Craig WIlliam Taylor proudly supports St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in its mission to prevent and cure debilitating pediatric diseases through cutting-edge research and treatment methodologies.
St. Jude Children's Hospital is the first and only pediatric cancer center designated as a Comprehensive Cancer Center by the National Cancer Institute. Its mission is to advance cures for pediatric catastrophic diseases through research and treatment, providing care regardless of a family's ability to pay. St. Jude has developed cures for diseases like ALL and sickle cell disease, and shares its research freely worldwide to help more children.
Danny Thomas founded St. Jude Children's Research Hospital in 1962 after praying to St. Jude Thaddeus for help in his career. St. Jude conducts research to advance cures and prevention of pediatric catastrophic diseases and provides treatment regardless of families' ability to pay. The hospital recently expanded its facilities and now has 2.5 million square feet dedicated to finding cures and saving children with cancer and other life-threatening illnesses.
Danny Thomas founded St. Jude Children's Research Hospital in 1962 after praying to St. Jude Thaddeus for help in his career. St. Jude conducts research to advance cures and prevention of pediatric catastrophic diseases and provides treatment regardless of families' ability to pay. It has expanded significantly over the years and remains committed to its founding mission of curing childhood diseases and helping families.
Danny Thomas founded St. Jude Children's Research Hospital in 1962 after praying to St. Jude Thaddeus and vowing to build a shrine if he found success in show business. St. Jude conducts research to advance cures and prevention of pediatric catastrophic diseases and provides treatment regardless of families' ability to pay. The hospital recently expanded its facilities and now has over 2.5 million square feet dedicated to finding cures and saving children with cancer and other life-threatening diseases.
Danny Thomas founded St. Jude Children's Research Hospital in 1962 after praying to St. Jude Thaddeus for help in his career. St. Jude conducts research to advance cures and prevention of pediatric catastrophic diseases and provides treatment regardless of families' ability to pay. It has expanded significantly over the years and remains committed to its mission of curing childhood diseases and helping families.
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital has partnered with the International Atomic Energy Agency to help fight childhood cancer in underdeveloped nations. The partnership aims to raise awareness, generate resources for nuclear medicine services, and support research and training in radiation oncology, as survival rates for pediatric cancer are much lower in developing countries due to lack of medical training and access to treatment.
St. Jude Teams with IAEA to Improve Pediatric Cancer Treatment AbroadArthur Godsell
Arthur Godsell has served as president of the Godsell Construction Corporation in Long Island, New York, for more than four decades. He follows in the footsteps of his parents, who founded the company in the 1960s in Hicksville, NY. Outside of his professional endeavors, Arthur Godsell gives back by supporting various charities, including St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, a nonprofit that provides free health care for children facing cancer.
Craig WIlliam Taylor proudly supports St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in its mission to prevent and cure debilitating pediatric diseases through cutting-edge research and treatment methodologies.
St. Jude Children's Hospital is the first and only pediatric cancer center designated as a Comprehensive Cancer Center by the National Cancer Institute. Its mission is to advance cures for pediatric catastrophic diseases through research and treatment, providing care regardless of a family's ability to pay. St. Jude has developed cures for diseases like ALL and sickle cell disease, and shares its research freely worldwide to help more children.
Danny Thomas founded St. Jude Children's Research Hospital in 1962 after praying to St. Jude Thaddeus for help in his career. St. Jude conducts research to advance cures and prevention of pediatric catastrophic diseases and provides treatment regardless of families' ability to pay. The hospital recently expanded its facilities and now has 2.5 million square feet dedicated to finding cures and saving children with cancer and other life-threatening illnesses.
Danny Thomas founded St. Jude Children's Research Hospital in 1962 after praying to St. Jude Thaddeus for help in his career. St. Jude conducts research to advance cures and prevention of pediatric catastrophic diseases and provides treatment regardless of families' ability to pay. It has expanded significantly over the years and remains committed to its founding mission of curing childhood diseases and helping families.
Danny Thomas founded St. Jude Children's Research Hospital in 1962 after praying to St. Jude Thaddeus and vowing to build a shrine if he found success in show business. St. Jude conducts research to advance cures and prevention of pediatric catastrophic diseases and provides treatment regardless of families' ability to pay. The hospital recently expanded its facilities and now has over 2.5 million square feet dedicated to finding cures and saving children with cancer and other life-threatening diseases.
Danny Thomas founded St. Jude Children's Research Hospital in 1962 after praying to St. Jude Thaddeus for help in his career. St. Jude conducts research to advance cures and prevention of pediatric catastrophic diseases and provides treatment regardless of families' ability to pay. It has expanded significantly over the years and remains committed to its mission of curing childhood diseases and helping families.
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital has partnered with the International Atomic Energy Agency to help fight childhood cancer in underdeveloped nations. The partnership aims to raise awareness, generate resources for nuclear medicine services, and support research and training in radiation oncology, as survival rates for pediatric cancer are much lower in developing countries due to lack of medical training and access to treatment.
St. Jude Teams with IAEA to Improve Pediatric Cancer Treatment AbroadArthur Godsell
Arthur Godsell has served as president of the Godsell Construction Corporation in Long Island, New York, for more than four decades. He follows in the footsteps of his parents, who founded the company in the 1960s in Hicksville, NY. Outside of his professional endeavors, Arthur Godsell gives back by supporting various charities, including St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, a nonprofit that provides free health care for children facing cancer.
Cancer Support VI (CSVI) provides financial assistance and support services to cancer patients in the US Virgin Islands. It was founded in 2005 and has since distributed over $940,000 in grants to help with medical costs, travel, lodging, and hospice care for uninsured cancer patients. CSVI works closely with local healthcare organizations and has partnerships with the American Cancer Society. Through case studies, the document outlines how CSVI has helped patients afford cancer diagnosis and treatment.
Please Support The Chase After a Cure for Childhood CancerGoing Places, Inc
Chase After a Cure (CAAC) was started in 2009 by Summerville, S.C., resident Whitney Ringler and her family after her son, Chase, was given a 30 percent chance of survival after being diagnosed with Stage 4 neuroblastoma, a cancer of the nerve tissue of the sympathetic nervous system. Chase survived this aggressive form of cancer and now his family works tirelessly on behalf of childhood cancer research.
CAAC raises awareness about childhood cancer, specifically neuroblastoma, and funds childhood cancer research at the Medical University of South Carolina Children’s Hospital.
Cancer is the No. 1 cause of disease-related death among children. About 13,500 children between birth and age 19 are diagnosed with cancer each year. Just at the Medical University of South Carolina, about 70 children are diagnosed with pediatric cancer annually.
Compared to adult cancer, childhood cancers are rare. Even though childhood cancer incidence rates continue to increase slightly each year, they still represent less than 1 percent of all new cancer diagnoses. That means funding for childhood cancer research is limited. In particular, neuroblastoma – which has one of the lowest survival rates – receives very little attention because the population base with this form of cancer isn’t profitable enough for pharmaceutical companies to develop new treatments.
While childhood cancer may impact a smaller population, it impacts the young lives of those diagnosed at 100 percent. Please help support Chase After a Cure. www.chaseafteracure.com/donate
The Chase Fund was established in 2013 by CancerConnects and a local health advocate to provide financial assistance to non-breast cancer patients in Central New York. In 2014, generous donations from the community and special fundraisers allowed the Chase Fund to provide nearly $30,000 in assistance to cancer patients in need. This included $500 in gas and grocery cards for a father with late-stage colon cancer, $721 for supplemental health insurance premiums for a woman with lung cancer, and a special mortgage payment and heating fuel costs to prevent a 25-year employee with cancer from losing his home.
The ETF - St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital PartnershipBrian Sidman
Brian Sidman is a former board member of the Eric Trump Foundation (ETF), which allotted 97% of its funds to St. Jude Children's Research Hospital. ETF was established in 2006 with the mission of raising funds for childhood cancer patients at St. Jude. It had raised over $30 million for St. Jude by 2016. St. Jude was chosen as the sole beneficiary because it never denies treatment due to inability to pay and freely shares its research. In 2016, ETF dissolved when Eric Trump's father was elected president to avoid conflicts of interest, ending ETF's fundraising efforts.
This document summarizes a St. Baldrick's head shaving event to raise money for childhood cancer. It provides an agenda for the event including registration, head shaving, entertainment and a silent auction. It thanks volunteers and sponsors who helped make the event a success in raising funds for cancer research.
Executive Supports Children's Cancer Research FundJeff Drobny
Jeffrey Steven Drobny (Jeff), founding member of Garda Capital Partners, an asset management firm based in Minneapolis, Minnesota, has deep ties to the city, where he lives and works. Formerly a Scottsdale, Arizona resident, Jeff Drobny gives back to his current community by supporting its charitable organizations.
Hope for Henry is a nonprofit that aims to improve the patient experience for children in hospitals. It focuses on reducing stress and increasing joy for kids undergoing long-term medical treatment for serious illnesses like cancer. It embeds child life specialists in hospitals to support patients. It also brings fun activities like parties and special events to hospitals to make healing more enjoyable for kids. Research shows this approach can positively impact medical outcomes in addition to improving quality of life. The organization is seeking donations to expand its programs to additional hospitals and children in need.
The document summarizes recent events and announcements from Genesis HealthCare System. It discusses the opening of the new Genesis Perry County Medical Center and Emergency Department. It also provides updates on migrating to a new email platform, an upcoming "Always Clean" awareness campaign from Environmental Services, service awards for employees celebrating milestone anniversaries, new physicians who have joined Genesis, and upcoming community events like Coal Miners Appreciation Day and an annual ethics symposium.
Every 3 minutes, a child is diagnosed with cancer worldwide. In the US, 43 children are diagnosed daily. 1 in 285 children will be diagnosed with cancer before age 20. St. Jude Children's Research Hospital has helped increase the cure rate for acute lymphoblastic leukemia to 95% and ensures families never receive bills, but it costs $2.2 million per day to operate. Public contributions cover about 75% of costs, with 82 cents of every dollar going to research and treatment.
This document discusses leukemia, a type of cancer that affects thousands of children each year in the United States. It primarily affects children between the ages of 3-15 and can drastically alter their lives. The disease involves an overproduction of abnormal, non-functioning blood cells which collect in the bone marrow and bloodstream. There are two forms, acute and chronic, with acute involving a more rapid overproduction of abnormal cells. Significant efforts have been made to research and cure leukemia through organizations like St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, founded by Danny Thomas in 1962 to support research for diseases that affect children. The hospital receives over $1 million in daily funding to support its facilities and treatment of over 5,000 patients at a time
The IGW Pediatric Cancer Foundation was started to raise awareness and support for families of children with cancer after the founders' son Ian was diagnosed with leukemia at age 4. The foundation supports families financially and emotionally during their child's cancer treatment at UNM Children's Hospital in Albuquerque, as many families must travel weekly from out of town and stay in Albuquerque for the duration of treatment. The foundation raises funds through an annual golf tournament and other donations. They allocate 75% of funds to UNM's Family Support Fund to help families with living expenses and 25% to hospice care for children with cancer. Since 2004 they have contributed over $117,000 to the Family Support Fund.
The document is the 2017-2018 annual report for East Tennessee Children's Hospital. It includes stories about patients like Audrey, who has been cancer-free for 10 years, and information about the hospital's services. The hospital provides comprehensive care through multiple clinics and specialists, and also focuses on family-centered care through services like child life, social work, and their facility dog. The hospital's reach extends across 16 counties in Tennessee as well as parts of Kentucky and Virginia through outpatient clinics, home health, and rehabilitation services.
The document summarizes philanthropic efforts that support centers of excellence at UM St. Joseph Medical Center. It discusses how donations to the Cancer Institute established an endowment to support innovative cancer therapies. It also describes a 5K run that raised funds for the Heart Institute's HeartAware program, which uses CT scans to screen for early heart disease. Overall, the document highlights examples of how philanthropy is enhancing patient care through various initiatives across several centers.
This document summarizes an event organized by Cost Cutters to raise money for St. Baldrick's, a charity that funds cancer research. It provides details on the head shaving event including the date, location, agenda and sponsors. It also includes facts about childhood cancer, thank you messages and profiles of child ambassadors who are battling cancer to highlight the importance of the cause.
The document summarizes services provided at the Grady Health System Breast and GYN Clinic in Atlanta, Georgia. It describes the clinic's mission to provide cancer care, screening, and support services to medically underserved patients, many of whom are African American or Hispanic women. As a social work student, responsibilities include performing psychosocial assessments, maintaining support group calendars, and ensuring patients can access community resources and financial assistance programs.
The document discusses planned giving options for supporting the American Cancer Society (ACS). It summarizes that the ACS is the largest non-governmental funder of cancer research, having contributed over $3.4 billion. It describes that planned gifts can come from assets rather than income, and can be outright or deferred, taking forms like wills, trusts, gift annuities, real estate, life insurance and donor-advised funds. The ACS supports all contributions to fund cancer research, support services for patients, and help create a world with less cancer.
This document provides information about recent activities and events at New Jersey Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs). It begins with a letter from the President & CEO of the New Jersey Primary Care Association reflecting on the past year and highlighting their work supporting FQHCs. It then discusses various FQHC events from the past few months, including breast cancer awareness events, health center expansions and awards, and community outreach programs. The document promotes upcoming training opportunities through the NJPCA and their partnership with RWJ on Project ECHO for expanding specialty care access at FQHCs.
About Children’s Cancer Recovery Foundation (CCRF)
Headquartered in Harrisburg, PA with a division in The Woodlands, TX, the Children’s Cancer Recovery Foundation supports children under 18 and their families facing the hardships of cancer. The foundation performs acts of care and kindness through the following programs: Bear-Able Gifts (largest distributor of gifts to children with cancer in the U.S.); Toxic-Free Kids (educates families on the dangers of environmental toxins); New Era Cancer Research Fund (funds research for less toxic, minimally-invasive pediatric-cancer treatments); International Aid (provides medications and supplies to clinics in developing and impoverished countries); Helping Hands Fund (provides emergency financial assistance to families); and Camp Scholarships (allows children in remission to reconnect with activities they love). With a national pediatric-hospital partner network of 215+ locations, the foundation directly helps more than 15,000 children affected by cancer and their families every year. Please visit www.ChildrensCancerRecovery.org.
About Alliance Defending Freedom’s Blackstone Legal FellowshipBryce Neier
Founded in 1993, ADF is a Christian non-profit legal organization dedicated to protecting Constitutional rights and litigating cases, including those related to free speech, religious liberty, marriage and family matters, and parental rights.
A Fayetteville, North Carolina attorney, Bryce D. Neier provides knowledgeable representation in international and family law issues. Bryce D. Neier is well-versed in what many term "military divorce", which present unique legal issues.
In reality family law is dictated by state statutes and state common law.
Cancer Support VI (CSVI) provides financial assistance and support services to cancer patients in the US Virgin Islands. It was founded in 2005 and has since distributed over $940,000 in grants to help with medical costs, travel, lodging, and hospice care for uninsured cancer patients. CSVI works closely with local healthcare organizations and has partnerships with the American Cancer Society. Through case studies, the document outlines how CSVI has helped patients afford cancer diagnosis and treatment.
Please Support The Chase After a Cure for Childhood CancerGoing Places, Inc
Chase After a Cure (CAAC) was started in 2009 by Summerville, S.C., resident Whitney Ringler and her family after her son, Chase, was given a 30 percent chance of survival after being diagnosed with Stage 4 neuroblastoma, a cancer of the nerve tissue of the sympathetic nervous system. Chase survived this aggressive form of cancer and now his family works tirelessly on behalf of childhood cancer research.
CAAC raises awareness about childhood cancer, specifically neuroblastoma, and funds childhood cancer research at the Medical University of South Carolina Children’s Hospital.
Cancer is the No. 1 cause of disease-related death among children. About 13,500 children between birth and age 19 are diagnosed with cancer each year. Just at the Medical University of South Carolina, about 70 children are diagnosed with pediatric cancer annually.
Compared to adult cancer, childhood cancers are rare. Even though childhood cancer incidence rates continue to increase slightly each year, they still represent less than 1 percent of all new cancer diagnoses. That means funding for childhood cancer research is limited. In particular, neuroblastoma – which has one of the lowest survival rates – receives very little attention because the population base with this form of cancer isn’t profitable enough for pharmaceutical companies to develop new treatments.
While childhood cancer may impact a smaller population, it impacts the young lives of those diagnosed at 100 percent. Please help support Chase After a Cure. www.chaseafteracure.com/donate
The Chase Fund was established in 2013 by CancerConnects and a local health advocate to provide financial assistance to non-breast cancer patients in Central New York. In 2014, generous donations from the community and special fundraisers allowed the Chase Fund to provide nearly $30,000 in assistance to cancer patients in need. This included $500 in gas and grocery cards for a father with late-stage colon cancer, $721 for supplemental health insurance premiums for a woman with lung cancer, and a special mortgage payment and heating fuel costs to prevent a 25-year employee with cancer from losing his home.
The ETF - St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital PartnershipBrian Sidman
Brian Sidman is a former board member of the Eric Trump Foundation (ETF), which allotted 97% of its funds to St. Jude Children's Research Hospital. ETF was established in 2006 with the mission of raising funds for childhood cancer patients at St. Jude. It had raised over $30 million for St. Jude by 2016. St. Jude was chosen as the sole beneficiary because it never denies treatment due to inability to pay and freely shares its research. In 2016, ETF dissolved when Eric Trump's father was elected president to avoid conflicts of interest, ending ETF's fundraising efforts.
This document summarizes a St. Baldrick's head shaving event to raise money for childhood cancer. It provides an agenda for the event including registration, head shaving, entertainment and a silent auction. It thanks volunteers and sponsors who helped make the event a success in raising funds for cancer research.
Executive Supports Children's Cancer Research FundJeff Drobny
Jeffrey Steven Drobny (Jeff), founding member of Garda Capital Partners, an asset management firm based in Minneapolis, Minnesota, has deep ties to the city, where he lives and works. Formerly a Scottsdale, Arizona resident, Jeff Drobny gives back to his current community by supporting its charitable organizations.
Hope for Henry is a nonprofit that aims to improve the patient experience for children in hospitals. It focuses on reducing stress and increasing joy for kids undergoing long-term medical treatment for serious illnesses like cancer. It embeds child life specialists in hospitals to support patients. It also brings fun activities like parties and special events to hospitals to make healing more enjoyable for kids. Research shows this approach can positively impact medical outcomes in addition to improving quality of life. The organization is seeking donations to expand its programs to additional hospitals and children in need.
The document summarizes recent events and announcements from Genesis HealthCare System. It discusses the opening of the new Genesis Perry County Medical Center and Emergency Department. It also provides updates on migrating to a new email platform, an upcoming "Always Clean" awareness campaign from Environmental Services, service awards for employees celebrating milestone anniversaries, new physicians who have joined Genesis, and upcoming community events like Coal Miners Appreciation Day and an annual ethics symposium.
Every 3 minutes, a child is diagnosed with cancer worldwide. In the US, 43 children are diagnosed daily. 1 in 285 children will be diagnosed with cancer before age 20. St. Jude Children's Research Hospital has helped increase the cure rate for acute lymphoblastic leukemia to 95% and ensures families never receive bills, but it costs $2.2 million per day to operate. Public contributions cover about 75% of costs, with 82 cents of every dollar going to research and treatment.
This document discusses leukemia, a type of cancer that affects thousands of children each year in the United States. It primarily affects children between the ages of 3-15 and can drastically alter their lives. The disease involves an overproduction of abnormal, non-functioning blood cells which collect in the bone marrow and bloodstream. There are two forms, acute and chronic, with acute involving a more rapid overproduction of abnormal cells. Significant efforts have been made to research and cure leukemia through organizations like St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, founded by Danny Thomas in 1962 to support research for diseases that affect children. The hospital receives over $1 million in daily funding to support its facilities and treatment of over 5,000 patients at a time
The IGW Pediatric Cancer Foundation was started to raise awareness and support for families of children with cancer after the founders' son Ian was diagnosed with leukemia at age 4. The foundation supports families financially and emotionally during their child's cancer treatment at UNM Children's Hospital in Albuquerque, as many families must travel weekly from out of town and stay in Albuquerque for the duration of treatment. The foundation raises funds through an annual golf tournament and other donations. They allocate 75% of funds to UNM's Family Support Fund to help families with living expenses and 25% to hospice care for children with cancer. Since 2004 they have contributed over $117,000 to the Family Support Fund.
The document is the 2017-2018 annual report for East Tennessee Children's Hospital. It includes stories about patients like Audrey, who has been cancer-free for 10 years, and information about the hospital's services. The hospital provides comprehensive care through multiple clinics and specialists, and also focuses on family-centered care through services like child life, social work, and their facility dog. The hospital's reach extends across 16 counties in Tennessee as well as parts of Kentucky and Virginia through outpatient clinics, home health, and rehabilitation services.
The document summarizes philanthropic efforts that support centers of excellence at UM St. Joseph Medical Center. It discusses how donations to the Cancer Institute established an endowment to support innovative cancer therapies. It also describes a 5K run that raised funds for the Heart Institute's HeartAware program, which uses CT scans to screen for early heart disease. Overall, the document highlights examples of how philanthropy is enhancing patient care through various initiatives across several centers.
This document summarizes an event organized by Cost Cutters to raise money for St. Baldrick's, a charity that funds cancer research. It provides details on the head shaving event including the date, location, agenda and sponsors. It also includes facts about childhood cancer, thank you messages and profiles of child ambassadors who are battling cancer to highlight the importance of the cause.
The document summarizes services provided at the Grady Health System Breast and GYN Clinic in Atlanta, Georgia. It describes the clinic's mission to provide cancer care, screening, and support services to medically underserved patients, many of whom are African American or Hispanic women. As a social work student, responsibilities include performing psychosocial assessments, maintaining support group calendars, and ensuring patients can access community resources and financial assistance programs.
The document discusses planned giving options for supporting the American Cancer Society (ACS). It summarizes that the ACS is the largest non-governmental funder of cancer research, having contributed over $3.4 billion. It describes that planned gifts can come from assets rather than income, and can be outright or deferred, taking forms like wills, trusts, gift annuities, real estate, life insurance and donor-advised funds. The ACS supports all contributions to fund cancer research, support services for patients, and help create a world with less cancer.
This document provides information about recent activities and events at New Jersey Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs). It begins with a letter from the President & CEO of the New Jersey Primary Care Association reflecting on the past year and highlighting their work supporting FQHCs. It then discusses various FQHC events from the past few months, including breast cancer awareness events, health center expansions and awards, and community outreach programs. The document promotes upcoming training opportunities through the NJPCA and their partnership with RWJ on Project ECHO for expanding specialty care access at FQHCs.
About Children’s Cancer Recovery Foundation (CCRF)
Headquartered in Harrisburg, PA with a division in The Woodlands, TX, the Children’s Cancer Recovery Foundation supports children under 18 and their families facing the hardships of cancer. The foundation performs acts of care and kindness through the following programs: Bear-Able Gifts (largest distributor of gifts to children with cancer in the U.S.); Toxic-Free Kids (educates families on the dangers of environmental toxins); New Era Cancer Research Fund (funds research for less toxic, minimally-invasive pediatric-cancer treatments); International Aid (provides medications and supplies to clinics in developing and impoverished countries); Helping Hands Fund (provides emergency financial assistance to families); and Camp Scholarships (allows children in remission to reconnect with activities they love). With a national pediatric-hospital partner network of 215+ locations, the foundation directly helps more than 15,000 children affected by cancer and their families every year. Please visit www.ChildrensCancerRecovery.org.
About Alliance Defending Freedom’s Blackstone Legal FellowshipBryce Neier
Founded in 1993, ADF is a Christian non-profit legal organization dedicated to protecting Constitutional rights and litigating cases, including those related to free speech, religious liberty, marriage and family matters, and parental rights.
A Fayetteville, North Carolina attorney, Bryce D. Neier provides knowledgeable representation in international and family law issues. Bryce D. Neier is well-versed in what many term "military divorce", which present unique legal issues.
In reality family law is dictated by state statutes and state common law.
Bryce Neier is a former United States Army Captain who served overseas for more than five years before going to law school. He is currently an attorney at the The Law Office of Bryce D. Neier PLLC Office in Fayetteville, North Carolina and is licensed in North Carolina and Georgia. Fitness and nutrition is a key component of Bryce Neier's success in the legal profession. Fitness and nutrition provide focus and clarity to better serve his clients.
Over the years, international law has evolved to encompass not only government relations, but also many organizations or individuals who operate across national lines.
Smile Train Virtual Surgery Simulator Training Surgeons GloballyBryce Neier
An attorney overseeing the Law Office of Bryce D. Neier PLLC in Fayetteville, North Carolina, Bryce Neier concentrates on family law, particularly international custody and abduction hearings between North Carolina and foreign countries. . Alongside his work, Bryce Neier is passionate about community involvement and supports the organization Smile Train. .Smile Train is the largest cleft-focused organization with a model of true sustainability — providing training, funding, and resources to empower local medical professionals in 70+ countries to provide 100%-free cleft surgery and other forms of essential cleft care in their own communities.
Regarded as the world’s largest cleft-focused organization, Smile Train supports surgery and essential quality cleft care for children born with a cleft palate. Since its inception over 20 years ago, the organization has attended to over 1.5 million children globally, with a model based on locating children in need, providing comprehensive cleft care, empowering the local medical staff, and advocating for innovative technology to train and extend the reach for families seeking assistance. One technology the organization uses to train medical personnel, regardless of location, is the Smile Train Virtual Surgery Simulator.
Smile Train developed the simulator in partnership with BioDigital, a leading 3D platform, to equip surgeons with cleft lip and palate repair skills. The technology enables surgeons to explore a virtual cleft lip and palate in 3D, simulate the surgical procedures, and access descriptions at every step. Also, surgeons can access landmark case studies, expert advice, and surgical videos in real-time, as well as take quizzes and tests on cleft palate and the methods of surgical treatment.
Smile Train Journeys to Third World CountriesBryce Neier
Smile Train is a charitable organization that provides cleft lip and palate surgery to impoverished children in developing countries. It has helped over a million children receive necessary surgery. One of Smile Train's volunteer opportunities is called "Journey of Smiles," which allows volunteers to travel to countries where Smile Train operates to meet children who have received surgery, their families, and local doctors. Previous volunteer trips have visited countries like Guatemala and Brazil to help in communities and gain a deeper understanding of the challenges faced by children born with cleft lips and palates.
Shriners Hospitals for Children Promotes Burn Safety AwarenessBryce Neier
For over two decades, Bryce Neier has maintained the Law Office of Bryce D. Neier in Fayetteville, North Carolina. Alongside his professional activities, Bryce Neier supports the work of a number of nonprofit organizations, including Shriners Hospitals for Children.
Bryce Neier is a litigation attorney who practices family and entertainment law internationally. He has experience working on major child custody and child abduction cases involving countries like Canada, Spain, Colombia, South America, and Germany. The Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction entered into force in 1983 and now has 92 signatory states. The treaty provides guidelines for returning a child who has been internationally abducted by a parent, but only if the child is under 16 years of age and both countries are signatories. Children are not always returned specifically to the other parent.
Alliance Defending Freedom Helps Protect Religious LibertyBryce Neier
Bryce Neier is a North Carolina lawyer who volunteers with the Alliance Defending Freedom, formerly known as the Alliance Defense Fund, to assist with constitutional law litigation protecting religious liberty. The Alliance Defending Freedom is a legal organization with over 2,400 allied attorneys that defends religious expression challenges and has won over 80% of its cases, including 38 Supreme Court victories. It focuses on protecting religious freedom for citizens in the U.S. and over 30 other countries.
Fundamentals of Contracts under Entertainment Law Bryce Neier
Bryce Neier's law practice focuses on family law but has expanded into entertainment law. Entertainment law is complex due to changing media companies and intellectual property laws. Contracts between performers and recording/distribution companies are important to protect both parties from risk. Personal service agreements bind performers for a period of time or until success. Some companies use renewable option contracts to maintain rights to an artist's work over multiple years. However, contracts without clauses allowing performers to leave if their works are unreleased can trap artists if a company decides not to market or allow other work.
Hay Street United Methodist Church to Host 2013 Brunch and MatineeBryce Neier
The Hay Street United Methodist Church announced that their 2013 Brunch and Matinee event will be held on September 21, 2013. The event will include a carnival fair for children in the morning followed by brunch and a private screening of the movie Seven Brides for Seven Brothers. Proceeds from the event will support programs at the church like vacation Bible study and youth ministries. Hay Street is a church located in Fayetteville, North Carolina that is actively involved in the local community through events like their brunch and other festivals.
Children's Fund aids underserved children around the world through grants and collaboration with organizations focused on children's well-being, public information, research, and model projects. It has supported programs in the United States like youth mentoring in Maryland, after-school programs, and food for the homeless. Children's Fund also works internationally in places like India, where it helps an orphanage school, and in Egypt, through job training for youth. The nonprofit is supported financially by benefactor Bryce Neier.
Bryce Neier, a North Carolina attorney, contributes to charities including Smile Train. Smile Train provides cleft lip and cleft palate surgery to individuals in developing countries, as these disorders can prevent proper eating, speaking, and attending school or work. Through Smile Train, doctors travel to over 80 countries and have treated hundreds of thousands of children, providing surgery and follow-up care like dentistry and speech therapy for those who cannot afford it. Smile Train also benefits communities by training local professionals and utilizing modern medical equipment.
Indira awas yojana housing scheme renamed as PMAYnarinav14
Indira Awas Yojana (IAY) played a significant role in addressing rural housing needs in India. It emerged as a comprehensive program for affordable housing solutions in rural areas, predating the government’s broader focus on mass housing initiatives.
This report explores the significance of border towns and spaces for strengthening responses to young people on the move. In particular it explores the linkages of young people to local service centres with the aim of further developing service, protection, and support strategies for migrant children in border areas across the region. The report is based on a small-scale fieldwork study in the border towns of Chipata and Katete in Zambia conducted in July 2023. Border towns and spaces provide a rich source of information about issues related to the informal or irregular movement of young people across borders, including smuggling and trafficking. They can help build a picture of the nature and scope of the type of movement young migrants undertake and also the forms of protection available to them. Border towns and spaces also provide a lens through which we can better understand the vulnerabilities of young people on the move and, critically, the strategies they use to navigate challenges and access support.
The findings in this report highlight some of the key factors shaping the experiences and vulnerabilities of young people on the move – particularly their proximity to border spaces and how this affects the risks that they face. The report describes strategies that young people on the move employ to remain below the radar of visibility to state and non-state actors due to fear of arrest, detention, and deportation while also trying to keep themselves safe and access support in border towns. These strategies of (in)visibility provide a way to protect themselves yet at the same time also heighten some of the risks young people face as their vulnerabilities are not always recognised by those who could offer support.
In this report we show that the realities and challenges of life and migration in this region and in Zambia need to be better understood for support to be strengthened and tuned to meet the specific needs of young people on the move. This includes understanding the role of state and non-state stakeholders, the impact of laws and policies and, critically, the experiences of the young people themselves. We provide recommendations for immediate action, recommendations for programming to support young people on the move in the two towns that would reduce risk for young people in this area, and recommendations for longer term policy advocacy.
karnataka housing board schemes . all schemesnarinav14
The Karnataka government, along with the central government’s Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana (PMAY), offers various housing schemes to cater to the diverse needs of citizens across the state. This article provides a comprehensive overview of the major housing schemes available in the Karnataka housing board for both urban and rural areas in 2024.
Jennifer Schaus and Associates hosts a complimentary webinar series on The FAR in 2024. Join the webinars on Wednesdays and Fridays at noon, eastern.
Recordings are on YouTube and the company website.
https://www.youtube.com/@jenniferschaus/videos
The Antyodaya Saral Haryana Portal is a pioneering initiative by the Government of Haryana aimed at providing citizens with seamless access to a wide range of government services
2. An accomplished attorney with a career spanning more than
three decades, Bryce D. Neier holds a juris doctor from
Campbell University School of Law. In 1994 after working for
the State of North Carolina and later as an associate with a
prominent law firm in Fayetteville, NC, he established a
private litigation firm in Fayetteville, North Carolina@@ where
he concentrates his practice on legal matters such as
international law, family law, and business law. Dedicated to
philanthropic endeavors, Bryce Neier donates to St. Jude
Children's Research Hospital.
Donating money to St. Jude Children's Research Hospital is
one way to help fight against childhood cancer deaths.
Established in 1962, St. Jude aims to bolster childhood cancer
survival rates through treatment and research efforts. The
hospital has raised patients' survival rates from 20 percent to
80 percent since its opening more than 50 years ago and
3. continues looking to push the envelope for a total cure to
cancer.
Eighty-two percent of the money donated to St. Jude funds
treatment and research. The donations cover all expenses
associated with treatment, including travel. Families of
children with cancer who go to St. Jude for treatment have
access to cost-free temporary accommodations and meals
throughout their stays. St. Jude provides equal opportunity for
all families.
St. Jude relies on monthly donations from volunteers.
Individuals can also contribute through Partner in Hope, a
dedicated program automatically debits donations through
credit cards, debit cards, or bank accounts. St. Jude also
accepts online payments through Apple Pay or PayPal.