Posts Tagged ‘Westchester’

LGBTQ+ Westchester Residents Sought for Focus Group

Monday, November 27th, 2017

Do you identify as an LGBTQ person of color between the ages of 25 to 55? Do you live and/or work in New Rochelle, Pelham, or Mount Vernon? If so, we want to hear about your experiences being LGBTQ in Westchester County!

WHAT: An hour-long focus group discussion about being LGBTQ in Westchester county
WHERE: Mt. Vernon (location provided upon RSVP)
WHEN: Wednesday, December 6 at 6pm
WHY: To help local LGBTQ organizations better meet your needs

$25 gift cards and food will be provided!

The LOFT, Center Lane and the Westchester Community Foundation are conducting an LGBTQ needs assessment to learn more what it’s like being LGBTQ in Westchester County, including a series of focus groups to hear directly from LGBTQ community members. Findings will be used to expand and improve services to better meet community needs. Join the discussion and share your thoughts on what’s working in Westchester, what needs to change, and how can we make this county more LGBTQ-inclusive.

To RSVP for the group or get more information, please contact Naomi Kabalkin at (845) 471-0708 x12 or at nkabalkin@hudsonvalleycs.org.

Woodlands Community Temple Organizes Food Drive for HVCS

Monday, October 2nd, 2017

Woodlands Community Temple in Greenburgh, NY organized a food drive for HVCS’ emergency food closets on Sunday, October 1st. Thanks to everyone who donated and the volunteers who brought a delivery truck full of food to our Hawthorne office!

New Prevention Program for Women of Color Coming Soon

Thursday, September 21st, 2017
Woman of color

Image by Javi_Indy on Freepik – www.freepik.com

HVCS is launching a new infectious disease prevention program this December specifically for women of color. Our new Women’s Services Program will help prevent new HIV, STD, and hepatitis C infections among minority women in Dutchess, Orange, Rockland and Westchester counties. The program aligns with New York State’s “End the Epidemic” plan to increase the number of women who know their HIV/STD/HCV status and increase the number of women linked to medical care.

The Women’s Services Program will use a trauma-informed approach to outreach and prevention, since many women at high risk for these infections live with traumatic pasts or present-day circumstances, including abuse, homelessness, poverty, and immigrant status.

Our initial contract will run for five years, and we aim to serve at least 300 women each year. We look forward to sharing more news about this exciting and important new program in the future.

Thanks to Whole Foods for donating hot cocoa to our PRO program!

Thursday, January 19th, 2017

Whole Foods donationOn January 18, 2017, Whole Foods in White Plains, NY donated a case of organic hot cocoa to our Project Reach Out (PRO) program. This is the perfect donation since the PRO team gets out there on the streets in all kinds of weather to talk to high-risk individuals about staying safe from HIV/AIDS. Many of PRO’s contacts are homeless or living in shelters. Thanks to Whole Foods, we can offer them a hot cup of cocoa while we meet with them inside our van. PRO provides HIV testing, information and referrals on PrEP, and referrals for substance abuse assistance.

Photos from HVCS’ 30th Anniversary Party

Friday, September 30th, 2016

On Friday, September 23, 2016, HVCS hosted a very special 30th Anniversary Party at Ceola Manor in Jefferson Valley, NY. 100 guests raised a glass to toast HVCS’ past, present and future, and US Congressman Sean Patrick Maloney delivered a personal and motivating keynote speech. Later on, advocate, peer and VOCAL-NY Board Member Dawn Carney shared her life’s story and received a standing ovation. Thanks to everyone who attended, donated silent auction items, and supported this momentous milestone with us.

Photos by Melisa Ann Photography – click on the images for full viewing.

On HVCS’ 30th Anniversary: An Open Letter

Thursday, September 22nd, 2016

March 3, 1986. That’s the date when John Egan, the first Executive Director of the organization that eventually became Hudson Valley Community Services, signed the papers to incorporate as the Mid-Hudson Valley AIDS Task Force. These papers also established the agency’s “doing business as” name: AIDS-Related Community Services, or ARCS. John and a few other volunteers worked with the New York State Health Department’s new AIDS Institute for two and a half years before that point to line up funding, establish a hotline to answer questions about AIDS, and provide the bare beginnings of education for the public about what turned out to be a long-lasting epidemic.

As John said in a recent interview (this month), no one expected AIDS to last that long—they thought it would be cured within a few years. They likely had no idea how long the new agency would last, either.

Thirty years later,  not only is the agency still here—bearing a new name and expanded mission—but it is thriving. Though AIDS is not yet over and still provides us with plenty of challenges, there is at least a blueprint for diminishing its impact in New York State, with Gov. Cuomo’s “Bending the Curve” program and commitment to reducing new HIV transmissions to zero by 2020.

The organization (once known as ARCS, now as HVCS) can now respond to the initial risk factors that make people vulnerable to HIV and many diseases: poverty, disenfranchisement, substance use, mental health. We’ve expanded our programs and services beyond the one medical issue to hundreds more—though we remain steadfast in battling the HIV virus that started us down this path.

HIV is still around—but we’re still here, too. We now have nine offices—our latest opened in Lake Katrine last December. Our incredibly caring, talented, hard-working staff of 100 employees  work continuously on new initiatives and approaches to providing help where it is needed among the most vulnerable communities of the Hudson Valley.

100 of our most ardent supporters, staff and volunteers are gathering on Friday, September 23, 2016 at Ceola Manor in Jefferson Valley to raise a glass to toast our past and celebrate our bright future. But that is only a small fraction of those involved in this organization–and the celebration continues long past the confines of one party on one evening. Every time we get a client into stable housing–every time a client gets to a medical appointment–every time a young person comes in for a free HIV test–every time we get a thank-you note from a grateful client–and every time we get a donation–those are the tributes to HVCS that matter most. We wouldn’t be here without you. Thank you, thank you, thank you.

Silent Auction Preview: 30th Anniversary Party

Wednesday, September 7th, 2016

To whet your appetite for our 30th Anniversary Party’s silent auction, here’s a small sample of the wonderful items up for bid!

 

spa

Relaxing Spa Packages – including Amore Day Spa and Marlboro Spa

Tickets to a Yankees 2017 Game

 

provincetown

A Week in Provincetown, MA – Two Bedroom Centrally-Located Condo

Dinners at Fine Restaurants – including Crave and Henry’s at Buttermilk Falls

 

warwick-valley-winery

Wine Tastings & Tours

 

OldDrovers_night

A Weekend at the Old Drover’s Inn in Dover Plains

Brewery Tours & Craft Beers – including Yonkers Brewing Company & Captain Lawrence

 

white sweet 16 dresses

An Exclusive Behind-the-Scenes Tour of the Bronx Zoo

Artwork & Home Decor – including vintage Herb Ritts posters

…and plenty more! Get your tickets and join us on September 23rd to help support our food pantries, housing and HIV prevention programs.

Meet Adie Shore, HVCS’ New Director of Grants, CQI and Data Services

Monday, February 22nd, 2016
bridesmaid dresses

Adie Shore, HVCS’ new Director of CQI, Data and Grants Management

Hudson Valley Community Services announced today that Adie Shore, a resident of Scarsdale, will lead a new department which will house quality improvement, data services and grant management. Shore comes to the agency from a long freelance career as a grant writer. She worked previously for the Women’s Enterprise Development Center and the YWCA.

 She holds a BS in Math from Long Island University, an MS in Operational Research from the New York Polytechnic Institute and an MA in Finance from Columbia Business School. After college she worked in the banking sector, and began volunteering for non-profits while raising her family. She then decided to devote her skills and interests to help non-profits succeed. She holds a National Grants Professional certification.

 HVCS reorganized two small administrative teams which oversee continued quality improvement and data services into one department, and expanded the responsibilities of its grant writer position to run the new department. Shore supervises four employees.

 “I’m happy to be working for an organization that believes that everyone has the right to a better quality of life.  This is evidenced by HVCS’ commitment to the clients they serve, and the programs they provide,” Shore said. “I’m impressed with HVCS’ commitment to quality improvement and data integrity.” She aims to maintain these high standards while securing funds to sustain existing programs and meet the agency’s future funding needs.

 Andrea Straus, Executive Director, congratulated Shore on her new position. “We are delighted to have Adie Shore on board at HVCS. Her arrival is the culmination of executive management’s dream of finding a director who can handle our multiple grant and foundation applications and licensing inquiries. This role also entails managing the increasingly complicated technology for funding application submissions, and integrates our grants, data and CQI functions. She is definitely the right person to do this, and has already begun to lead us in new ventures.”

 

ShopRite Donations Roll In

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2016

An overflowing cart of donated non-perishables from ShopRite in ScarsdaleHVCS has been the lucky recipient of several donations from ShopRite/Price Rite and Wakefern’s Partners in Caring initiative over the past week! Today, ShopRite of Scarsdale donated an overflowing cart of nonperishable foods for our emergency food closets. Catholic Charities helped them collect the food.

We also learned that our Monticello and Newburgh offices have each received a $1,000 credit at the Regional Food Bank of Northeastern New York thanks to the Partners in Caring program. Funds came through ShopRite in Monticello and in Vails Gate. We are extremely grateful for ShopRite’s ongoing support for our emergency food closets!

Meet Toya Bost-Utsey, HVCS’ New Human Resources Director

Friday, January 29th, 2016

Toya Bost-UtseyHudson Valley Community Services announced today that Toya Bost-Utsey is the new Director of Human Resources at the local non-profit organization. She supervises two employees.

Bost-Utsey holds a Bachelor of Science in Organizational Management from Mercy College. She has spent much of her career thus far in human resources at financial institutions, including Hudson Valley Bank in Tuckahoe.

Though her first job after graduation was as a legal secretary, she came to the human resources field by accident. Her first job in human resources was at Cablevision. She is a member of the Society of Human Resources Management (SHRM).

Originally from the Bronx, she is now a resident of Croton-on-Hudson.

“I am thrilled to work for such an energetic, welcoming organization,” Bost-Utsey said. She looks forward to working cohesively with all departments. She prides herself on embracing technology to update and streamline the Human Resources department.

“We are fortunate to have Toya Bost-Utsey join our senior management team and to fill an essential role at HVCS,” said Andrea Straus, Executive Director. “Her predecessor had been with us for sixteen years, so it was no small accomplishment to learn the workings of our organization in a very short period of time right when we transitioned to a new health insurance plan, our first switch in decades. I know she will also easily handle multiple personnel, staff training, and policy issues.”