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  • Tax Implications of the Marriage Equality Act, Part 1 - Income Tax

    This year New York passed the Marriage Equality Act which legalized same-sex marriages. The good news is that under all New York laws, same-sex married couples now have the same rights as heterosexual married couples. The bad news is that the federal government continues to inexplicably yet valiantly "defend" the institution of marriage from same-gender couples who love one another and wish to form a family. With almost half of marriages ending in divorce, heterosexual couples evidently do not appreciate all the Congressional efforts on their behalf.

    All jokes aside, when it comes to taxes, same-sex married couples will unfortunately continue to feel like separate and unequal citizens in this state. For example, a heterosexual married couple residing in New York files its federal income tax return as "married filing jointly" or "married filing separately" and then uses the numbers on the federal return to compute its New York income tax. Same-sex married couples will now also be filing their New York income tax returns with a married status. However, since the IRS continues to ignore their marriage, tax season is about to become a lot more complicated for same-sex married couples.

    First, each of the same-sex spouses will prepare and file a federal return as if they are not married. Then, the couple will have to prepare but not file a "dummy" federal income tax return as if the federal government recognized their marriage. They must then use the numbers from that unfiled federal "dummy" return to determine their New York State income tax. This will result in the preparation of at least four income tax returns for same-sex married residents of New York (double that of same-gender married couples filing jointly).

    Thus, starting with the spring of 2012 and until the federal Defense of the Marriage Act is extinguished, same sex married couples will be forced to annually expend significantly more money and efforts on their income tax returns than their heterosexual counterparts.

    Look for part 2 next week,
    Lucy


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    Lucy Kats is a member of Whiteman Osterman & Hanna LLP's Estate Planning and Administration Practice Group. She drafts estate planning documents, including wills, trusts, retirement plan and insurance beneficiary designations, powers of attorney, health care proxies, and living wills. She also supervises all aspects of estate and trust administration.

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  • Meet Lucy, our Guest Blogger

    Every fall, as the weather turns from sunny to gloomy, so does my mood. However, as November approaches, I begin looking forward to the AIDS Council's Beaujolais Noveau Wine Celebration. I have learned over the years that reviewing the philanthropic mission and projects of a fundraising organization is invaluable in coping with the guilt that may otherwise hold back my unbridled passion for auction bidding. Therefore, for the last several years, I remind myself as I arrive at Beaujolais that the AIDS Council will use the auction proceeds for HIV treatment and prevention in underserved communities of the Capital Region. Thus armed with the best intentions, I feel free to go to town with my credit card. While I wait for the results of the silent auction, I "sample" copious amounts of delicious food, followed by one or two or seven desserts. In other words, Beaujolais is my annual evening to indulge in shopping, scrumptious food, good music and fun company.

    Last November, I was particularly excited about one of my prizes. I won the "Guest Blogger" auction item, allowing me to use the AIDS Council's marketing team in order to feature myself as the self-proclaimed brilliant Trusts & Estates lawyer on the organization's blog. The marketing team turned out to consist of the two nicest people who share a rare sense of humor and camaraderie, Richard Nacy and Malissa Pilette-McClenon. One tour of the AIDS Council's facilities, a fabulous lunch at the Brown Derby, and several mugs of coffee later, Malissa, Richard and I were convinced that we were best friends, destined to work together toward educating the AIDS Council's blog readers on the legal issues affecting their lives. My excitement, however, skidded to a screeching halt when my pragmatic husband informed me that no one is going to read a blog with the words "tax implications" in its title. Luckily, I had my new best friends, Richard and Malissa, to assure me that, like the rest of the article, the title was informative and relevant to many in their blog audience. Encouraged by their compliments, I ignored my husband (natch) and proceeded to write not one, but three articles, with the following thrilling titles:

    - Tax Implications of the Marriage Equality Act: Part 1 - Income Tax
    - Tax Implications of the Marriage Equality Act: Part 2 - Estate Tax
    - Tax Implications of the Marriage Equality Act: Part 3 - Who is Affected

    These articles will outline the process same-sex married couples must follow in filing income and estate tax returns and will inform you how the AIDS Council can assist. As the articles appear in the next several weekly blogs, I challenge all the readers to prove my husband wrong with comments like "catchy title!", "informative and witty!", or even "I managed to finish the article despite its boring title and depressing content."

    Until next time!
    Lucy

    Check back soon for part 2.

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    Lucy Kats is a member of Whiteman Osterman & Hanna LLP's Estate Planning and Administration Practice Group. She drafts estate planning documents, including wills, trusts, retirement plan and insurance beneficiary designations, powers of attorney, health care proxies, and living wills. She also supervises all aspects of estate and trust administration.

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  • Holiday Sponsor Program; Experience the Holidays in a Whole New Light

    I'm a little embarrassed to admit that I once believed the threat of HIV/AIDS was a thing of the past. My ignorance was undoubtedly a result of the silence that surrounds the disease. The absence of HIV/AIDS related stories in the media had lulled me into a false sense of security. That was until about a year ago, when I received the devastating news that a close friend of mine was HIV positive.

    This realization opened my eyes to just how vast the HIV/AIDS epidemic is, and our small area in the Northeast is no exception. The toll HIV takes on people's lives throughout the year is unimaginable, but the holiday season can be especially difficult. The stress of struggling to participate in holiday festivities often causes these individuals to neglect their most basic needs in an effort to provide for their families.

    In order to ensure our clients are able to enjoy a joyous and healthy holiday season, the Holiday Sponsor Program was created. By sponsoring one of these needy individuals or families you let them know they have not been forgotten, and that their struggle is not meant to be fought alone. Over the years the Holiday Sponsor Program has become a beacon of hope within the community, and with your support we can continue the tradition.

    This is my first year coordinating this program, and the enthusiasm and generosity that previous sponsors have shown throughout the years is nothing short of overwhelming. The sense of pride and enjoyment that participating in the Holiday Sponsor Program has granted them is truly rewarding. Their excitement quickly overcame me, and I found myself representing the program with a zealous spirit of tenacity.

    Even with the holiday season already upon us it's not too late to help and individual or family living with HIV/AIDS. If you would like to sign up and participate in the Holiday Sponsor Program, please contact me at (518)434-4686 Ext. 2415 or mstarr@aidscouncil.org, and I will get you the necessary information to make this a memorable experience. Once you have completed your shopping, you can drop your wrapped gifts off at one of the AIDS Council's five offices. To help ensure that people have their gifts in time for the holidays, we ask that all donations please be submitted by December 9th.


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    Michael Starr is a Development and Marketing intern at the AIDS Council of Northeastern New York. Now completing his Associates degree in human services, he plans to pursue and undergraduate degree in social welfare. Michael brings exceptional interpersonal skills and dynamic eloquence to the development/marketing team. Michael volunteers at the AIDS Council because he believes his unique set of skills and motivation will make him an asset to the organization's mission to increase the public awareness of HIV/AIDS.

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  • October 15th is National Latino AIDS Awareness Day

    Tomorrow, October 15th is National Latino AIDS Awareness Day. This day marks an opportunity to increase awareness of the devastating and disproportionate effects of AIDS in the Latino community. Hispanics/Latinos, who represent approximately 13% of the total U.S. population, make up 18% of new HIV infections. Among Latinos, men make up the vast majority of new HIV infections (76%), but Latino women are also at disproportionate risk for HIV. They are infected with HIV at a rate four times greater than white women.

    In honor of National Latino AIDS Awareness Day (NLAAD), the AIDS Council of Northeastern New York will be offering free, confidential HIV testing and STD screening in its Albany office from 9:30 a.m. - 4:00 p.m., Monday-Thursday. Visit http://www.aidscouncil.org for the complete testing list. If you found the AIDS Council's blog through Google and you're located outside New York's Capital Region or Northeastern New York, fear not: Visit http://www.aids.gov and enter your zip code in the "Find an HIV Test Site" section in the upper right corner of the page. For more information on National Latino AIDS Awareness Day, visit http://www.nastad.org.


    Mañana, el 15 de octubre es el Día Nacional Latino para la Concientización del SIDA. Este día marca una oportunidad para aumentar la conciencia de los efectos devastadores y desproporcionados del SIDA en la comunidad latina. Los hispanos / latinos, que representan aproximadamente el 13% de la población total de los Estados Unidos, y el 18% de nuevas infecciones por el VIH Entre los latinos. Los hombres constituyen la inmensa mayoría de nuevas infecciones por el VIH (76%), pero las mujeres latinas (deleted son) también estan a riesgo desproporcionado para el VIH. Las mujeres Latinas están infectadas con el VIH cuatro veces mas rapido que las mujeres Americanas.

    En honor al Día Nacional Latino para la Concientización del SIDA (NLAAD), el Consejo del SIDA del Noreste de Nueva York ofrecerá exámenes graits y confidenciales de VIH y la detección de las enfermedades sexual en su oficina de Albany, de 9:30 am - 4:00 pm, de lunes a jueves. Haga clic aquí para la lista completa de pruebas. Si has encontrado el blog del Consejo de SIDA a través de Google y que está situado fuera de la Región Capital de Nueva York o el noreste de Nueva York, no se preocupe: Visita http://www.aids.gov e ingrese su código postal en la sección "Buscar la prueba del VIH del sitio" en el esquina superior derecha de la página. Para más información sobre el Día Nacional Latino para la Concientización del SIDA, visite http://www.nastad.org.

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  • Eat Pasta. Fight AIDS. (It's really that simple.)

    The Pasta Factory in Latham will be holding a fundraiser on Thursday, September 22, 2011 to benefit the AIDS Council's team for AIDSWalk 2011. To participate, all you have to do is stop by The Pasta Factory at 952 Troy Schenectady Road in Latham (located at the far right of the Peter Harris Plaza) and enjoy a great meal between the hours of 5:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. The Pasta Factory will generously donate 10% of the price of your meal to our AIDSWalk 2011 team! 100% of the funds raised will go directly to people living with HIV/AIDS in our community. So, you get a great meal, and you get to do something good for your community. What's not to like?

    Be sure to download a flyer and bring it with you to The Pasta Factory on September 22 to ensure that your meal counts towards our fundraising total.

    You can still sign up to join the AIDS Council's team for AIDSWalk 2011 this Saturday, September 24, 2011. Download the registration forms from our website, or call our Development Office at 518.434.4686 Ext. 2428 to register by phone. Can't make it to the walk? You can donate to our team online or by calling us at 518.434.4686 Ext. 2428.

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  • AIDS Council's Mission Goes Global

    On Thursday, September 8, 2011, the AIDS Council was visited by Ms. Irina Georgeta Nita. Ms. Nita is the Executive Director of the Bucharest-based NGO (Non-Government Organization) ACCEPT, the only Romanian NGO advocating for the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) individuals. The AIDS Council was contacted by the International Visitors Leadership Program (Office of International Visitors, Bureau of Educational & Cultural Affairs, United States Department of State) to host this visit. Ms. Nita visited the AIDS Council's Albany Office to learn about the agency's work with the LGBT community, Men who have Sex with Men (MSM), and its HIV/ Sexually Transmitted Infections (STI) prevention work. We were honored that the U.S. Department of State specifically requested that the AIDS Council be a stop in Ms. Nita's itinerary.

    Ms. Nita explained that like a number of other Eastern European countries, Romania remains socially conservative with regard to the rights of its LGBT citizens. Until 1996, it was illegal to be gay, and citizens could be incarcerated due to suspicion of homosexual activities. The significant discrimination that LGBT people suffer in her home country, causing them to stay "in the closet," can be linked to an increased transmission of HIV and STIs. Lack of sexual health education and safer sex supplies also increases these risks. Ms. Nita hopes that increased awareness and acceptance will lead to safer sex practices and lower transmission rates.

    We discussed strategies for dealing with the very sensitive issues in the area of LGBT rights, including: public outreach; models for discussion and support networks in schools; and awareness campaigns. She was particularly interested in Project HOPE, our program geared towards the LGBT community and our website redesign for www.rubbaboyz.net. The visit proved to be immensely beneficial for both sides, helping to create a greater global understanding of the challenges faced by the LGBT community and how this effects the transmission of HIV and STIs.

    Irenia and Michele

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  • AIDS Council of Northeastern New York Responds to 30 Years of HIV/AIDS Crisis by Unveiling New Testing and Outreach Van

    Initiative will provide wide-spread access to HIV/STI testing and counseling, community outreach, and raise awareness as AIDS crisis heads into fourth decade.

    The AIDS Council of Northeastern New York unveiled its new testing and outreach van at a press conference held at the agency's Albany office on Monday, August 8, 2011. The van will allow the AIDS Council to increase access to HIV/STI/Hepatitis C screening and testing for hard to reach populations including communities of color, homeless populations, high-risk youth that may have dropped out of school/run away from home, substance users, and rural populations.

    This innovative program will help to eliminate some of the obstacles of access faced by the most vulnerable, at-risk populations in our region. The mobile prevention outreach and testing van will allow the AIDS Council to reach populations that are most in need, but are limited financially or geographically for accessing services, getting tested, and receiving safer sex materials. The van will enhance the AIDS Council's current prevention services by increasing the number of people who get tested for HIV/STIs and, for those who test HIV positive, receive access to services such as medical care, social services, case management, and access programs for substance abuse treatment.

    The van will make its inaugural trip to Plattsburgh this weekend (August 19 - 21) to provide syphilis and HIV testing. It will also be providing testing and outreach for communities of color bi-weekly on South Pearl Street in Albany and in Schenectady.

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  • U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand to Chair Columbia County Garden Party

    The AIDS Council of Northeastern New York thanks United States Senator Kirsten Gillibrand for serving as Honorary Chair of our 2nd Annual Columbia County Garden Party on Sunday, September 4, 2011. It's not too late to join the Honorary Committee - or become a business sponsor - but time is running out, so jump on over to our website to read more about the event and to reserve your place at this year's event.

    The Columbia County Garden Party will be held at Taghkanic House, the home of Moyra Mulholland Botta. The house itself is an award-winning architectural wonder, and is surrounded by hundreds of acres of rolling terrain, exquisitely manicured landscaping and gardens, and 360 degrees of breakthaking views of the Catskills. Don't miss out! Reserve your place on the Honorary Committee today!

    Funds raised through the 2nd Annual Columbia County Garden Party will benefit the AIDS Council's Client Services Emergency Fund and its prevention and outreach activities in at-risk communities.

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  • National HIV Testing Day: Monday, June 27

    This coming Monday (June 27, 2011) is National HIV Testing Day. To mark this awareness day, the AIDS Council of Northeastern New York - along with the New York State Department of Health, Upper Hudson Planned Parenthood, and Whitney M. Young, Jr. Health Center - will be providing free, confidential HIV testing in locations throughout the community for a full week. The Times Union published an article online about these "Testing Week" activities. Specific information about testing dates, times, and locations provided by the AIDS Council and its community partners can be found by visiting www.aidscouncil.org. Testing information is also available on our GLBT-focused website, www.rubbaboyz.net.

    If you found the AIDS Council's blog through Google and you're located outside New York's Capital Region or Northeastern New York, fear not: Visit www.aids.gov and enter your zip code in the "Find an HIV Test Site" section in the upper right corner of the page.


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  • New Project HOPE Website: Check It Out!

    The AIDS Council of Northeastern New York is pleased to announce the relaunch of the Project HOPE website, www.rubbaboyz.net. The new site will feature expanded information and resources specifically geared towards the GLBTQ community. The site will also have increased interactivity, including a chatroom, links to Project HOPE's social networking sites, and more content-rich features than ever before. (Coming soon.) Visit the site today* and check back regularly for updates.

    *This website contains prevention and education messages that may not be appropriate for all audiences.

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