Agosto es el Mes Nacional de Hacer un Testamento, un momento oportuno para que los neoyorquinos comiencen a planificar el final de la vida, según dicen los expertos.
De acuerdo con una encuesta de Gallup de 2021, solo alrededor del 46% de los estadounidenses tiene un testamento, la mayoría de los cuales tienen más de 50 años. Menos gente aún tienen lo que se conoce como un "testamento en vida", el cual incluye preferencias de atención médica por si no pueden hablar para ellos mismos.
Puede ser fácil posponerlo, porque la gente asume que es demasiado costoso o que podría ser demasiado complicado, dice Sam Young, de Compassion & Choices, una organización sin fines de lucro. Pero dice que otra gran razón es que es difícil aceptar el hecho de que no vivirán para siempre.
"Es realmente difícil tener una conversación con alguien sobre la muerte, y COVID nos ha hecho más conscientes de esto," opina Young. "No se trata tan solo de tener una enfermedad terminal o ser viejo; desafortunadamente, cualquiera de nosotros puede tener una situación en la que tenga que enfrentarse a la mortalidad."
Young dice que algunas personas asumen que sus últimos deseos se quedarán en manos de sus familias, o simplemente no tienen muchos bienes y creen que no necesitarán un testamento. Él dice que ambos son mitos, y solo un testamento escrito puede usarse para determinar cómo es que se distribuirán las posesiones de una persona.
Existen numerosas formas de hacer un testamento. Lo más común es consultar a un abogado. Compassion & Choices está asociado con Free Will, lo que Young describe como un sitio web sin costo alguno que es fácil de usar para crear un documento que luego debe ser atestiguado y notariado. Pero no importa cómo se desarrolle el testamento, Young solo quiere asegurarse de que la gente tenga uno. Siente que la planificación para el final de la vida es una necesidad para todos.
"Es realmente una oportunidad para crear comodidad para usted y su familia," asegura Young. "Que su memoria y su legado, y las cosas que son importantes para usted durante su vida, estén en su lugar al momento del fallecimiento."
Agrega que Compassion & Choices también proporciona guías en línea para directivas de demencia, poderes notariales y otros servicios relacionados con el final de la vida.
Divulgación: Compassion & Choices contribuye a nuestro fondo para informar sobre compromiso cívico, problemas de salud, problemas de personas mayores, justicia social. Si desea ayudar a respaldar noticias de interés público,
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Concerns about potential voter intimidation have spurred several states to consider banning firearms at polling sites but so far, New Hampshire is not among them.
Only a dozen states and Washington, D.C., prohibit both open and concealed-carry weapons at voting locations.
Emma Brown, executive director of the Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence, said most of the bans were enacted after the 2020 election, when unfounded claims of widespread voter fraud took hold.
"The risk of gun violence at the polls is heightened," Brown contended. "Which means that legislation at the state level is even more critical than it ever has been."
Brown argued America's elections are free and fair, and prohibiting guns at polling sites and government locations is constitutional. Opponents countered the bans unfairly disarm law-abiding gun owners.
Recent surveys reveal election workers have faced increased threats and harassment since the 2020 election with one in three reporting some form of abuse. And nearly half of election workers said they are concerned for their colleagues' safety.
Brown pointed out armed intimidation tactics disproportionately target people of color and add to the growing exodus of election workers.
"This is a threat that we can't ignore," Brown stressed. "These attacks have also served as a deterrent to Black and brown election workers, who've historically been a really key part of ensuring that our democracy endures on Election Day."
As state legislatures consider banning guns at voting sites, legislation in Congress known as the "Vote Without Fear Act" would place a nationwide ban on weapons within 100 feet of a federal election facility, with exceptions for on-duty law enforcement and security personnel. It has been languishing in a House committee for a year.
Support for this reporting was provided by The Carnegie Corporation of New York.
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Nassau County's executive wants to deputize residents who hold gun permits.
County Executive Bruce Blakemen's plan involves training 100 residents for "the protection of human life and property during an emergency." Little else has been made public about the plan but it has been met with widespread opposition and concern.
Delia DeRiggi-Whitton, minority leader of the Nassau County Legislature, said there are many ways it can go wrong.
"Emergencies are very chaotic situations by nature and all of a sudden, someone shows up that a police officer might not recognize or isn't identified correctly," DeRiggi-Whitton pointed out. "We're just waiting for a disaster to happen."
She added some Nassau County police officers are against the plan and, like many others, feel it's unnecessary. Blakeman said he is relying on New York State County Law 655, which grants sheriffs authority to deputize added personnel for emergencies.
DeRiggi-Whitton noted legal options are being pursued to stop the plan from being enacted.
The lack of information has made residents anxious about what the plan would do. Some have said the effort, along with Blakeman's ban on female trans athletes in county athletic facilities, are solutions without problems.
Susan Gotthrer, director of the Nassau Regional Chapter of the New York Civil Liberties Union, said more pressing issues need to be addressed.
"We have real problems in Nassau County," Gotthrer argued. "We have housing shortages, we have lack of opportunities, we have education issues, high taxes. We would really like to see Mr. Blakeman putting his energies towards real governing issues and not imaginary ones like this."
Blakeman is not alone in pushing to deputize gun owners. Support for militias is growing among conservative politicians. Some residents are worried the armed people will be used to intimidate voters at or after the 2024 election. Nassau County is considered one of the safest counties, not just in the state but in the nation.
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April is National Volunteer Month, and Nebraskans rank high nationwide for their willingness to volunteer.
In the most recent Census Bureau/AmeriCorps report, Nebraska ranked seventh in the nation for formal volunteering and second for informal volunteering.
However, many nonprofits still need more help.
Central Nebraska Community Action Partnership in Loup City serves 21 counties with programs in housing, early childhood, family outreach and community health. It serves 72 counties with its veterans programs.
Executive Director Cheryl Holcomb said it would struggle to offer these services without volunteers.
"Throughout our agency, it is vital - vital that we have volunteers that provide services as well," she said. "We always have a need for more."
Holcomb explained that for their Head Start programs, volunteers do more than help the teachers and children. Their hours also contribute to the 25% match the program's grant funding requires. Volunteer time is valued at nearly $32 an hour, and most grants count volunteer hours as an "in-kind" match. Nationally, women volunteer at a slightly higher rate than men, and Gen-Xers have the highest percentage by age group.
Like other nonprofits providing food assistance, Holcomb said they've seen an increase in need without an accompanying increase in volunteers. She added that the funding for its Commodity Supplemental Food Program, which serves people 60 and older, isn't sufficient to support the program.
"So, relying on volunteers to help offset that program is crucial," she said. "They rely on volunteers to come in and package the food; they rely on volunteers to make deliveries in the specific community."
Central Nebraska Community Action Partnership also relies on volunteers at its two food pantries, a quarterly mobile food pantry and four food warehouses.
There are nine Community Action agencies across the state. Although their programs vary, Holcomb said, all rely on volunteers.
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