National Association of Licensed Practical Nurses Chooses Buffalo for National Convention

Four-day event will headquarter at M Hotel on Walden at Galleria Drive October 11-14, 2023

BUFFALO, NY –A party and vendor market in celebration of WNY “healthcare heroes” will be on tap to lead-off the national convention of licensed practical nurses when it brings its chapter members to Buffalo this October.

This will be the first time for this gathering in Western New York of United States members, which will convene on the 75th anniversary of the national chapter’s founding.

“We are so excited to be the host organization that brings together, for the first time since the Covid-19 pandemic, nurses and healthcare workers from all corners of the US,” says NY State Chapter President Renee Likong, “What’s more, we happen to be doing this on the 75 th anniversary of the founding of our national organization by Lillian Custer, in 1948!”

October 11 th , a Wednesday, will be the kickoff party to the convention where the entire ballroom and access hallways will be filled with exhibits, food sampling, beverage tasting, shopping, apparel, jewelry makers, crafters, and entertainment aimed at the 2 healthcare industry. It will be called “Nurses’ Night – Celebrating ALL our Healthcare Heroes” and will go from 5pm – 9pm.

Continues Likong: “We sponsored this event in Buffalo in 2019 at Shea’s Seneca, so I contacted the people that ran this one and asked if they could re-create their very successful event again to be the start of our convention and they jumped right in! They had put a hold on the event from 2020 till now due to the pandemic but are eager to go all-out for us on October 11 th . It will be even bigger and better this year!”

The four-day convention will be providing continuing education credits, national motivational speaker Tiffiney L. Hall, a guest appearance by Eileen Gunther (who promoted safe staffing ratio for NY) and an excursion to Niagara Falls. LPNs that are interested in attending the conference may register at nalpn.org.

Topics for the Thursday-Saturday portion of the convention will include talks on Alzheimer’s, Diabetes, Drug Addiction, Opiods, Mental Health, First Aid, Narcan applications, and Domestic Abuse. Other topics will be added, according to Likong.

Tickets for the October 11th “Nurses’ Night – Celebrating All Healthcare Heroes” will be available for $9.50, a link for purchase is up on www.NursesNightofCelebration.com. The event is open to ALL healthcare workers from doctors to nurses to caregivers, first responders, to facilities people and their friends.

A campaign will start soon that will include honoring special healthcare heroes of the past few years that endured through the many hardships of the Covid-19 pandemic. Cumulus Broadcasting, owner of Classic Hits 104.1, 97 Rock, and 103.3 The Edge will be hosting the awards. Sponsor of the WNY Healthcare Hero awards is UnitedHealthcare. More information will follow on the radio station websites.

Anyone wishing to sponsor or be a vendor for the October 11 th “Nurses Night – Celebrating ALL Healthcare Heroes” and/or attend or sponsor the convention at the M Hotel is asked to contact Paul Maurer at Paul@PDMMarketingMedia.com, Amy Coddington at amylcodd@gmail.com or Renee Likong at nyalpn@gmail.com.

The post National Association of Licensed Practical Nurses Chooses Buffalo for National Convention appeared first on Buffalo Healthy Living Magazine.

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New from New York

Happening now:

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Mayor Eric Adams this morning showed reporters a chain that was used to barricade a door during college protests in New York City.

DEMS DEFEND CAMPUS CRACKDOWN: The police were not just arresting pro-Palestinian protesters at Manhattan colleges Tuesday night, but protecting “children” from “outside agitators,” Mayor Eric Adams said, defending the NYPD in a round of media appearances this morning.

“This is a global problem, that young people are being influenced by those who are professionals at radicalizing our children,” Adams said at a press conference with police Wednesday morning. “And I’m not going to let that happen as the mayor of the city of New York.”

Adams declined to elaborate on who the agitators were. And while it’s not in question that some of the people protesting at campuses were not students, the NYPD’s main evidence today — that protesters who seized a building used thick bike locks favored by students — was roundly mocked online.

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The NYPD said 173 people were arrested at City College, and 109 were arrested at Columbia on Tuesday night.

Leading Democrats, including Gov. Kathy Hochul and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, backed up the high profile police responses.

"As far as I can tell, the efforts by the NYPD were thorough, professional, and they exercised the degree of calm in a very tense situation that should be commended,” Jeffries said at a press conference today, POLITICO’s Nicholas Wu reported.

“The rest of the campus, they should not be living in fear because you're claiming an exercise of your rights,” Hochul said at a separate media availability. “But that's what was starting to happen on our campuses over the last couple of weeks.”

But New York Civil Liberties Union Executive Director Donna Lieberman said reports of police closing blocks of the city, pepper spraying protesters and throwing them to the ground showed the response was “counterproductive and downright dangerous.”

“While other campuses across the country have engaged demonstrators in productive dialogue, at Columbia and City College last night the NYPD responded instead with intimidation and violence. — Jeff Coltin

Former Assemblymember Walter Mosley was picked by Gov. Kathy Hochul to be the next secretary of state. He now awaits Senate confirmation.

SENDING OUT AN SOS: Former Assemblymember Walter Mosley is Hochul’s choice to become the next secretary of state for New York, her office announced today.

“The Department of State plays a critical role implementing a broad array of government services, from the Downtown Revitalization Initiative to the Office for New Americans,” Hochul said in a statement.

“Walter Mosley’s public service in the New York State Assembly and his years of leadership in his community have given him the skills and experience necessary to lead this Department into the future.”

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On the campaign trail

Micah Lasher is running for Assembly in the 69th district.

HOCHUL FUNDRAISING FOR LASHER: Hochul will attend a swanky fundraiser for Upper West Side Assembly candidate Micah Lasher tonight. The affair is being hosted by Dan Doctoroff, a former deputy mayor under Michael Bloomberg and former CEO of Bloomberg L.P.

Lasher was previously Hochul’s top policy adviser and worked for Bloomberg earlier in his career. He faces a four-way primary, with public defender Eli Northrup, a Working Families Party candidate, likely to be his most formidable challenger.

The 69th District seat, which includes the embattled Columbia University, is currently held by Assemblymember Danny O’Donnell. He is retiring after representing the area for 20 years. While other big names like Rep. Jerry Nadler, Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine and former NYC Comptroller Scott Stringer have endorsed Lasher, O’Donnell still hasn’t announced support for a candidate in the race.

While O’Donnell has shied away from commenting on Columbia’s protests, Lasher commented on the unrest in a statement to Playbook.

“The situation has been heart-breaking in so many ways,” he said. “At this point I only hope that the Columbia community can find a way forward.”

Earlier today, Northrup called the deploying of the NYPD Tuesday evening a “wholly disproportionate response.”

The tickets to attend the 6:30 pm fundraiser range from $1,000 to $3,000.

“I couldn’t be more honored to have two of my former bosses, Dan Doctoroff and Governor Hochul, along with Alisa Doctoroff, teaming up to give our campaign a boost as we enter the home stretch,” Lasher said in a separate statement.

Northrup blasted Lasher for the fundraiser.

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— Students at SUNY Stony Brook’s encampment were warned they might have to move to another location. (Newsday)