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Get the Facts NY

Get Facts New York


Last Updated: 11/25/2009

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Gender: NotSet
Status: Single
Age: 36
Sign: Aquarius

City: ALBANY
State: New York
Country: US
Signup Date: 7/26/2006

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Monday, March 23, 2009 

On Monday March 16, 2009 more than 130 teens from across New York State
gathered in Albany, NY for the Get the Facts NY Youth Leadership
Conference to learn about health care issues and to gain advocacy
skills to promote reproductive health in their communities.

One of the vent presentations focused on activism on the internet, and
how to spread information and activism via facebook, myspace, and
twitter. (EXACTLY what we are doing right here!)

Shelby Knox, a young feminist and activist, was the keynote speaker.
Her documentary about the fight for comprehensive sex education in her
Texas town, "The Education of Shelby Knox" was also shown. Shelby gave
an inspiring speech about activism, sex education in schools, and the
importance of young people getting involved NOW.

The teens also attended workshops such as "Organizing 101" and "Know
Your Rights." "Organizing 101" taught ways in which students could
organize events within their community to foster successful activism.
"Know Your Rights" focused on educating teens about their rights as to
better help them advocate for themselves.

Everyone had a great time! Thanks again to all the attendees, students,
activists, contributors and organizers that helped make this event such
a success! We hope that we have inspired you the way that you have
inspired us!
Tuesday, September 16, 2008 

Category: News and Politics

The New York Times reported last week that John McCain ads have distorted Barack Obama's policyies regarding sex education. We thought you might want to read more. Check it out here.

Keep up to date on the latest in sex ed by visiting the Get the Facts NY web site.

Monday, August 18, 2008 

Category: News and Politics
Hey, so is it any surprise to learn that a "New Study Finds Oral and Anal Sex Common Among Sexually Active Teens?" Of course not. But it's always a great conversation starter for your next party.

The most interesting key finding we saw was "There was little evidence of teen virgins using serial oral sex with multiple partners as a substitute for vaginal intercourse. In fact, the majority (67%) of teens who had engaged in oral but not vaginal sex had only one sexual partner in their lifetime. "

It's time for Congress to pass the REAL act and the New York State Senate to take action and pass the Healthy Teens Act. Because when it comes right down to it, we don't get to make the decision of when our children decide to have sex, they do. And don't we want them to be safe when they do?
Thursday, June 12, 2008 
Family Planning Advocates of NYS '
Press Release


150 ORGANIZATIONS JOIN SENATORS TO DEMAND REAL SEX EDUCATION

With the School Year and the Legislative Session Coming to an End, the Get the Facts NY Coalition Says the Senate Must Vote on the Healthy Teens Act Before Another Class Graduates


Albany, NY (June 11, 2008)—Representatives of the 150-member Get the Facts NY Coalition joined with Members of the New York State Senate today to call for passage of the Healthy Teens Act. The bill - which has passed the Assembly with huge bi-partisan support four years in a row - must now be passed by the Senate to make resources available for schools to provide young people with real sex education.

State Senator Suzi Oppenheimer, who co-sponsors the Healthy Teens Act (A.2856/S.1342), was joined by many of her Senate colleagues and sex education advocates to call for the bill to be discharged from the Senate Finance Committee, chaired by Senator Owen Johnson. The bill is sponsored by Senator George Winner.

Lawmakers working to pass the bill were cheered by members of the Get the Facts NY Coalition and students as they discussed the urgent need to provide resources for comprehensive sex education.

The CDC recently released a national study that revealed that 1 in 4 teen girls has a sexually transmitted infection. In New York State, 6 out of every 10 teens have sex before they graduate from high school – and nearly 40,000 teens become pregnant each year. 88 percent of New Yorkers agree that students should have information about contraception and the prevention of sexually transmitted infections. Yet New York still does not have a dedicated funding stream to support comprehensive sex education in schools.

"Parents want their children to get honest, accurate sex education in school. We have a duty to provide teens with the basic information they need to make healthy decisions throughout their lives," said JoAnn M. Smith, president and CEO of Family Planning Advocates of New York State. "The Senate cannot let another school year end without passing the Healthy Teens Act."

"Young people are continually exposed to sexually explicit information through television, movies, magazines and the Internet," said Dr. Carrin E. Schotter-Thal, MD, FAAP, representing the American Academy of Pediatrics, District II, NYS. "They need access to understandable and accurate information to build their personal capacity to make informed decisions about their health and sexual activity."

"The kids I see every day act like they know a lot about sex," said Claire Skotnes, a high school senior. "They want to appear confident, they want to feel and act like adults. Teens think they can look anything up on the Internet—so we don't always ask questions. The problem is, a lot of what we find on the Internet is wrong or incomplete. We need the facts. We need medically accurate, complete sex education."

"Too many young people are left to make potentially life-changing decisions without accurate information and resources," said Reina Schiffrin, president/CEO, Planned Parenthood Hudson Peconic. "New York must act now to establish comprehensive sex education programs for our teens. We urge Senate Majority Leader Joseph Bruno to bring the Healthy Teens Act to the Senate floor and pass this important bill this year."

"Teachers and health-related professionals should have the resources they need to enable students to make safe and responsible choices," said Alan Lubin, executive vice president of the New York State United Teachers.

(more)


150 Organizations Join Senators to Demand Real Sex Education
June 11, 2008
Page 2


"Given our own organization's research, and our years of experience providing comprehensive sexuality education, Girls Incorporated of the Greater Capital Region supports the inclusion of comprehensive sexuality education in all of the New York State public schools," said Teri Bordenave, president/CEO of Girls Incorporated of the Greater Capital Region. "To invest our taxpayer dollars on anything less effective is a tragedy!"

"We can no longer ignore," said Patricia McGeown, president/CEO of Upper Hudson Planned Parenthood, "the impact of ineffective and misguided sex education policies on the health and lives of our children. Every week we see young girls who still think they cannot get pregnant the first time they have sex; who have never heard of the word chlamydia until they test positive for the infection. More and more, we talk to young people who have been told in health classes that condoms don't work. The price is paid in rising rates of sexually transmitted infections, rising teen birth rates, rising health care expenses and ruined lives. This must stop! What reason can possibly be given for holding up a bill that would provide schools with funds to improve and expand medically accurate sex education?"

"BirthNet supports the Healthy Teens Act because we believe that accurate, age-appropriate reproductive health education will provide young women and men with a foundation for understanding their bodies and for healthy behavior that will serve them throughout their lives and is vital to the health and well being of teens and of the adults they will become," said Carolyn Keefe, co-founder of BirthNet.

"Our teens deserve to know the facts about sex to help them make responsible decisions," said Carol Love, president/CEO, Planned Parenthood of the Rochester/Syracuse Region. "This common sense approach should be something we can all agree on."

"NASW-NYS strongly supports comprehensive, age-appropriate, culturally competent sex education and as such urges enactment of the Healthy Teens Act, an initiative to address the disturbingly high number of incidents of pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases in our teen population," said Reinaldo Cardona, MSSW, LCSW, executive director of the National Association of Social Workers-NYS.

"Clergy from many different denominations believe that teens need the potentially life-saving information that comprehensive sex education provides," said Rabbi Dennis S. Ross, director of Concerned Clergy for Choice. "As teachers and counselors of teens and their families, we know how complicated life can become. When teens have the truth, they can make informed decisions and keep themselves safe and healthy."

"The health of young people is not being adequately addressed in our schools," said Fiona Murray, a student at SUNY-Geneseo. "Each year, more of my classmates become pregnant and affected by sexually transmitted infections. I can't help but think that if we had better sex education in high school, their lives could be different."

"The Healthy Teens Act would give schools and communities the resources to provide teens with vital information to help them stay healthy," Scott Heyman, interim CEO/president, Planned Parenthood of the Southern Finger Lakes. "Teens need access to information that can help them prevent unintended pregnancy
and sexually transmitted infections. The Senate can make that happen by passing the Healthy Teens Act."

"Teen dating violence and date rape are prevalent problems that threaten the safety and well-being of New York's teenage girls," according to Patti Jo Newell, deputy director at the NYS Coalition Against Domestic Violence. "The specter of unintended pregnancy and sexually transmitted infections further intensifies those dangers. New York must pass the Healthy Teens Act as a key element in its response to teen dating violence and date rape."

"This legislation has passed the Assembly with tremendous support from both Democrats and Republicans four years in a row," said Clare Coleman, president of Planned Parenthood of the Mid-Hudson Valley. "It's time for the Senate to pass the Healthy Teens Act and reduce the high rates of unintended pregnancy and sexually transmitted infection that afflict our schools."


Wednesday, May 28, 2008 

Category: News and Politics
Keep the Healthy Teens Act Moving



The Healthy Teens Act is one step closer to becoming law.

Last week, the Healthy Teens Act was favorably reported out of State Senate Health Committee. Now it must also be voted on in the Senate Finance Committee and we need your help to bring this bill to a full vote by the Senate.

Members of the Senate Finance Committee need to hear from you. They need to know why the Healthy Teens Act would make a difference in your community.

Click here to send a fax to members of the Senate Finance Committee urging them to bring the Healthy Teens Act up for a vote.

Then take one more step to support real sex education.

Call Senator Owen Johnson, Chair of the Senate Finance Committee, right now at (518) 455-3411. Tell him to pass the Healthy Teens Act (S.1342).
Tell me more.
Monday, May 19, 2008 
Did you know...

1 in 4 teenage girls has an STD.

40,000 teens will become pregnant in New York State this year.

6 in 10 high school seniors will have sex before they graduate.

Yet New York State has no dedicated funding stream to support communities and schools that want to provide comprehensive sex education.

In order to change these startling statistics, the New York State Senate must pass the Healthy Teens Act now. The New York State Assembly has passed the Healthy Teens Act four years in a row with strong bi-partisan support.

The Healthy Teens Act would create a grant program for schools and communities to provide comprehensive sex education for young people in New York State. If the bill is passed, schools will be able to provide sex education programs that are medically accurate and age-appropriate.

You can make a difference today. Senate Majority Leader Joe Bruno has the power to bring the Healthy Teens Act to the floor of the Senate for a vote. He can take one of the most important steps in preventing 1 in 4 young women from getting an STI.

Send a message to Senate Majority Leader Joe Bruno and tell him to pass the Healthy Teens Act now. Visit Get the Facts NY rght now to take action today!
Wednesday, April 30, 2008 

ARE YOU POS OR NOT?

mtvU and the Kaiser Family Foundation, in partnership with POZ Magazine, unveiled "Pos or Not" (www.PosorNot.com): an online game that challenges stereotypes and breaks down the barriers that may prevent people from talking openly about HIV/AIDS, getting tested, and using protection.

Check out Pozornot.com

Wednesday, April 02, 2008 

On Monday, March 17th the New York State Assembly passed the Healthy Teens Act by a vote of 130-14. Through bipartisan support the New York State Assembly has demonstrated its support for comprehensive sex education in schools for the fourth year in a row.  Given recent reports from the CDC that 1 in 4 teenage girls have a sexually transmitted infection, the Assembly continues to show great leadership in tackling this problem.  The Healthy Teens Act would create a grant program for schools and communities to provide comprehensive sex education for young people. This preventative legislation is a great step in making sure teens stay healthy by working to provide teens with medically accurate and age-appropriate sex education in schools.


Read more and take action by visiting FPA’s web site.

Monday, February 18, 2008 

Come check out the Get the Facts NY Youth Leadership Conference on March 10, 2008 at the Empire State Plaza Convention Center in Albany, NY from 9:30 am to 7pm. Get the Facts NY supports the right of every young person to access the information and develop the skills necessary to make safe and responsible choices about his or her sexual health. Youth from around NY will meet others who are concerned about the need for teens to have access to comprehensive sex education and reproductive health services.



Young advocates will learn new skills through workshops on lobbying, phone banking and organizing. Teens will be given a chance to tell their own story and learn skills necessary to advocate for real sex education. The day will end with a pizza party and open mic. Keep an eye out for updates for who our keynote performer will be! So come learn the different ways you can become organized and take action in your community. The price is only $25 which includes the cost of meals. For more information, check out the website at getthefactsny.org.

Friday, February 15, 2008 

Get the Facts Youth Leadership Conference

March 10, 2008

Empire State Plaza Convention Center

Albany, NY

9:30 am – 7:00 pm

  • Learn to be an advocate for sex education in New York State
  • Meet with peers to champion your cause. 
  • Hear from elected officials. 

Special guest: NELLIE MCKAY!!

She'll be giving a special performance for all teens at the Youth Conference!

Check her out at http://www.nelliemckay.org/

Teens 14-19 welcome

Registration Required

visit www.getthefactsny.org for more information