When the Church Where You Were Baptized Is Disappearing — St. Elizabeth’s

I read recently that St. Elizabeth’s Church in Yorkville may soon be demolished.

It caught my attention immediately. Not because I’ve attended Mass there in years, but because St. Elizabeth’s is the church where I was baptized.

And when a place like that is disappearing, you realize it was never just a building.

It was the beginning of your story.

Baptism is something none of us remembers. We were too young. But our parents remember it. Our godparents remember it. Someone held us, water was poured, a name was spoken, and a family quietly marked the beginning of a life.

For me, that moment happened at St. Elizabeth’s, in the Yorkville that shaped so many of us who grew up on Manhattan’s Upper East Side.

And I still have the photograph.

It’s a simple picture, really — my Aunt Sissy carrying me into St. Elizabeth’s for my baptism. I was an infant, of course, with no idea what was happening. But there she is in the photograph, holding me as she walks toward the church doors. It captures a moment that, for me, marks the very beginning of my story in that neighborhood.

Yorkville back then wasn’t the polished neighborhood people see today. It was a neighborhood of families living close together, of stoops where kids gathered on warm nights, and corner stores where the guy behind the counter knew your parents. Life spilled out onto the sidewalks. People talked to one another. Kids roamed the blocks freely.

I remember sitting on the stoop of the building where my family lived on 83rd Street when I was a little kid. The street felt like an extension of our living room. Neighbors drifted in and out of conversations. Kids ran up and down the block. It was a neighborhood where everyone seemed to know one another, even if they didn’t know your name.

It was also where I learned some early lessons about people.

One afternoon I was sitting on that stoop when a man from the neighborhood slowly walked toward me. His body twisted in painful spasms with every step. I was terrified. When he saw the fear on my face, he struggled to get the words out.

“Please don’t be afraid of me.”

His name was Joe. My uncle later explained that Joe had once been an accountant before a neuromuscular disease took hold of him. His wife had left, and life had become unimaginably hard. The kids on the block didn’t understand his condition and would sometimes shriek when they saw him walking.

But the adults in Yorkville quietly looked out for him. Someone would hand him a dollar or two. The deli guys let him wash up in the back. The bar on the corner gave him a place to sit.

Yorkville had its rough edges, but it also had that kind of humanity.

And like so many neighborhoods of that time, the parish church was the center of it all. St. Elizabeth’s wasn’t just a place for Sunday Mass. It was where families marked the milestones of their lives — baptisms, weddings, funerals, confirmations. Generations passed through the same doors.

Places like that held the rhythm of the neighborhood.

Yorkville itself has changed enormously over the years. The old bakeries disappeared. The small neighborhood bars and stores closed. The stoops grew quieter. Apartment buildings were renovated or replaced. Families moved away.

And increasingly, the churches have disappeared as well.

To some people, the story of St. Elizabeth’s is simply a property story. Manhattan land is valuable. Congregations shrink. Maintenance costs grow. Developers make offers that are hard to refuse.

But churches were never just real estate.

They were where people were baptized, married, mourned, and remembered. They were quiet anchors in neighborhoods that otherwise changed constantly.

When one disappears, something deeper disappears with it.

Not just stone and stained glass.

Memory.

For those of us who passed through those doors long ago — even if only once, carried there as infants — the place remains part of our personal history.

Long before careers, responsibilities, and the complicated lives we eventually lead, someone carried us into St. Elizabeth’s, poured water over our heads, and welcomed us into a community that believed we belonged.

And somewhere in a photograph, my Aunt Sissy is still carrying me through those doors.

That kind of beginning stays with you.

Even when the church itself is disappearing.

When the Judge Is the Problem: Can a Plea Bargain Block the Appeal?

The U.S. Supreme Court this week confronted a question that strikes at the core of the American justice system: what happens when the judge is the problem?

That question surfaced during arguments in United States v. Carter, a case forcing the justices to consider whether a defendant who signs away the right to appeal in a plea bargain can still challenge a sentence that may have been imposed for blatantly improper reasons.

In federal courts, plea bargains are the backbone of the criminal justice system. Well over 90 percent of criminal cases end in negotiated pleas rather than trials. In many of those agreements, defendants are required to sign appeal waivers, surrendering their right to challenge their sentence later in exchange for reduced charges or a lighter sentence.

The Department of Justice appeared before the Court defending the enforceability of those waivers. Prosecutors argue they are essential to keeping the system functioning. Without them, the government says, the certainty that underpins plea agreements could collapse, potentially flooding appellate courts with challenges to sentences that were part of negotiated deals.

But the justices quickly pushed the argument into uncomfortable territory.

Several members of the Court posed stark hypotheticals that cut directly to the heart of the matter. What if a judge openly stated that a defendant deserved a harsher sentence because of their race? Or because they were a woman? Or because they belonged to some other disfavored group?

Would the defendant still be barred from appealing simply because they had signed a plea agreement?

Government attorneys struggled to draw a clear line. While acknowledging that such behavior would clearly violate the Constitution, they maintained that appeal waivers are still a critical part of the plea bargaining system and should generally remain enforceable.

The exchange exposed a deeper tension in the modern criminal justice system. Plea bargains keep courts from grinding to a halt. But they also shift enormous power into the hands of prosecutors and judges, often leaving defendants with very limited recourse once the agreement is signed.

Critics argue that enforcing appeal waivers even when judicial bias is alleged could effectively allow unconstitutional sentences to stand without meaningful review. Supporters counter that weakening those waivers would undermine the reliability of plea agreements and create uncertainty throughout the system.

The Supreme Court’s eventual ruling in United States v. Carter could determine whether there is any legal escape hatch when a plea deal collides with judicial misconduct.

At its heart, the case asks a simple but deeply uncomfortable question:

Can the justice system insist that defendants keep their bargain—even when the judge may have broken the Constitution?

Resolution 2026030: Governance or Grandstanding?

There are resolutions that fix roads.

There are resolutions that allocate funding.

There are resolutions that directly affect the daily lives of the people who pay the taxes.

And then there is Resolution No. 2026030.

The Dutchess County Legislature has introduced Resolution 2026030 to formally oppose a proposed federal immigration detention or processing facility.

The facility is not in Dutchess County.

It is in the Town of Chester.

In Orange County.

Now, let’s be fair. The resolution raises concerns about due process, environmental review, transparency, potential strain on hospitals and emergency services, and broader human rights questions. Those are serious issues. No one dismisses that federal actions can have regional consequences.

If Dutchess hospitals were to see measurable increases in emergency intake — show the numbers.

If EMS services were to be strained — provide projections.

If environmental impacts extend into the Hudson River watershed — produce the data.

That is governance.

But Resolution 2026030 reads less like a fiscal impact memo and more like an ideological position paper. It condemns hate and discrimination. It reaffirms Dutchess as a welcoming community. It invokes constitutional principles and federal enforcement practices.

All noble language.

But language alone does not create jurisdiction.

Dutchess County has no zoning authority in Chester.

No permitting authority.

No regulatory control over the project site.

Which raises the Valley Viewpoint question:

Is this about protecting Dutchess County systems — or about signaling alignment in a national immigration debate?

Local government has limited bandwidth. Time spent debating Orange County’s land-use matters is time not spent addressing Dutchess’ own challenges: property taxes, infrastructure maintenance, housing affordability, economic development.

There is also precedent to consider. If Dutchess formally opposes major projects in neighboring counties based on “regional impact,” does that open the door for neighboring counties to weigh in on Dutchess decisions they politically oppose?

County lines exist for a reason. They define authority and responsibility.

Dutchess County holds a proud constitutional history. We were the site of New York’s ratification of the United States Constitution. That legacy demands disciplined governance — not symbolic votes.

If Resolution 2026030 is rooted in documented fiscal or environmental exposure to Dutchess residents, then those findings should be clearly presented and debated on their merits.

If it is primarily about staking out a political position, then voters deserve that honesty as well.

The proposed facility is in Orange County.

That’s not ideology.

That’s geography.

And good government begins with knowing the difference.

Valley Viewpoint: The Supreme Court Just Drew a Line — And It’s About Parents

Every now and then, the U.S. Supreme Court hands down a ruling that doesn’t just tweak policy — it redraws the boundary between government and family.

This week was one of those moments.

In a 6–3 decision, the Court granted an emergency application brought by the Thomas More Society in Mirabelli v. Bonta, effectively shutting down California’s policy that allowed schools to conceal a child’s gender transition from his or her parents.

Let that sink in.

Schools were permitted — even required — to keep parents in the dark while facilitating a child’s social transition and compelling teachers to participate in that concealment.

The Supreme Court said: not so fast.

The justices found that California’s “secret transition regime” likely violates both the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment and the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. In plain English? The state cannot cut parents out of life-altering decisions about their own children.

The Court’s language was striking. It said the state had “cut out the primary protectors of children’s best interests: their parents.”

That’s not subtle.

Paul M. Jonna of the Thomas More Society called it a watershed moment. Peter Breen, the organization’s executive vice president, put it even more bluntly: California built a wall of secrecy between parents and their children — and the Supreme Court just tore it down.

Whatever side of the broader cultural debate you fall on, this case isn’t ultimately about slogans or yard signs.

It’s about who gets to make decisions for a child.

The state?

Or the parents?

The Court reaffirmed something that used to be common sense: parents hold primary authority over “the upbringing and education of children.” That includes not being shut out of decisions about a child’s mental health. The justices even compared California’s actions to prior cases where government intrusion into parental rights was struck down — and suggested this went even further.

The ruling also reinstates U.S. District Judge Roger Benitez’s earlier decision blocking the policy statewide. Importantly, the Court upheld class-wide relief, meaning the injunction doesn’t just protect a handful of parents — it protects families across California.

And yes, this matters beyond California.

Here in the Hudson Valley, we’ve seen our share of school board battles, policy disputes, and national culture wars playing out in local gymnasiums. Parents pack meetings. Teachers feel caught in the middle. Administrators try to navigate shifting mandates from Albany and Washington.

This ruling sends a clear constitutional signal: government agencies cannot override the fundamental role of parents under the banner of administrative policy.

That doesn’t end the debate. It won’t quiet the politics. And it certainly won’t resolve the deeper questions about how schools handle sensitive issues involving children.

But it does restore a constitutional baseline.

Parents are not optional participants in their children’s lives.

They are not obstacles to be managed.

They are not adversaries to be bypassed.

They are, as the Court reminded the country, the primary protectors of their children’s best interests.

In an era when institutions often expand their reach quietly — sometimes bureaucratically, sometimes ideologically — this decision is a reminder that there are still constitutional guardrails.

And sometimes, the highest court in the land still enforces them.

Before You Say “I’m Praying for You”

You know, I probably do need to get out more often. Most people unwind with Netflix. I apparently unwind with 16th-century Jesuits.

I just finished reading the Examen of St. Ignatius Loyola, and something in it stopped me cold.

Ignatius makes a point that feels almost uncomfortable in its clarity: prayer must be followed by action. Not eventually. Not symbolically. Not when it’s convenient. But concretely.

He suggests that the person who seeks the spirit of God first in good works will actually find God more deeply in prayer later on than the person who seeks God first in prayer and only then — maybe — in action.

That flips the script on how many of us operate.

How often do we hear about someone’s misfortune — a death in the family, a medical diagnosis, a lost job, a quiet personal struggle — and instinctively say, “I’m sending my prayers”?

It sounds compassionate. It feels spiritual. It costs us nothing.

But Ignatius would likely look at that and ask: And then what?

Did you bring the meal?

Did you make the call?

Did you write the check?

Did you sit with them in the silence?

Did you show up?

Because while prayer matters — deeply — it cannot become a substitute for mercy in motion.

There’s something almost self-protective about “sending prayers.” It allows us to feel engaged without actually entering someone else’s suffering. It keeps the pain at a safe distance. We remain observers of hardship rather than participants in healing.

Ignatius, in his blunt Jesuit way, seems to suggest that if you truly want to encounter God, you won’t find Him by standing back and spiritualizing someone else’s crisis. You’ll find Him when you step into it.

And maybe that’s the harder truth.

It’s simply not enough to tell people who are hurting, grieving, or down on their luck that we are “sending our prayers.” Those words can comfort — but only if they are attached to something real.

Faith that never leaves the kneeler isn’t faith fully lived.

If someone is hungry, prayer should lead to food.

If someone is lonely, prayer should lead to presence.

If someone is overwhelmed, prayer should lead to help.

Otherwise, “I’m praying for you” risks becoming little more than a polite dismissal dressed in piety.

Ignatius understood something we sometimes forget: God is not only encountered in the chapel. He is encountered in the kitchen, the hospital room, the funeral home, the late-night phone call, the quiet check slipped into an envelope.

And perhaps — just perhaps — the prayer that follows that kind of action is the one that finally rings true.

What I Learned the Hard Way

There are lessons I didn’t learn in school.

I learned them in courtrooms.
In boardrooms.
On subway platforms waiting for a downtown train.
Behind a radio microphone before sunrise.
In the quiet after arguments.
In the stillness of walking the dog when the world finally shuts up.

And somewhere along the way, I learned how to find my voice.

Not the loud voice. Not the performative voice.
My voice.

Becoming the best version of myself has required more goodbyes than I ever expected. Some were relationships. Some were illusions. Some were my own need to be right. Growth has cost me comfort — and sometimes people.

I’ve learned you cannot heal in the same environment that wounded you. You can’t stand in the same courtroom, the same toxic dynamic, the same cycle of resentment and expect peace to magically appear. At some point, you have to step outside the noise and choose a different room — sometimes a different life.

I’ve stayed on the wrong train before. Professionally. Personally. Emotionally. And the longer you stay because of pride or fear or “what will people think,” the more expensive it becomes. Time is the one currency you don’t get refunded.

I’ve worked for people who led by intimidation rather than inspiration. People who believed fear was management. Who confused control with leadership. Who raised their voices because they couldn’t raise their standards.

For a time, I tolerated it.

And I’ve learned something hard and uncomfortable: the hypocrisy you tolerate is the hypocrisy you enable — until you find your voice.

If you stay silent long enough, you begin to convince yourself it’s strategy. Or professionalism. Or patience. But sometimes it’s just fear. And fear has a way of dressing itself up as wisdom.

I tried to outwork it. Tried to reason with it. Tried to prove myself worthy of basic respect.

What I eventually learned is this: you cannot earn dignity from someone who doesn’t possess it themselves.

And I’ve learned something else — sometimes the people who should be giving you feedback don’t. Or won’t. Or can’t. So you learn to listen elsewhere.

I’ve learned to take feedback from clients rather than waiting for it from the people who were supposed to be guiding me. If the people you serve respect you, trust you, call you back, seek you out — that tells you something. Results speak. Relationships speak. Silence from above doesn’t erase the truth of the work.

There were seasons when my value wasn’t seen internally — but it was felt externally. That contrast teaches you perspective.

Those experiences didn’t break me — but they shaped me. They taught me the kind of leader I never want to be. They taught me that calm is power. That clarity is power. That treating people decently isn’t weakness — it’s discipline.

I’ve been underestimated. Mistaken for calm. Mistaken for patient. Mistaken for soft-spoken. But I’ve learned never to confuse peace with weakness. The most disciplined people I know are the ones who could fight — but choose when and how.

When things have gotten toughest in my life, it has almost always meant I was close to something breaking open. Close to clarity. Close to change. Close to a new chapter I didn’t yet understand.

Life repeats lessons when you ignore them. I’ve learned that the hard way. Patterns don’t disappear because you’re tired of them. They disappear when you confront them.

I’ve fought for people who loved me. And I’ve exhausted myself fighting for people who didn’t. That was a painful lesson — but a necessary one. Love should not feel like litigation.

I’ve learned that good health is not a guarantee. It’s a gift.

I don’t like asking for help. Never have. So I’ve worked harder than I needed to — sometimes out of pride, sometimes out of fear of burdening others. I’m still learning that strength includes allowing others to show up for you.

And somewhere along the way, I’ve come to value something I probably took for granted when I was younger — friendships that have lasted more than 50 years. Guys I stood next to in high school halls, who knew me before the titles, before the gray hair, before the scars. When one of them calls out of the blue, it means more than I sometimes let on. There’s something grounding about a voice that remembers you at seventeen. It reminds you who you were — and who you still are underneath everything else. I’m grateful for those calls. Truly grateful.

Finding my voice didn’t happen overnight. It came after staying silent too long. After tolerating things I shouldn’t have. After confusing endurance with strength. It came when I realized that speaking honestly — even imperfectly — was better than swallowing truth.

The scariest thought I’ve ever had isn’t that I might fail.

It’s that I might shrink.

That I might look back and realize I played small when I didn’t have to.

Starting over used to terrify me. Now I see it differently. Reinvention isn’t failure. It’s courage. It’s refusing to stay stuck in a version of yourself that no longer fits.

Some of the fiercest battles I’ve fought were internal — ego versus humility, anger versus restraint, fear versus faith. Those wars leave no visible scars, but they change you.

And here’s the truth I come back to again and again:

Fear doesn’t stop death.

It stops life.

It keeps you from speaking.
From trying.
From leading.
From challenging hypocrisy.
From finding your voice.

I don’t want to live small.

These aren’t inspirational quotes for me.

They’re scars.
They’re growth.
They’re gratitude.
They’re hard-earned clarity.

They’re what I learned — the hard way.

And I’m still learning.

Grace Is Cheaper Than Litigation

“It’s gonna be a tough next 18 years.”

Those were the words my friend’s daughter was forced to hear in a recent divorce proceeding. Not spoken in sorrow. Not said with regret. Said almost as a promise.

He was referring to their little girl — still young enough to need bedtime stories and reassurance — and making it clear that, for the next eighteen years, difficulty would be the plan.

I don’t know the private details of why their marriage is ending. And I won’t pretend to. But I have written before about my own experiences navigating Family and Supreme Court in New York — courtrooms where ego too often eclipses empathy, where process becomes more important than people, and where justice can feel secondary to personality.

I’ve stood before judges like John Sweeny, whose bench practice, in my view, reeked of conceit and arrogance. I’ve watched Support Magistrates like Rachelle Kaufman operate with a confidence that seemed inversely proportional to wisdom — a reminder that in New York’s judicial system, arrogance paired with stubborn certainty can carry you far.

Anyone who has been through that system understands how quickly conflict becomes institutionalized. Once you step into it, the machinery feeds on hostility. Lawyers posture. Motions fly. Calendars fill. And somewhere in the middle of it all sits a child who never asked for any of this.

Here’s what I do know.

A child is not leverage.

She is not a possession to be divided, not a pawn to be maneuvered, not a weapon to be aimed at the other parent.

She is a little girl.

She did not ask for divorce papers.
She did not ask for lawyers.
She did not ask for hearings.
She did not ask to become the centerpiece of a war.

What she needs is far simpler — and far harder.

She needs to feel equally loved and safe in both homes.
She needs to see her parents treat each other with dignity, even if the marriage failed.
She needs to witness cooperation instead of combat.
She needs to see grace extended when it’s least deserved.
She needs to learn that even when something breaks, adults can rebuild something new that is stable and healthy.

When one parent says, “It’s going to be a tough next 18 years,” what the child hears — even if she can’t articulate it — is: I am going to live inside conflict.

That’s not strength.
That’s not justice.
That’s not protection.

That’s ego.

The courtroom will not heal what pride keeps open. Judges can sign orders. Magistrates can set schedules. But no one in a black robe can manufacture maturity.

Eighteen years can either be a sentence… or a responsibility.

Grace costs nothing. Litigation costs everything.

I truly wish more people going through divorce understood this.

Children do not need parents who win.
They need parents who grow up.

And the insanity stops the moment one of them decides to.

VALLEY VIEWPOINT: The $100 Billion Question No One’s Talking About

There are moments in New York politics when something big is happening — but it’s happening quietly.

No rallies.

No floor debates dominating the evening news.

No headline screaming “Your Taxes Are About to Go Up.”

Instead, it’s tucked into budget language.

An opinion piece this weekend in the New York Post laid out what it calls a “stealth” effort by public-employee unions to roll back key pension reforms enacted in 2012 — reforms that created what’s known as Tier 6. Those changes required newer public employees to contribute more toward their pensions and modestly adjusted retirement benefits to control long-term costs.

Now, according to the piece, unions want those reforms reversed — not through standalone legislation with a public actuarial score, but by embedding the change inside the state budget.

Let’s pause there.

Because budgets in Albany are not small documents. They are massive, thousand-page vehicles where policy sometimes travels in the shadows. If something is buried deep enough, it can move fast before taxpayers even realize it’s there.

The cost estimate cited in the column — written by Ken Girardin of the Manhattan Institute — is staggering: potentially $100 billion over time. That’s not pocket change. That’s generational money. That’s property-tax pressure on Hudson Valley homeowners already juggling rising energy bills, school levies, and grocery costs.

And here’s the critical piece: under New York’s Constitution, once pension benefits are enhanced, they cannot be reduced. Ever. They are locked in. Permanent. The bill, however, remains very flexible — it shows up every year.

Supporters of rolling back Tier 6 argue recruitment is suffering. They say New York needs to make public service more competitive. That’s a real debate worth having. But worth having is the key phrase.

Out in the open.

With numbers.

With hearings.

With an honest explanation of what it will cost taxpayers in Poughkeepsie, Pleasant Valley, Wappingers, Rhinebeck — not just Albany insiders.

If the change is justified, make the case publicly. If it costs $100 billion, show the math. If it improves retention, provide the data.

But slipping permanent fiscal commitments into a budget bill? That’s not transparency. That’s strategy.

Governor Kathy Hochul has a choice. The Legislature has a choice. Either this becomes a full public debate — or it becomes another example of how Albany does business when it hopes no one is paying attention.

In the Hudson Valley, we pay attention.

Because every “Albany adjustment” eventually lands on a local tax bill.

And that’s not opinion.

That’s experience.

The Empire Is Cracking — And Voters Just Said So

When a Marist College poll drops numbers like this, it isn’t background noise.
It’s an alarm bell.
Let’s stop dancing around it.
Chuck Schumer — Senate Majority Leader, permanent fixture on cable news — is sitting at just 27% “excellent” or “good” among New York voters.
Sixty-five percent rate him fair or poor.
Forty-one percent say poor.
That’s not mild dissatisfaction.
That’s fatigue.
And then there’s Kirsten Gillibrand — 31% positive, 51% fair or poor, nearly one in five voters unsure what she’s even doing.
If almost 20% of voters don’t know how to rate you, it’s because they don’t feel your impact.
These are not red-state numbers.
These are New York numbers.
And here’s where it gets more troubling — because this mindset trickles down.
When you have local Democrats like David Siegel running for Dutchess County Legislative District 3 on a platform that essentially boils down to “just elect Democrats,” that’s not a vision. That’s a shortcut.
And when Emma Arnoff in District 2 campaigns on national ideological issues instead of focusing on local tax burdens, infrastructure, public safety, and constituent service — that’s not leadership. That’s distraction.
County government doesn’t control foreign policy.
It doesn’t set Supreme Court precedent.
It doesn’t manage the U.S. border.
It sets local budgets.
It impacts property taxes.
It influences development.
It addresses local services.
When local candidates run as if they’re auditioning for MSNBC panels instead of applying for a county job, voters notice.
And they’re growing tired of it.
This is the deeper meaning behind the Marist numbers. It’s not just about two senators. It’s about a political culture that has grown comfortable assuming party loyalty replaces performance.
For too long, New York’s political class has operated on autopilot: run on national narratives, rely on party registration, and assume the rest takes care of itself.
Meanwhile:
Energy costs climb.
Families relocate.
Small businesses strain.
Taxes remain stubbornly high.
Residents feel unheard.
Power without results breeds resentment.
Longevity without accountability breeds backlash.
New York may still lean blue, but complacency is not a strategy. When approval ratings hit historic lows — and they are historic — it signals erosion of trust.
And trust, once eroded, is hard to recover.
This isn’t about party.
It’s about seriousness.
If the message to voters is “Just elect us,” eventually voters respond with a different message:
Earn it.
The Marist poll didn’t whisper.

It warned.

The Balance Sheet You Can’t See: Human Capital

Over the course of my career, I have reviewed thousands of spreadsheets.

Revenue projections. Compensation models. Benefits renewals. Payroll registers. Insurance exposure. Bonus accruals. Workforce plans.

Every organization obsesses over the visible balance sheet — assets, liabilities, margins, cost controls. We debate capital expenditures and operating expenses. We scrutinize EBITDA. We forecast risk.

But there is another balance sheet — one that never appears in QuickBooks or on a quarterly report.

It’s the human one.

Human capital is the largest investment most organizations make, yet it is often treated like a controllable expense rather than strategic infrastructure.

When hiring moves quickly, it’s expected.

When hiring slows, HR is questioned.

When morale is strong, leadership celebrates culture.

When someone resigns, the spotlight shifts toward HR.

Over the course of my career, I’ve seen HR positioned as administrative overhead — the department that processes payroll, manages policies, and “handles issues.” What I’ve also seen is this: every single strategic decision eventually runs through people.

Expansion plans require hiring architecture.

Cost control affects morale and retention.

Compensation strategy impacts performance.

Compliance failures create financial liability.

Poor succession planning destabilizes growth.

HR sits at the intersection of finance, risk, and culture. It sees pressure building before it shows up in the numbers. It understands when compensation is misaligned with performance. It recognizes when engagement is slipping long before turnover spikes.

And yet, too often, HR is invited into conversations after the strategy is set — asked to implement what it did not help design.

That is backwards.

Human capital is not a soft metric. It is protective capital. It is growth capital. It is risk mitigation. It is reputation insurance. It is operational continuity.

If you want to understand the true strength of an organization, don’t just look at the financial statements. Look at how it treats its people strategy. Look at whether HR has a seat at the table before decisions are finalized.

Over the years, I’ve learned something simple: the companies that thrive treat HR not as a cost center, but as part of their core infrastructure. They understand that the most important line item on their balance sheet is the one they can’t physically see.

It’s human capital.

And it deserves to be managed with the same rigor, foresight, and strategic respect as every other asset in the business.

Valley Viewpoint: Citizenship Is Not a Suggestion

Up here in the Hudson Valley, we understand something instinctively: if you belong to something, it means something.

You belong to a fire district — you pay into it.

You belong to a school district — you vote in it.

You belong to a country — you shape its future.

That’s why the debate over the SAVE Act strikes me as oddly disconnected from common sense.

The Act does one primary thing: it requires documentary proof of citizenship to register to vote in federal elections. Not a library card. Not a utility bill. Proof of citizenship.

Some in Washington have reacted as if this is radical. As if asking someone to verify citizenship before participating in a federal election is an assault on democracy itself.

But here’s the question no one seems willing to answer plainly:

If voting is reserved for citizens, why would we object to confirming citizenship?

In Pleasant Valley, if you showed up at Town Hall asking to vote in a local fire district election, you’d expect to demonstrate that you’re eligible. That’s not oppression. That’s procedure. It’s stewardship. It’s respect for the integrity of the system.

Opponents argue that documented cases of non-citizen voting are rare. Perhaps. But election integrity is not about tolerating “rare.” It’s about removing doubt. Democracy runs on trust. When trust erodes, participation erodes. When participation erodes, legitimacy follows.

The SAVE Act doesn’t eliminate voting. It doesn’t cancel mail ballots. It doesn’t silence voices. It simply says: before you register to help decide who governs 330 million Americans, demonstrate that you are one of them.

We verify identity to board an airplane.

We verify identity to open a bank account.

We verify identity to receive government benefits.

But we’re told verifying citizenship to vote is somehow extreme?

What’s extreme is pretending that sovereignty doesn’t require standards.

The other argument we hear is that states should handle this themselves. But when election rules vary wildly from state to state, confusion and suspicion fill the gaps. A uniform federal baseline for federal elections is not federal overreach — it’s clarity.

None of this should be partisan. Citizenship is not a Republican concept. It is not a Democratic concept. It is an American one.

Up here in the Valley, we value fairness. We value clarity. We value rules that apply evenly. The SAVE Act reflects that spirit: protect access, yes — but protect legitimacy too.

Because when the ballot box loses credibility, everything built on top of it wobbles.

Citizenship is not a suggestion.

It is the foundation.

And foundations are worth protecting.

How Absurd Does Justice Have to Get?

If you’ve been reading Valley Viewpoint for any length of time, you know a theme runs through my writing like a fault line beneath the surface:

The growing absurdity of our justice system.

Not the ideal. The ideal is sacred. Equal justice under law. Blindfolded. Balanced scales.

But the execution? Increasingly political. Increasingly detached from common sense.

And before anyone says, “That’s happening somewhere else,” let me say this clearly: cultural shifts do not stop at the Hudson River.

What begins in California courtrooms finds its way to New York. What is normalized in national headlines eventually filters into state courts, local courtrooms, and yes — even here in the Hudson Valley.

The latest controversy involves a ruling requiring prosecutors to use a defendant’s preferred pronouns in a rape trial — referring to a biological male as “she.”

Pause there.

A rape trial.

Not a workplace seminar. Not a campus discussion. Not a social media debate.

A courtroom — where liberty is on the line and trauma is examined under oath.

This is not about being unkind. It is not about scoring political points. It is about clarity in the most serious setting our society has.

Sexual assault cases hinge on physical facts. On biological realities. On who did what to whom. When language begins to obscure those realities, confusion is not just possible — it is predictable.

Imagine a jury drawn from Poughkeepsie. Pleasant Valley. LaGrange. Hyde Park. Fishkill. Ordinary Hudson Valley residents fulfilling their civic duty.

They are asked to weigh credibility, evaluate evidence, and render judgment in a case that could alter lives forever.

They should not be asked to untangle semantic gymnastics at the same time.

Jurors are not there to referee social philosophy.

They are there to determine guilt or innocence.

For those who have followed my own writing on the justice system, you know I have chronicled procedural delays, unanswered filings, bureaucratic silence, and selective responsiveness. The pattern is familiar: institutions increasingly protecting narratives instead of protecting truth.

When courts begin compelling speech in criminal trials, we are no longer adjusting etiquette. We are reshaping the foundation of due process.

Today it is pronouns in a California rape case.

Tomorrow it is policy guidance in Albany.

And the day after that, it is precedent cited in a New York courtroom.

The Hudson Valley is not insulated from national currents. We feel them in our schools, our municipal policies, and yes — potentially in our courts.

The question is not whether individuals have the right to live as they choose. That debate will continue in many arenas.

The question is whether a criminal trial — especially one involving violence — is the place to advance linguistic ideology.

Our courts should be the last place where reality becomes negotiable.

Justice requires clarity.

And if stating biological facts in a criminal proceeding is now controversial, then the question is unavoidable:

How absurd does justice have to get?