in bringing these groups together to find a common language and agree on basic principles.”

Bracco added that there has also been a significantly increased need for programming in Ossining and Yonkers, including community forums and cultural awareness work with police officers. Programs aim to build trust: “humanize police officers to the immigrant community and humanize the immigrant community to the police officers,” she explained. After five officers came in for five consecutive weeks to meet with participants, there was “no question that the immigrant community left feeling more comfortable stepping forward if they were ever witnesses or victims of a crime,” Bracco said.

NL is always looking for adult and teenage volunteers. High school students and adults assist clients with their English and volunteer in the family center, and doctors and attorneys provide services. Now, more than ever, Neighbors Link is making a huge difference in people’s lives and they can use as much support as possible to help those in need. Visit neighborslink.org.

Grace Bennett is Publisher and Editor of the Inside Press. Debra Hand is a longtime contributing editor.

Filed Under: Cover Stories Tagged With: Carola Bracco, Immigrants, Neighbors Link, Safety Net

A Poem for My Mother

April 24, 2017 by The Inside Press

By Hannah Fenlon

Now,
I carry my mother,
who carried me.

I carry tradition,
filial piety.
I am the seaweed from the wet sand of Weihai
Picked and dried by hand
your aunt’s labor.
I am those wet strands
uniting the branches
of past, present,
and future.

I am the threads
weaving through your father’s
sick blood,
stitching together an ever growing quilt.
I stretch from his heart
to his brain
Sending strength,
where medicine had failed.

Was it hard to let go
of what connected us for those nine months;
of what connected your stories with mine;
merging your past with my future?

Now,
I only know what I’ve been told.

I’ll never know a summer night spent
folding soft dough over mounds of meat,
floured hands and wistful hearts,
a soft familiar voice
floating over the radio.

I’ll never know mornings on the subway,
then bus
riding to Stuyvesant,
breakfast sandwich pressed into your hand by your mother
her wish wrapped in tinfoil
that you return safely from school.

I’ll never know afternoons
spent by your father’s hospital bed
watching his chest rise
and fall
waiting for words,
for movement.

Your father who left before
his filial duty was done–
The white haired should never bury
their children.

Now,
we float with the wind
in opposite directions.
I am rushing forward,
while you long to go back,
while you long for more time.

Now,
I float with the wind
that connects stitches with seaweed,
that connects soy sauce and soda bread,
that connects me to you.

Hannah Fenlon is a junior at Horace Greeley High School. This poem was awarded a prize in the 2016 Chappaqua Library Young Writers Contest.

 

Hannah Fenlon

Filed Under: Cover Stories Tagged With: A Poem for My Mother, hannah fenlon, poem

Resident Geri Mariano’s Trying Experiences with Medicaid Managed Care

April 24, 2017 by The Inside Press

By Grace Bennett and Janie Rosman

Geri Mariano
PHOTO BY RICHARD CAPLAN

Geri Mariano (also known as Geralyn Pinciaro), a much beloved Armonk resident with a myriad of health care needs, has hit too many brick walls in her odyssey through the health care morass. Inside Armonk contacted local and state officials with the goal of spotlighting her situation…in the hopes that Geri can receive the care she deserves and within her means.

“Geri Mariano imbues the spirit of the community and pride in her hometown, and it in her,” State Assemblyman David Buchwald stated when contacted to discuss Geri’s recent issue with obtaining optimal health care to address her unique medical needs. “What saddens me so much is that health care policy hasn’t done right by her, most recently in June 2016.”

Background

Governor Andrew M. Cuomo’s Executive Order No. 42 regarding Medicaid redesign was to cover recipients who have long-term disabilities and chronic health problems such as diabetes, heart disease, substance abuse and mental illness. Some constituents like Geri Mariano found their coverage changed as a result of the Governor’s April 12, 2012, directive, which established a state-based health benefit exchange per the Affordable Care Act.

Born at White Plains Hospital in October, 1967 with Diastrophic Dysplasia/Dwarfism, Geri was abandoned at birth by the biological parents. It wasn’t until she was 18 months that then Geralyn Pinciaro was taken in by William and Doris Mariano after her story appeared in the Gannet Newspaper. She was raised in a loving home; yet never legally adopted, Mariano was an official “Ward of the State” and remained under Department of Social Services’ protection until she turned age 18. Afterwards she went years without needing re-approval for Medicaid coverage.

Approximately 10 years ago, she would be re-certified every other year or so. When she received a letter stating she would be moved from Straight Medicaid in January. 2013, she asked NYS Assemblyman David Buchwald (93rd A.D.) to intervene on her behalf. After a few calls, the Assemblyman’s Office found there had been a mistake and Mariano’s status was not supposed to change; her status was changed back.

A letter last summer mandated Mariano to enroll in a managed care plan by July 31, 2016. As no exemptions for Medicaid enrollees applied to her situation, she was automatically enrolled in MVP Medicaid Managed Care. As a result of the change, Mariano can’t see her PCP whose office is in downtown Armonk and has been accommodating and an advocate for her for over 20 years. Additionally, her aides took an unexpected pay cut due to the coverage switch. And the prosthetist who got Mariano up and walking again after several years is not covered. After making much progress regaining the ability to walk, Mariano has not been upright since November, 2016.

Mariano was the first special needs student with a physical disability to be enrolled in Byram Hills School District in 1972 without the Federal Mandate to do so; she graduated in 1985. Mariano graduated from Smith College n 1989, one of its first matriculated students with congenital disabilities. In 2013, she received the Spirit of Independence Award from Westchester Disabled on the Move in Yonkers. “We all want to assist Geri, whom I have known for many years growing up in Armonk,” said Westchester County Legislator Margaret A. Cunzio, representing District 3 (Mount Pleasant, Pleasantville and parts of North Castle) “Anything we can do to bring this issue to the forefront and seek assistance from New York State is imperative.”

Her two Fair Hearing appeals (when no  representatives from DSS or Medicaid Choice showed up) were denied last fall. Mariano was informed by the Hearing Judge that his decision could be overturned but that she would not be made aware if in fact it was. Mariano is frustrated to not know if the Hearing Judge ruled in her favor and the decision was overturned by Albany. Mariano reached out to friends for advice with her predicament, one of whom posted her situation in the Facebook group, Armonk Moms. At press time, discussions have started whether a letter writing campaign and rally would help bring wider attention to this matter.

The Inside Press has since reached out to the Governor’s press office, the New York Department State of Health, Representative Nita Lowey (D-NY17) and State Senator George Latimer (37th S.D.). As this is a State matter specifically, Roy Loewenstein of Lowey’s office, suggested the State could provide the most comprehensive answers.

A letter was being drafted by Andrew Ferris in State Senator Latimer’s office, and awaits signatures by the senator and Assemblyman Buchwald. “There’s no hardship exemption, where someone says, ‘What’s best for Geri given her situation?’” Buchwald said. “My role is to try to cut through the bureaucracy as the system is not designed for folks like Geri.”

At press time we are awaiting a response from the state. Mariano wants an opportunity to share her story with Gov. Cuomo’s administration representatives and relate that the present exemptions DO NOT fit every situation of those who have had coverage throughout their entire lives. States Geri: “There are others in the same boat. I need to be their voice, too.”

Grace Bennett is publisher and editor of the Inside Press, which she founded in 2003. Janie Rosman is a freelance writer and editor whose work appears in local and regional publications. She chronicles the Tappan Zee Bridge replacement project at Kaleidoscope Eyes.

Filed Under: Armonk Cover Stories Tagged With: Armonk Residnt, Disabilities, Geri Mariano, Managed Care Challenges, Medicaid

For Mother’s Day: Family Memories Shared by our Sponsors too!

April 23, 2017 by The Inside Press

A Family who Golfs Together Stays Together!

Miyuki Shirakura, Business Administrator of Dr. Aki Shirakura and Associates Dental Practice in Armonk, with her beautiful children Douglas (14) and Maya (12).

“Golfing with my kids is something wonderful we all share a love for and enjoy doing together. I hope they will keep golfing throughout their lives and with their kids someday.” –Miuki Shirakura


What it’s All About

“It’s not always about burping, feeding and diaper changes Sometimes it’s about having fun. Thanks mom for hanging out and playing with me at World
Cup Gymnastics
Romperee Class!”


Chappaqua Grandmothers

“Mom Jean (Jean Bueti) and and Mom Marge (Marge Cullen) as she is ready to make a wish…They both live close by, a hop and a skip through the Greeley woods and over the stream.”

–Sandy Bueti and Teresa Cullen Bueti, Bueti Brothers Builders, Inc.


Celebration Time

Daughter and granddaughter, Gail Marie and Daniella Victoria Delbalzo, enjoyed time together celebrating with Mildred Rose Politi on Mildred’s 104th Birthday.

Gail Marie Brow Studio & More

Filed Under: Sponsor News! Tagged With: memories, mothers day, Words and Wisdom from our Sponsors

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