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Relay for Life

Welcoming James Carroll: New Castle’s New Police Chief

August 24, 2019 by Ronni Diamondstein

Police Chief James Carroll
PHOTO BY RONNI DIAMONDSTEIN

There’s a new Chief in town, but New Castle’s new Police Chief James Carroll is hardly new to New Castle. Carroll was sworn in on June 28th upon the retirement of Chief Charles Ferry. “We chose Jim Carroll based on his experience. Chief Carroll has more than 15 years of police supervisory experience. He has been, and will continue to be, an asset to the Town,” said Town Supervisor Robert Greenstein about the Board’s decision to promote Carroll.

Carroll lived in the Bronx until he was five years old and then moved to Dutchess County where he still lives. He has a Bachelor’s degree in Business from Marist College and worked briefly as a claims adjuster until he began his law enforcement career in April 1990 as a Dutchess County Deputy Sherriff.

In October 1993, Carroll joined the New Castle Police Department as a police officer. He trained new police officers for five years, was promoted to Sergeant in 2004, and then Lieutenant in 2016. “I didn’t know that I wanted to be Chief. I always wanted to move up in the ranks because I thought I could help shape the department. The further I got up, the further I wanted to go,” says Carroll.

Vicki Bergstrom whose family owns Lange’s Little Store has known Carroll since he started in New Castle. “It’s nice to see him rise through the ranks. He’s always been a great part of the community.”

“Service is our goal and primary function,” says Carroll. “I’d like to make this town the safest, and provide the best possible police service in the County or anywhere.” He is proud of his accomplishments to date that include increased productivity of traffic enforcement and community checks. “I want people to know that if they have a problem they should call. I tell the officers that if the phone rings I want a police officer to go speak to the caller.  Sometimes it’s not a police matter, but we can talk to them and maybe steer them in the right direction, and that helps.”

Chief Carroll hosted his first “Coffee With A Cop” on Saturday, July 27, 2019 at Lange’s Little Store in Chappaqua with plans for one soon in the west end of the town. (L-R): Lt. James Dumser, Caroline Wood, Chief James Carroll, Nate Wood and Lt. Estuardo Pazmino. PHOTO BY RONNI DIAMONDSTEIN

Strengthening Relationships in the Community

Carroll is pleased with his good relationships with fellow first responders. “Jim has always brought a sense of calmness to his role as a police officer and his presence at emergency scenes is not only comforting to the residents, but the first responders as well,” says Chappaqua Fire Chief Russell Maitland. “We are very lucky to have someone like Jim at the helm of our police department.”

Carroll has also developed a strong relationship with the school district. Amy Kaiser, a Chappaqua teacher met Carroll when she was Greeley’s faculty advisor for the annual Relay for Life.  “For the first time, we decided to hold the event at the Bell field, which we knew would require lots of support from our police department. Lt. Carroll was totally supportive and a true pleasure to work with.  He and his officers were on-site throughout the evening, ensuring the event was safe and successful.”

A priority for Carroll is to have full-time school resource officers, one in the high school, one in each middle school, or one for both middle schools, and he’s working with the school district to get that done.

“We’re here as a resource to help and guide. We want to have a relationship with students so they feel comfortable and can go talk to an officer. If you do it with the kids when they are young, it helps with their social and emotional growth.”

As Chief, Carroll’s increased responsibilities include personnel selection, promotions and the budget. “You’re responsible for things that no one else is, and for everyone in the department from detective sergeants to the civilian staff.” He knows he will face some challenges. “Recruiting and selecting officers are more difficult these days. Fewer people are interested in going into law enforcement as a career.”

On the Horizon for the Police Department

Going forward, Carroll wants to improve their social media presence on Facebook and Twitter to give the department more transparency. “There are a lot of things we do that people don’t know about. We have a brand new police car, and we’ve reunited lost dogs with their owners.” He’d also like to build relationships with the officers and the community. “I want to do ‘Coffee with a Cop,’ ‘Coffee with the Chief,’ have an open house, and bring back the bike and motorcycle patrols.” says Carroll.

Carroll is grateful to his predecessor. “Chief Ferry has been a great mentor, co-worker, leader and friend. I wouldn’t be here now without him. It’s exciting to take over and put my own stamp on it.”

Filed Under: Cover Stories Tagged With: Chief Carroll, Chief Ferry, Coffee with a Cop, community, James Carroll, New Castle Police, Police Chief, police officer, relationships, Relay for Life

Passion and Purpose in Chappaqua’s Relay for Life

May 26, 2018 by Derek Rosen

Since Chappaqua’s Relay For Life, a fundraiser for the American Cancer Society, is organized through Horace Greeley High School, many are under the assumption that it is a student only event. After doing some research, however, I discovered that anybody from the community is welcome to take part in it, so I decided to once again, a year after graduating,  sign up. To be clear, there are plenty of opportunities to get involved in Relay after high school by simply showing up to the event, making a donation, or sharing your experiences with cancer. Additionally, most colleges host their own Relays for Life, but I frankly did not feel the same connection to it as the one in my own community.

The People

The participants of Relay for Life in Chappaqua are some of the most passionate people that I have ever met, sacrificing their time and energy for the cause. Together they managed to raise over $130,000 this year, standing in the top ten most successful Relays in the country. Many of these volunteers are united by similar heart wrenching stories of losing loved ones to the disease, or for a lucky few, tales of triumph and survival.

Every year at the event several residents who have dealt with cancer, either personally or as witnesses, tell their stories. Jonathan Taub, a local resident who lost his son Casey to cancer just last year, was particularly emotional. Casey had spoken at the previous Relay, and served as a reminder of what we were fighting to cure.

 

The Opportunity

One of the highlights of Relay For Life is seeing the many different creative ways that people raise money. This is made possible by the fact that Relay attracts a large amount of willing donors to one place, meaning that a professional idea/orientation is not needed in order to draw attention and make a positive impact. For example, three years ago my team came up with the unorthodox idea to make a watermelon-themed booth at the event, selling various homemade foods and drinks containing the pink fruit, as well as exploding a watermelon with rubber bands. What first started out as an odd idea for a fundraiser, quickly turned into a hit and a tradition that kept us coming back.

This is what makes Relay for Life so magical, it gives everyone a chance to raise money for a great cause. With this unique opportunity to be a part of a community comes the formation of lasting memories, times where you and your friends did something simple to fight against a disease bigger than yourselves. These moments can be happy, such as exploding a watermelon at 2:00 AM while surrounded by a screaming crowd, or they can be sad, like crying and holding your friends tight as you listen to a cancer victim’s story.

My Call to Action   

Simply put, I love Relay for Life–the people that participate in it, the opportunity that it presents, and of course the cause, and I don’t want to leave that just because high school is behind me. Making a donation is important, but volunteering your time and energy truly shows cancer patients that you care. I urge you to not limit yourself because of your age and to participate in Relay For Life. It will help you change lives, and I assure you that it will change yours as well.     

Derek Rosen (HGHS Class of ’17) is an intern for the Inside Press this summer. In September, Derek will be entering his sophomore year at Syracuse University, where he is a communications major.

 

Filed Under: New Castle News Tagged With: cancer, Chappaqua, Horace Greeley High School, Relay for Life

Relay Reflections…

May 26, 2017 by Inside Press

… and Hope Following the 10th Annual Relay for Life of Chappaqua     

Article and Photo by Gillian Hand

On May 20th, the field in front of Bell Middle School was transformed. Tents and tables sprung up across the property as Greeley students prepared to spend the night at one of the most anticipated fundraising events of the year: the 10th Annual Relay for Life of Chappaqua. All night long, these participants would walk in support of cancer patients, raising money for research and fostering hope for a world without cancer.

The dedication to finding a cure runs strong in this American Cancer Society event, bringing communities together across the globe and right here in Chappaqua. Although no words can do it justice, this Relay for Life slogan is a true testament to the nature and goals of this inspiring event: “Celebrate. Remember. Fight back.”

2017 marked the tenth year of Chappaqua’s participation in Relay for Life. For one decade, students at Horace Greeley High School have come together to raise money for cancer research and have walked the track throughout the night in support of all those who have been touched by cancer. This year, the reconstruction of the Greeley track and field facilities prompted the event’s move to downtown Chappaqua.

While this would mark the first year that the fundraiser would be held anywhere but the Greeley property, the new location of Bell Middle School enhanced community involvement and inspired increased participation of local merchants and residents. Although the Bell facilities do not include a track, committee members from the Greeley club worked throughout the day to prepare the grounds for the fundraiser and mimic the setup of past years. While it was certainly a change from the previous events held at Greeley, the Chappaqua administration partnered with the Relay for Life of Chappaqua executive board to help ease the transition and make the event the great success it has been in the past.

I served on the Relay planning committee and executive board throughout my four years at Greeley. Behind the scenes, this dedicated Greeley club prepares for the event throughout the year, organizes the setup and cleanup of the event grounds, and works tirelessly to ensure that the night runs smoothly. It has been an honor to not only take part in such an inspiring and worthy event, but to also lend a personal hand in the successful planning and execution of the fundraiser. Each year, I have been privileged to watch the event grow and develop at every stage, present for everything from the early months of planning to the sun rising over the field after a night of walking.

Relay for Life is extraordinary. By rallying behind friends or family members touched by the disease or simply staying the night despite heavy rain or cold temperatures, these students prove themselves year after year as true supporters of the cause. It is incredible to see students, families, Greeley faculty members, and other Chappaqua residents coming together in hope and support; Relay for Life of Chappaqua has shown me how successful we can be when we unite behind a common goal. Nearly everyone has been touched by cancer in some way, and with an event like Relay, the entire community can work together to foster change and progress in cancer research. While I am looking forward to continuing my participation in college, I am excited to watch Relay for Life of Chappaqua continue to grow and succeed. 

At the time of the writing of this article, the 2017 Relay for Life of Chappaqua had raised over $170,000 for the American Cancer Society, and this number will only go up. Relay for Life is something that both Greeley and Chappaqua as a whole can be proud of.

To donate to Relay for Life of Chappaqua, visit http://main.acsevents.org/site/TR/RelayForLife/RFLCY17EA?pg=entry&fr_id=79440.

 

Inside Press Intern Gillian Hand is a senior at Greeley.

Filed Under: Inside Thoughts Tagged With: American Cancer Society, cancer, cancer research, Chappaqua, Hope, Horace Greeley High School, Relay for Life, Relay for Life of Chappaqua, theinsidepress.com

Ready, Set, RELAY

May 28, 2015 by The Inside Press

Planning Committee members Gillian Hand (L) and Vivian Kaiser at the 2014 Relay
Planning Committee members Gillian Hand (L) and
Vivian Kaiser at the 2014 Relay

Behind the Scenes of the 
Ultimate Community Fundraising Event

By Debra Hand

Celebrate. Remember. Fight Back.

On June 6th, hundreds upon hundreds of Chappaqua residents of all ages will descend upon the Horace Greeley High School track to take part in what is likely the largest–and perhaps the most moving–community event in town every year: the American Cancer Society’s (“ACS”) Relay for Life.

The Chappaqua Event Has Been
 Growing since 2008

Relay events span the globe, with team members taking turns walking all night to raise funds for cancer research. Food, games, activities and music build camaraderie and make every Relay the ultimate community event for a common cause. According to the ACS website, “each team is asked to have a representative on the track at all times during the event…because cancer never sleeps.”

The first Chappaqua Relay for Life was held in 2008, when three students who had participated in Fox Lane High School’s Relay to honor a stricken friend asked Greeley English teacher Amy Kaiser to be the faculty advisor for a HGHS club and event. That first year, the Chappaqua Relay drew 30 teams, over 300 participants, and raised over $70,000, surpassing its modest $30,000 goal.

The Greeley Relay, traditionally held the first weekend in June, has since grown exponentially, both in number of participants and funds raised. Last year, the event brought in approximately $160,000; the total raised in only seven years amounts to over $1,025,000, making the Chappaqua event one of the top Relays in the country every year since 2011, when it won the Number One Youth Award. With over 80 teams and close to 600 participants, from 8th graders through adults, the 2015 event will certainly reach its $170,000 goal.

Behind the Scenes: 
Months of Planning

No event of this magnitude happens without a good deal of organization. Shortly after the ACS October “Making Strides” Walk Against Breast Cancer, an ACS staff partner meets with Greeley organizers to set guidelines and a schedule. After a January kickoff ceremony, the school club, this year chaired by Greeley students Emma Meyer, Micaela Silver and Emily Kerstein, brainstorms activities and fundraising ideas.

“We are all really proud of our work this year and are so happy to be a part of Relay for Life. As co-chairs we organize the event for our town,” said Meyer. She adds, “Everyone is welcome to come support us to finish the fight against cancer!”

In memory of a loved one, with HOPE for all. Relay for Life Committee Photo
In memory of a loved one, with HOPE for all.
Relay for Life Committee Photo

Student subcommittees handle every detail: survivors’ dinner, entertainment, publicity (posters and social media), team recruitment, sponsorship and selling and decorating thousands of luminaria, paper bags to be filled with sand and candles honoring or remembering all loved ones.

Teams run fundraisers leading up to the event, including bake sales, car washes, yard sales, and jewelry or stationery creations and sales. The Chappaqua Relay, along with each team and individual participant, has a dedicated ACS webpage to help everyone solicit donations from family and friends.

ACS even offers various fundraising tips and incentives, such as Relay paraphernalia awarded for certain dollar amounts reached.

“Chaperones are the unsung heroes of Relay,” said Kaiser, who adds that the event “couldn’t happen without them.” Each youth team must have an adult who supervises overnight, and often those chaperones have friends offer to keep them company. “The community members do it for each other,” she said.

On “Bank Night,” money manually collected is submitted, t-shirts distributed, and campsites assigned. Logistics and paperwork are finalized; each “minor” participant must provide emergency contact information and chaperone confirmation.

In keeping with the community spirit of Relay, many local businesses provide goods and services, according to Kaiser: coffee and hot chocolate from Starbucks, the survivors’ dinner from Villarina’s, movie popcorn from the Jacob Burns Film Center, concession-stand ice cream from Ben & Jerry’s, and survivors’ dinner centerpieces from Whispering Pines.

The Day Arrives

At 8 a.m., Kaiser, the ACS liaison and the school Relay Executive Committee convene at Greeley to unpack and hang 200 signs brought by ACS, which also provides the large survivors’ tent, portable rest rooms, floodlights and lighting poles, all of which are delivered and assembled throughout the morning.

At 10 a.m., the 30-student planning committee begins arriving in shifts to plant stakes labeling the 80 campsites, inflate hundreds of balloons for a balloon arch, hang ACS banners, and ready the survivors’ and registration tents. Thousands of luminaria are filled with sand and placed around the track, and arranged on the bleachers to spell “HOPE.” The snack bar is set up for committee members to take shifts selling snacks like chips, pizza, soda and ice cream.

Between 4 and 6 p.m., participants arrive, register and assemble campsites. School custodians (also “unsung heroes,” said Kaiser), shuttle things on golf carts from parking lot to field, while the school DJ club provides music. Approximately 50 cancer survivors are served dinner, as young and old flood the field.

“Many people come to purchase luminaria for their loved ones so that they can decorate them personally and place it on the track themselves,” explained Kaiser.

The Survivor Lap: The Walk Begins

Relay officially begins at 7 p.m. with the inspirational Survivors’ Lap, accompanied by Melissa Etheridge’s song “I Run for Life;” survivors and their caregivers/families walk the track, wearing purple survivor shirts and sashes, as other participants and guests applaud.

“The first lap that the participants begin walking to was written by a Greeley graduate, Ben Silver (Micaela’s brother),” said Kaiser. “It’s a techno song called Relay that he wrote in order to raise money for Relay for Life at Tufts University when he graduated.  It’s pretty awesome that we have our own song!”

Everyone then walks the track, and runs or visits campsite fundraisers such as penny candy sales, photo booth, dunk tank, wedding booth, “relay-grams,” and “lap trackers,” where a walker purchases a lanyard and receives a bead for each lap walked. The most popular and profitable fundraiser is usually the “jail” created by adjoining soccer nets: individuals pay $5 to have friends “arrested,” or $5 bail for their release.

Luminaria from the 2014 Relay. Relay for Life Committee Photo
Luminaria from the 2014 Relay.
Relay for Life Committee Photo

The Luminaria Ceremony: Honoring Those Lost

As darkness falls, the committee lights candles in the thousands of luminaria lining the track and on the bleachers, each one bearing the name of a person touched by cancer. Light sticks are distributed to everyone present, and the lights on the fields are turned off.

In an incredibly moving and brave ceremony, student speakers talk about their experiences with cancer, either having faced the disease themselves or having watched a parent battle. Kaiser said that the students often volunteer, and are free to speak as long as they’d like without restrictions or time limits. She notes how difficult it is to see students struggle with such heartache.

The assembled audience is then asked to snap their light sticks in memory of loved ones lost to cancer, by turns parents, children, siblings, friends and others. “Hearing the crack, the noise of the light sticks, is just heartbreaking,” said Kaiser. The Greeley Madrigal Choir sings while all present walk a silent lap around the track. The music is the only thing heard, the light sticks, luminaria, and the word HOPE on the bleachers the only illumination.

The Long Overnight

Guests leave by 11 p.m., after which only students cleared with proper permission may stay. Kaiser herself checks registration wristbands throughout the night. Teams take turns walking and sleeping, tossing a frisbee, or playing board games in their tents. A movie is screened in the survivors’ tent, the school Puritans improvisation troupe may perform, even a yoga class may be offered.

At 5 a.m., coffee and bagels are provided, total fundraising announced, and exhausted participants pack up and leave. Committee members stay until 9 a.m. to take down the signs and dismantle the tables and chairs.

“This is a very hardworking committee of students,” said Kaiser. “They’re the muscle, and they’re on all night, too.” Most Relay participants go on 
to walk in their college campus Relays as well.

“Why We Relay”

The ACS philosophy states it best: Relay For Life “represents the hope that those lost to cancer will never be forgotten, that those who face cancer will be supported, and that one day cancer will be eliminated.”

realy-logoRelay for Life is many things to many people: it is an affirmation of life for those who have beaten cancer, it honors those lost to the disease, it is a way of coming together as a community to fight back and raise funds to rid the world of a scourge that has touched everyone in some way. The Chappaqua community has shown its generosity time and again, and Relay for Life is no exception.

To learn more about the Chappaqua Relay for Life or donate, click HERE.

Debra Hand is a longtime writer and editor for Inside Chappaqua. Her daughters have been on the Relay Planning Committee since 2011, and her husband has chaperoned twice (once in a very, VERY small tent).

 

Filed Under: Cover Stories Tagged With: American Cancer Society, cancer research, Chappaqua, Community Fundraising, Inside Press, Relay for Life, theinsidepress.com

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