2
Mid Hudson Times, Wednesday, May 8, 2019
IN THIS ISSUE
Calendar. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
City of Newburgh.. . . . . . . . . . . 20
Classifieds. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
Crossword. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
Letters to the Editor. . . . . . . . . . 8
Meadow Hill. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
Town of Newburgh. . . . . . . . . . . 23
Newburgh Heritage. . . . . . . . . . . 10
New Windsor.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Obituaries. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Opinion. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Police Blotter. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Service Directory. . . . . . . . . . . 32
Sports. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
PUBLIC AGENDA
WEDNESDAY, MAY 8
Newburgh Enlarged City School District
Capital Bond Forum. 6 – 7:30 p.m. South
Middle School, 33-63 Monument St.,
Newburgh.
MONDAY, MAY 13
Newburgh City Council meeting. 7 p.m.
City Hall, 83 Broadway.
Newburgh Town Board meeting. 7
p.m. Town Hall, 1496 Route 300, Town of
Newburgh.
TUESDAY, MAY 14
Newburgh Enlarged City School District
Board of Education, 6- 8:30 p.m. Board
Auditorium, 124 Grand St., Newburgh.
THURSDAY, MAY 16
Newburgh City Council Work Session, 6
p.m. City Hall, 83 Broadway.
Town of Newburgh Planning Board. 7
p.m. Town Hall, 1496 Route 300, Town of
Newburgh.
HOW TO REACH US
OFFICE:
300 Stony Brook Court
Newburgh, NY 12550
PHONE: 845-561-0170, FAX: 845-561-3967
Emails may be directed to the following :
ADVERTISING
[email protected]
CALENDAR SUBMISSIONS
[email protected]
TO REACH THE EDITOR
[email protected]
FOR THE SPORTS DEPARTMENT
[email protected]
PUBLIC NOTICES
[email protected]
WEBSITE
www.mhtimesonline.com
The Mid Hudson Times (USPS 000-5947) is a weekly
newspaper published every Wednesday at Newburgh,
NY 12550, with offices at 300 Stony Brook Court,
Newburgh, NY. Single copy: $1 at newsstand. By mail
in Orange, Ulster or Sullivan Counties: $40 annually,
$44 out of county. Periodicals permit at Newburgh,
NY. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Mid Hudson
Times, 300 Stony Brook Court, Newburgh, NY 12550.
Two residents of Newburgh are Women of
By KATELYN CORDERO
[email protected]
T
his year the Girl Scouts Heart of
the Hudson honored two Newburgh
residents as the 2019 women of
achievement. Regina Cieslak and
Regina Brown are two powerful forces
in their community that each have an
inspirational story for young girls and
women to learn from.
Cieslak is a woman who has dedicated
her life to helping others, to lifting other
women up to see their full potential. This
was something that was not done for her
as a young woman.
When graduating from High School
Cieslak was told she was not college
material, her hopes to become a
veterinarian were crushed when a school
counselor told her that was not her track
in life. So she went down a different path
into fashion merchandising, where she
became a manager at age 19.
“As a young woman they told me I
wasn’t smart enough to go to school,
but I ended up graduating from William
Patterson with honors and a degree in
education,” said Cieslak.
Working in service was engrained in
her as a little girl watching her mother
and father take care of others in their
community.
“My parents always had us do service,
my family always served, that was
something that was nurtured within me,”
said Cieslak.
After working in the fashion
merchandising industry Cieslak felt she
needed to do something more fulfilling.
After graduating from William Patterson
Cieslak started working for BOCES. She
worked as a teacher in the federal prison
in Otisville.
“I would sit there and talk to my
students and listen to their problems,
they would tell me that I need to be a
counselor, not a teacher,” said Cieslak.
“It was the inmates that steered my
educational path. After listening to them
I decided to go back and get my masters
in mental health counseling.”
Cieslak has worked with various
organizations across Orange County, one
of the most memorable positions she held
was when she worked with Education for
Gainful Employment. She would work
with young mothers and young women to
get their GED or certifications needed to
push them in the right direction towards
a career path.
“A lot of my clients are still here in
the City of Newburgh,” said Cieslak. “It’s
very nice that they don’t forget me 15 to 20
Regina Brown – Security Guard, Newburgh
Enlarged City School District.
years later.”
Cieslak has watched as young women
struggling as teenagers grow in their lives
and their careers. She has seen children
she visited in the hospital when they were
born grow up to young teenagers, some of
which she is godmother to.
One special moment for Cieslak was
a young woman who came to her at 17
when she was pregnant just to talk. Later
on the young woman came back to pass
her LPN program to become a nurse. The
young woman asked Cieslak to pin her
when she passed her program.
“It was incredible to watch she
overcame so many obstacles. She did it
all and she was amazing,” said Cieslak.
Cieslak is a humble woman, she is not
one to ever ask for help, but the first to
lend a helping hand. Accepting the Orange
County Women of Achievement award is
something she finds uncomfortable with,
she is always searching for others to push
into the spotlight instead of herself.
Even 10 years ago when she had
breast cancer she continued to put her
children in BOCES and her students first,
scheduling her chemo sessions on the
weekend so she could still take care of
her students, and make them smile with
whichever wig she picked out for the
week.
Cieslak now works as the Assistant
Director of Prevention Services for
Catholic Charities of Orange, Sullivan
and Ulster Counties. You’ll also see her at
Regina Cieslak – Assistant Director of
Prevention Services – Catholic Charities of
Orange, Sullivan, and Ulster.
Team Newburgh events connecting with
the youth in the City of Newburgh to
prevent the spread of the opioid epidemic.
Another Newburgher on the list
of Women of Achievement is Regina
Brown, a security guard at New Windsor
Elementary School. Brown greets each
and every person that walks into the
school with a smile, and knows every
student in the school by name.
Her smile can light up any room that
she walks into, but what most people
don’t know is the amount of effort it took
for Brown to get to the point where she
was smiling from the inside out.
To say Brown had a tough journey
is an understatement at best. At age 14
she was a young woman caring for her 5
siblings when she found out that she was
pregnant.
“It was hard I didn’t do a lot of the
things that other kids did.” said Brown
“I became a mother at such a young age,
I was sad, and angry all pushed into one,
but I had to continue to push forward for
my son and for my siblings.”
Regardless of having her son at such
a young age Brown continued to push
forward. She graduated from Newburgh
Free Academy and went on to become
a teacher’s assistant at Heritage Middle
School. Her goal was always to be the
best parent she could be.
“I just wanted to be the best mother
that I could be for my son,” said Brown.