April 2024 Newsletter

CDS April 2024 Newsletter cover image

April 2024 Newsletter

 

CDS Training Institute

 

Upcoming Trainings

 

Virtual Volunteer Orientation Session

 

April 4, 4:30-6:00pm

Register in advance for this meeting:

https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZEpfuuopzMuHtZh0BLB6YV03LegaLTrsmvo

 

KAIROS Blanket Exercise/Witness to Injustice (in partnership with Neighbors of the Onondaga Nation)

This interactive experience uses participatory education to foster truth, understanding, and respect between Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples.

 

April 18, 12:00-3:00pm

Crouch Hall, Onanda Park, Canandaigua

 

Basic Mediation Training

This 35-hour training introduces participants to the Transformative mediation framework to prepare them to mediate community disputes as well as to become a volunteer with the Center for Dispute Settlement.

 

May 8-10 and 21-22

Notre Dame Retreat House, Canandaigua

 

For more information or to register, contact Ronalyn Pollack: rpollack@cdsadr.org

Serving Our Youth Through the Family Empowerment Project

 

CDS's Family Empowerment Project began in October 2019 through a contract with Monroe County Department of Human Services, serving youth and their families referred by the Family Access Connection Team (FACT). The program is funded by Monroe County’s allocation from the NYS Supervision and Treatment Services for Juveniles Program (STSJP).

 

The Family Empowerment Project provides conflict resolution services, including case management, conflict coaching, mediation, and restorative circles, to youth and their families in need of prevention and early intervention services. Trained conflict resolution specialists work with youth and families to address issues such as school attendance, family and peer conflict, and criminal cases handled by Probation.

 

CDS is seeking additional funding to expand our programming so we can serve more youth and families in need of support. Our priority is to increase services for single mothers who are in need of referrals for additional supports with housing, food, employment, and other basic needs.

 

For more information about how to make a donation to support the Family Empowerment Project, contact: Julie Burke: jburke@cdsadr.org. Or visit: https://www.cdsadr.org/?q=donate

 

The Great North America Total Solar Eclipse

April 8, 2024

 

On April 8, 2024, our area is fortunate to experience the rare phenomenon of a total solar eclipse. A total solar eclipse only takes the same path every 100 years or so. The eclipse occurs where the moon will completely eclipse the sun and daylight is reduced to twilight conditions.

 

On April 8, the eclipse will start at 2:07pm, peak at 3:20 pm, and end around 4:33 pm.

 

How to prepare? The number one tip for solar eclipse viewing it to keep your eyes protected. Do not look directly at the sun if you do not have proper glasses! Here is a list of reputable places to buy the solar eclipse glasses – visitingfingerlakes.com/eclipse-2024/resources/solar-eclipse-glasses/ and Rochestereclipse2024.org/eclipse-glasses-buying-locations/

 

The best viewing locations are places that offer a clear view of the sky. In our area, schools are closed for the day, watch parties are being planned, wines are being named in its honor, beautiful posters are being created, and there’s a lot of fun things to see and do in preparation of the big event! Check out www.iloveny.com/events/eclipse-2024/ for a list of events.

 

The Center for Dispute Settlement will be closed on April 8th in celebration of the total solar eclipse.

Why I'm on the Racial Equity

Leadership Committee (RELC)

 

by Maia Taub, RELC Co-Chair

 

This month, I am going to talk a little about my why -- why I'm on RELC, why I care so much about Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Belonging (DEIB) -- because I know that humans connect by sharing stories. So here is a story.

 

 

It has been twenty-nine years since I discovered two things. I learned, from my dad's Time-Life World War II In Pictures books, that the Holocaust had happened and how dreadful it had been. I also learned that the Germans had done it. Yes, the Nazis, but many people make the argument that if you weren't actively fighting the Nazis, you were complicit.

 

 

 

And what I realized, out of all that, was that I was German. I make no secret of being half-foreign; assimilation in America, as a bicultural person, has been difficult, and my family is White and European. My mother and all of the relatives I knew as a child were born in and grew up in and lived their lives in Germany. Somehow it didn't hit as hard until I was confronted with this ugly truth about my people -- and when I say my people, I mean my family, my home.

 

 

 

As a German, therefore, I resolved, as a little girl, two things: to change whatever I could change so that this never happened again, and to bear witness to whatever I could not change.

 

 

 

This year, Yom HaShoah (literally "day of the Holocaust") falls in early May. I was not introduced to the commemoration until I was in college. Monroe Community College puts on a whole day of programming for Yom HaShoah, and they're not shy about including other genocides. I remember spending part of one Yom HaShoah silently standing in a box about twice the size of a phone booth with eight other people, to experience what it would have been like to hide from the people who were hunting us. I stood witness to the survivors who came to speak, knowing that their time with us was limited even twenty years ago.

 

 

 

I kept, and keep, the day of remembrance after I left MCC. One year, my friend Evan went with me to the Jewish Community Center to see an exhibit. It was a garden of brick and stone. I remember the day was gray and a little damp. Very somber. I traced the names on the bricks, and I sobbed, because my family had not been able to keep them safe. We were trying to survive ourselves. It was a near thing for my grandfather, who was drafted to the Eastern Front and ended up in a Russian mine as a prisoner of war.

 

 

For nearly thirty years I have held this. So when I woke up to the injustices on this side of the ocean, the targeting of Black and Indigenous People of Color (BIPOC) Americans, there came a time when I could no longer remain complacent and silent. I had to find a way to be part of the solution or risk being part of the next Shoah.

 

 

 

That is why I pour myself into this work. It is my apology to everyone who died as a result of my family's inaction. It is my promise to stand with those who need it, if the same or worse should come to pass here. It is my resistance. There are people whose trajectories I can change using my privilege.

 



It takes stories to make up a history, and it takes histories to show us how we can change the future. I welcome you all to share your stories, so we can make new history here and now -- in the name of giving the generations to come a better life.  

21 Day Equity Challenge

by Dawn Wisset, CDS Volunteer Mediator 

 

I really enjoyed participating in the 2024 21-Day Equity Challenge sponsored by the University of Rochester, the United Way, and the University of Rochester Association for Minority Residents and Fellows (AMRF).

 

For 21 days during February, participants received daily emails with challenges covering topics such as Structural Racism, Belonging, Neurodiversity, Gender Affirming Language, and The Generational Gap in the Workplace. The challenges included opportunities for learning through articles and videos, as well as questions for reflection.

 

The concept, for individuals to gain deeper understanding of equity as part of a community-wide effort, is appealing as a starting point for taking action. Although none of the topics were foreign to me, I learned a lot from the challenges and was reminded to be more attentive and outspoken regarding inequity. It’s a small amount of progress but will hopefully lead to further personal and collective steps forward. I strongly encourage others to participate in similar future opportunities.

Volunteer of the Month

Jose Cruzado

 

Jose Cruzado became a certified Custody and Visitation Mediator in 2022. He first learned about mediation through his work with the courts in Livingston County. His discussions with the director, Leticia Rosenthal, led to his interest, training, and certification in the field of mediation.  

 

Prior to becoming a volunteer at Center for Dispute Settlement, he worked for the NYS courts for 12 years as a Chief Clerk, Commissioner of Jurors in Livingston County, and Deputy Chief Clerk in Allegany County, NY. He retired from the courts in January of 2022.

 

In mediation, Jose believes that one of the most important things we do is to help parties communicate and perhaps improve the way they communicate in the future and for the long term.  

 

In custody and visitation cases his hope is to indirectly or directly improve communication in a way that improves the quality-of-life of the child/children that will be impacted. 

 

Having worked for the courts for so many years he has witnessed first-hand how demanding large caseloads can be on the court system and the impact of litigation on the parties. He believes mediation is clearly a positive approach to reducing the impact of litigation on all whether that impact be financial or emotional. 

 

When not volunteering his time at CDS, Jose enjoys dancing, walking, hiking, drawing, and DANCING. (Salsa, anyone?)  

 

We are SO GRATEFUL to Jose for sharing his gifts and his time with staff and clients in Livingston County!

April Diversity Calendar 2024

 

If a holiday begins the evening before, we will mark it with an asterisk (*) below.

 

April is Celebrate Diversity Month which recognizes the diversity of the world and is a time of understanding differences whether gender, sexual orientation, race, ethnicity, religion, or other identities.

 

Lesbian Visibility Week is celebrated to increase awareness and a better understanding of issues related to the LGBT community and its different identities. It’s associated with Lesbian Visibility Day, which is observed every April 26.

 

April 2 - World Autism Awareness Day

This annual celebration helps raise awareness and acceptance of those with neurodivergence and developmental disorders.

 

April 6 – Tartan Day

The day acknowledges the contributions that Scottish Americans have made.

 

April 22 – Earth Day

Celebrate the 54th annual Earth Day by attending neighborhood or beach cleanups, planting a tree, or helping to lead a recycling effort in your workplace.

 

April 22 – 30 – Passover

Passover or Pesach celebrates the ancient Israelites' escape from slavery in Egypt. It is also known as the Feast of Unleavened Bread as Matzah is eaten during this holiday.

 

Source: diversityresources.com/diversity-calendar-2024/

 
 

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