Upload
josh-hill
View
218
Download
1
Embed Size (px)
DESCRIPTION
This is an official publication of the New York District of Key Club International. We reserve all rights. It was compiled with the help of the Kiwanis Family Relations committee 2012-2013. Please use this Directory as a resource in which you can find what Kiwanis Family clubs are within your Division. If you have any questions, please refer to the contact list in the back of the Directory. Thank you.
Citation preview
1
An Official Publication of the New York District Key Club
Kiwanis Family Relations
Committee’s Kiwanis Family
Directory 2012-2013
2
Greetings from Your Committee 3
Kiwanis Kids 4
Builders Club 6
Key Club 8
Circle-K 12
Aktion Club 14
Kiwanis 16
Contact Information 20
Information in this publication was compiled by the Kiwanis Family Relations Committee.
This official publication was created by District Editor Holy Cheong. © 2012
Table of Contents
3
Hello New York District Key Club!
In hopes to strengthen Kiwanis Family relations in the upcoming service year, your Kiwanis
Family Relations Committee has been working hard to compile lists if all the Kiwanis Fam-
ily clubs in each Key Club division in the New York District. In this booklet you will find the
completed lists, descriptions of each Kiwanis Family branch and short messages from
various members and officers from the branches. Please use this resource to help better
Kiwanis Family Relations on a club and division level.
Before you jump into all this information, we want to make sure you know what each
branch is:
Kiwanis Kids - Elementary School level
Builder’s Club - Middle School level
Key Club - High School level
Circle K - College level
Aktion Club - Adults with Disabilities
Kiwanis - Adults
If you have any questions regarding anything in this resource, please contact the Kiwanis
Family Relations Committee :
LTG Joshua Hill, co-Chair, [email protected]
LTG Jason Roman, co-Chair, [email protected]
LTG Sean Charles, committee member, [email protected]
LTG Victoria Clabeaux, committee member, [email protected]
LTG Helen Wong, committee member, [email protected]
Or if you have any specific questions pertaining to a club in your division, contact your
Key Club Lieutenant Governor or sponsoring Kiwanis Club!
We thank you again for taking the time to look through this resource! We expect to hear
about many good Kiwanis Family service projects this coming year!
Yours in service and friendship,
Joshua Hill, Jason Roman, Sean Charles, Victoria Clabeaux and Helen Wong
2012-2013 Kiwanis Family Relations Committee
New York District of Key Club International
4
K-Kids is the largest service organization for
elementary school students, with more than 42,000
members worldwide. The first K-Kids was chartered
in 2000. Today, there are more than 1,200 clubs in
Australia, the Bahamas, Barbados, Bermuda,
Canada, Italy, Jamaica, Malaysia, Martinique,
Nigeria, the Philippines, Trinidad and Tobago and
the United States.
K-Kids is a “student-led” community service organization that operates
under school regulations and draws its members from the student body.
Community-based K-Kids clubs also can be established at churches,
libraries, YMCAs, lodges or similar facilities. A Kiwanis club, composed of
like-minded, service-oriented people from the community, serves as the
club’s sponsor.
K-Kids is structured only on the local club level but is supported by the
Kiwanis International Office in Indianapolis, Indiana, which provides
programs, literature and opportunities to relate to teenagers from countries worldwide.
For more information visit their website: www.kiwaniskids.org
Kiwanis K-Kids
All descriptions of each Kiwanis Family Branch are taken from their respective websites.
This is to not leave out any information and to get the correct information across to
anyone reading this resource.
5
Division # K-Kids Club Division # K-Kids Club
1 Hampton Bays Elementary Chazy Central Rural School
2 Fifth Avenue School Keeseville Elementary
3 Northport Mooers Elementary School
4 Connolly Elementary School Rouses Point Elementary School
Covert Elementary School 15 N/A
Hampton Street School 16 E. R. Crosby Elementary School
Hillside Grade School Meagher Elementary
Jackson Avenue Voorheesville Elementary School
Landing Elementary School 17 Blue Creek Elementary
New Hyde Park Road School Boght Hills Elementary School
Sea Cliff Elementary School Castleton Elementary School
5 N/A Saint Ambrose School
6 Bowling Green School 18 Carroll Hill School
Franklin Square Hoosick Falls Elementary School
McVey Elementary School West Sand Lake Elementary School
7 Oaks Road School 19 N/A
South Oceanside Road School 20 N/A
Walter S. Boardman School 21 Dr. Weeks Elementary School
8 & 8A Glendale, NY – Kiwanis 22 Dana L. Lyon Elementary School
Learning Tree Multi-Cultural School 23 Canandaigua Elementary School
Maspeth Elementary School Klem Road South Elementary School
PS91 of Glendale St. Joseph School
P.S. 13 Queens-LeFrak State Road Elementary School
P.S. 229 Queens 24 Lawrence Avenue Elementary School
P. S. 207 NNCS
P. S. 212 25 Benjamin Franklin Elementary School
9 PS 215 East Elementary School
10 N/A Holmes Elementary School
11 P.S. 205 Jefferson Elementary School
12 Edward Williams Elementary School Lewiston-Porter Elementary School
Eldorado Elementary School
Niagara Wheatland West Elementary
School
Elmwood Elementary Potters Road Elementary School
Lime Kiln School Theodore Roosevelt Elementary School
Margetts Elementary School Tuscarora Indian School
13 Ellenville Winchester Elementary School
Fallsburg 26 N/A
Fostertown Etc Magnet 27 Christ the King School
Minisink Valley Intermediate School City of Rochester School
Otisville Elementary Pembroke Intermediate School
14 Bailey Bears St. Joseph School
Clubs by Division
6
Builders Club
Builders Club is the largest service organization for
middle school and junior high students, with more
than 45,000 members worldwide. Members learn to
work together and develop servant-leaders skills as
they serve their school and community. In
partnership with UNICEF and March of Dimes, the
clubs are able to expand their outreach to babies
and children of the world.
The first Builders Club was chartered in 1975. Today,
there are more than 1,600 clubs in Aruba, Australia,
the Bahamas, Barbados, Bermuda, Canada, Italy, Jamaica, Korea, Martinique, Netherlands
Antilles, Philippines, Suriname, Trinidad and Tobago, and the United States.
Builders Club is a student-led community service organization that operates under school
regulations and draws its members from the student body.
Community-based Builders Clubs can also be established at churches, libraries, Boys & Girls
Clubs, YMCAs, lodges or similar facilities. A Kiwanis club, composed of like-minded,
service-oriented people from the community, serves as the club’s sponsor.
Builders Club is structured on the local club level but is supported by the Kiwanis
International Office in Indianapolis, Indiana, which provides guidelines, programs, and
opportunities to relate to teenagers from countries worldwide.
For more information visit their website: www.buildersclub.org
7
Clubs by Division
Division 1 Division 9 Division 18
Hampton Bays Middle School I.S. 30 Algonquin Middle School
Westhampton Beach Middle School Marine Park IS 278 Gardner Dickinson School
Parkway School Maple Hill Middle School
Division 2 Seeall Academy PS/IS 18 Rensselaer Middle High
Copiague Middle School Seth Low IS 96
South Ocean Middle School The Christa McAuliffe Division 19
St. Martin of Tours School Division 10 Frankfort-Schuyler Middle
Town of Webb Schools
Division 3 Division 11 Westmoreland Central Middle School
Thomas C. Giordano Middle School Division 20
Division 4
Finley Middle School Division 12 Division 21
Floral Park Memorial High East Ramapo (Pomona) Donald S. Ray Middle School
Glen Cove Youth Bureau Rye Neck Middle School
New Hyde Park Memorial Willow Grove Middle School Division 22
North Shore Middle School Broadway Middle School
Division 13 Cohen Middle School
Division 5 Chester Academy Ernie Davis Middle School
Alfred G. Berner Middle School Fallsburg Middle School
Merrick Avenue Middle School M.C. Millier Middle School Division 23
Minisink Valley Middle School Bishop Kearney High School
Division 6 Monhagen Middle School Canandaigua Middle School
Island Trees Middle School R.J. Kaiser Middle School East High School
Jonas E. Salk Middle School Twin Towers Middle School Spry Middle School
Lincoln Orens Middle School Victor Junior High School
Wisdom Lane Middle School Division 14
Woodland Middle School Lake Placid Middle High School Division 24
W.T. Clarke Middle School Northeastern Clinton Middle Ogdensburg Free Academy
Saranac Middle School
Division 7 Division 25
Baldwin Middle School Division 15 East Aurora Middle School
East Rockaway Jr./Sr. Glens Falls Middle School Lewiston Porter Middle
Oceanside Middle School West Middle School
Division 16
Divisions 8/8A Albany Academy for Girls Division 26
I.S. 73 Queens Berne-Know-Westerlo Jr Silver Creek
I.S. 125 J. Watson Bailey Middle School Washington Middle School
I.S. 77 Saugerties Jr High School
I.S. 5 Queens Voorheesville Middle School Division 27
Nathaniel Hawthorne Middle School Alexander Middle School
P.S. 207 Division 17 East Irondequiot Middle School
Saint Helen School Fonda-Fultonville Cent Pembroke Central High
Schoharie Junior High Warsaw Central School
8
Key Club
Key Club is the oldest and largest service program for high school students.
It is a student-led organization that teaches leadership through service to
others. Members of the Kiwanis International family, Key Club members
build themselves as they build their schools and communities. Key Club has
approximately 260,000 members in approximately 5,000 clubs. Key Club is
represented in 30 countries.
Key Club assists Kiwanis in carrying out its mission to serve
the children of the world. High school student members of Key Club perform
acts of service in their communities, such as cleaning up parks, collecting
clothing and organizing food drives. They also learn leadership skills by
running meetings, planning projects and holding elected leadership positions
at the club, district and international levels.
Key Club International brings together all Key Club's members' efforts and energies into an
area that makes an international impact through the Major Emphasis, "Children: Their Future,
Our Focus.” The Major Emphasis unites Key Clubs under the banner of service that deals with
the most important part of our community, our youth.
The Key Club service initiative is the hands-on element of the Major Emphasis. All of the hands
-on service provided to children by Key Club International members is directed to a single
area of need, to make a substantial impact. The current service initiative, The Eliminate
Project, allows Key Clubbers joining forces with Kiwanis International and UNICEF eliminate
maternal and neonatal tetanus.
Each year, Key Club International teams up with its three partner organizations, March of
Dimes, Children’s Miracle Network and UNICEF, for the fundraising element of the Major
Emphasis. As you plan your club’s service programming for the year, keep these
organizations in mind. Each Key Club is encouraged to participate with our partners as we
join together to make a difference in the lives of
children.
For more information visit their website: www.keyclub.org
9
Clubs by Division
Division Club Division Club
1 Bishop McGrann-Mercy 4 Wheatley
1 Easthampton
1 Eastport South Manor 5 CCA Wantagh
1 Hamptonbays 5 Farmingdale
1 Riverhead 5 John F. Kennedy
1 Southhampton 5 Massapequa
1 Westhampton Beach 5 Plainedge
5 Sanford H. Calhoun
2 Amityville 5 Seaford
2 Bellport 5 W.C. Mepham
2 Copiague 5 Wantagh
2 Lindenhurst
2 Patchogue-Medford 6 Division Ave
2 Sayville 6 East Meadow
2 William Floyd 6 G.C. Tech
6 Garden City
3 Half Hallow Hills East 6 General Douglas MacArthur
3 Half Hallow Hills West 6 Island Trees
3 Huntington 6 Sacred Heart Academy
3 Northport High School 6 Uniondale
3 Smithtown 6 W.T. Clarke
3 Ward Melville 6 West Heapstead
4 Carle Place 7 Baldwin
4 Elmont 7 East Rockaway
4 Floral Park 7 Freeport
4 Glen Cove 7 Hewlett
4 Great Neck North 7 Lawrence
4 Great Neck South 7 Long Beach
4 Herricks 7 Lynbrook
4 Hicksville 7 Oceanside
4 Manhasset 7 Valley Stream
4 Mineola
4 New Hyde Park 8 August Martin
4 North Shore 8 Aviation
4 Paul D. Schreiber 8 Bayside
4 Sewanhanka 8 Benjamin N. Cardozo
4 St. Dominic 8 Francis Lewis
4 Westbury 8 Martin Van Buren
10
Clubs by Division
Division Club Div. Club Div. Club
8 Queens H.S of Science at York College 11 HS of American Studies 14 Seton Catholic Central
8 Robert F. Kennedy 11 Hunter College 14 Ticonderoga
8 Townsend Harris 11 Stuyvesant 14 Willsboro
8A Christ the King 12 Ardsley 15 BOCES
8A Forest Hill 12 Lincoln 15 Bolton
8A Garden School 12 Mount Vernon 15 Fort Ann
8A Grover Cleveland 12 New Rochelle 15 Glens Falls
8A John Adams 12 North Rockland 15 Hadley-Luzerne
8A Martin Luther 12 Ramapo 15 Hartford
8A Maspeth Key Club 12 Rye Neck 15 Queensbury
8A Newtown 12 Saunders 15 Saratoga Springs
8A Richmond Hill 12 Spring Valley 15 South Glens Falls
8A St. Francis Prep 12 Ursuline
8A Sunny Side 12 Woodlands 16 Albany
8A William Cullen Bryant 12 Yonkers 16 Bethlehem
12 Yorktown Heights 16 Berne-Knox-Westerlo
9 Abraham Lincoln 16 Colonie
9 Bishop 13 Beacon 16 Guilderland
9 Brooklyn Tech 13 Chester 16 Heatley
9 Edward R. Murrow 13 Cornwall 16 Kingston
9 James Madison 13 Fallsburg 16 Saugerties
9 John Dewey 13 Middletown 16 Shaker
9 Leon M. Goldstein 13 Minisink Valley 16 Voorheesville (Clay A Bouton)
9 Midwood 13 Monticello
9 New Utrecht 13 Newburgh Free Academy 17 Amsterdam
9 Telecommunications A 13 Port Jervis 17 Broadalbin-Perth
13 Stissing Mountain 17 Fonda-Fultonville
10 CSI International Studies 17 Gloversville
10 Curtis 14 Ausable Valley 17 Johnstown
10 St. Johns Villa 14 Chazy Central 17 Mayfield
10 Staten Island Technical 14 Keene Valley 17 Niskayuna
10 Susan Wagner 14 Lake Placid 17 Schalmont
10 Tottenville 14 North Adirondack 17 Mohonasen
14 Northeastern Clinton 17 Schenectady
11 Bronx HS of Science 14 Peru Central 17 Schoharie
11 DeWitt Clinton 14 Plattsburgh 17 Scotia-Glenville
11 Fiorello H. LaGuardia 14 Sarnac Central 17 Shenendehowa
11 HS of Math, Science, and Engineering 14 Sarnac Lake
11
Division Club Division Club Division Club
18 Averill Park 21 Nottingham 25 Lewiston Porter
18 Catholic Central 21 Oswego Free Academy 25 Lockport
18 Columbia 21 Oswego High School 25 Niagara Catholic
18 Hoosick Falls 21 Solvay 25 Niagara Falls
18 Maple Hill 25 Springfield Griffith
18 Rensselaer 22 Corning 25 West Seneca East
18 Tamarac 22 Elmira Free Academy 25 West Seneca West
18 Troy 22 Ithaca
22 Notre Dame 26 Cassadaga Valley
19 Frankfort-Schuyler 22 Southside 26 Falconer
19 llion 22 Spencer Van-Etten 26 Fredonia
19 New Hartford 22 Thomas A. Edison 26 Jamestown
19 Oriskany 22 Wellsville 26 Ripley
19 Proctor 26 Silver Creek
19 Rome Catholic 23 Bishop Kearney 26 Southwestern
19 Rome Free Academy 23 Brighton 26 Westfield
19 Webb/ Old Forge Ctr. Adr. 23 Canandaigua Academy
19 Westmoreland 23 East High 27 Arcadia
23 Penfield 27 Brockport
20 Charles W. Baker 23 Victor Cenral 27 DeSale Regional
20 Charlotte Valley 23 Wayne 27 Eastridge
20 Chenango Valley 23 Webster-Schroeder 27 Geneva
20 Children's Home 23 Webster-Thomas 27 Keshequa
20 Greene 27 Livonia
20 Johnson City 24 Carthage 27 Mt. Morris
20 Laurens 24 General Brown 27 Pembroke
20 Maine-Endwell 24 Gouverneur 27 Rush-Henrietta
20 Norwich 24 Indian River
20 Owego Free Academy 24 Madrid-Waddington
20 Seton Catholic 24 Norwood-Norfolk
20 Union-Endicott 24 Ogdensburg
24 Potsdam
21 Baker 24 South Jefferson
21 Cicero-North Syracuse 24 Watertown
21 East Syracuse Minoa
21 Fayetterville Manlius 25 Alden
21 Hannibal 25 City Honors
21 Jamesville Dewitt 25 Holland
21 Liverpool 25 Iroquois
12
Circle K International (CKI) is the premier
collegiate and university community ser-
vice, leadership development, and friend-
ship organization in the world. With more
than 12,600 members in 17 nations, CKI is
making a positive impact on the world
every day.
Circle K clubs are organized and sponsored by a Kiwanis club on a college or
university campus. CKI is a self-governing organization and elects its own offi-
cers, conducts its own meetings, and determines its own service activities.
CKI blends community service and leadership training with the opportunity to
meet other college students around the world. Projects such as the Six Cents
Initiative, CKI’s International fundraiser that aims to provide water to the 2.2 bil-
lion children worldwide who lack safe drinking water, bring CKI members to-
gether to make a difference in the world.
Circle-K
13
Clubs by Division
Division Circle K Name Division Circle K Name
1 NA 16 University of New York at Albany
2 NA The College of St. Rose
3 Five Towns College 17 NA
Stony Brook 18 Hudson Valley Community College
4 LIU Post Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
New York Institute of Technology Russel Sage College
5 NA 19 Utica
6 Adelphi University 20 Hartwick College
Hofstra University SUNY Binghamton
Nassau Community College 21 SUNY Oswego
7 Molloy College Syracuse University
8/8A Queens College 22 Cornell University
Vaughns College Elmira College
9 Brooklyn College Ithaca College
New York University SUNY Cortland
10 Wagner College 23 St. John Fisher
11 City College of New York University of Rochester
Columbia University 24 Clarkson University
Hunter College St. Lawerence University
LaGuardia Community College SUNY Potsdam
St. Johns University 25 Canisius College
12 Fordham College Niagara University
Marist College Univeristy of Buffalo
13 SUNY New Paltz 26 NA
14 NA 27 Rochester Institute of Technology
15 NA SUNY Brockport
SUNY Geneseo
14
Aktion Club is the only service club for adults with disabilities,
with more than 9,000 members worldwide.
Aktion Clubs draw members from various organizations that
support individuals with disabilities, as well as other
community programs. Aktion clubs can also be established
at churches, libraries, YMCAs, lodges or similar facilities. A
Kiwanis club, composed of like-minded, service-oriented
people from the community, serves as the club’s sponsor.
Aktion Club is supported at the district level and by the Kiwanis International Office in
Indianapolis, Indiana, which provides programs, literature and opportunities to relate to
individuals with disabilities from countries worldwide.
For more information visit their website: www.aktionclub.org
Aktion Club
15
Clubs by Division
Division 1 Division 10 Division 23
Brighton
Division 2 Division 11 Newark
Ontario County
Division 3 Division 12
Division 24
Division 4 Division 13 DPAO, Watertown
Nassau Boces RKS at Manhasset High Division 14 Evergreen
Adirondack Ogdensburg
Division 5 Plattsburgh
Nassau Boces at Rosemary Kennedy Division 15
Nassau Boces RKS at JFK H.S Warren-Washington (Glen Falls) Division 25
Division 16 Buffalo
Division 6 East Aurora
West Hempstead Court Division 17 Niagara
Division 18 West Seneca
Division 7
Oceanside Sailors Division 19 Division 26
Division 8/8A Division 20 Division 27
Astoria Batavia
Heartshare Division 21 Lifetime Assistance Inc. (Brockport)
Forest Park Livonia
Division 22 Nunda
Division 9 Elmira Rochester
16
Kiwanis
Kiwanis clubs, located in 80 nations, help
their communities in countless ways. Each
community’s needs are different—so each
Kiwanis club is different. By working together,
members achieve what one person cannot
accomplish alone. When you give a child the
chance to learn, experience, dream, grow,
succeed and thrive, great things happen.
Service footprint: Service is at the heart of
every Kiwanis Club, no matter where in the
world it’s located. Members stage nearly 150,000 service projects and raise nearly
US$107 million every year for communities,
families and projects.
A family of servant leaders: Kiwanis Clubs focus on changing the world by serving
children, one child and one community at a time. To do this, many clubs also sponsor a
Kiwanis family club—K-Kids for primary school children; Builders Clubs for adolescents;
Key Clubs for teens; CKI clubs university students and Aktion Clubs for adults living with
disabilities—to reach more people and have a greater service impact on their
communities.
Traditional and not: No two Kiwanis Clubs look exactly the same. And they shouldn’t.
Each members’ and community’s needs are different, and each club should look
different. Some clubs are very traditional, with weekly meetings and a strong sense of
history. Other clubs don’t meet at all, and instead hold meetings online and only come
together for service projects. Newer clubs may follow the 3-2-1 concept: 3 hours of
service, 2 hours of social activity and a 1 hour meeting each month. Clubs should reflect
their community and their members and should work to meet their needs. Flexibility is key
to a successful club.
Fellowship and fun: Kiwanis members don’t just do service—they have fun. Members
make new friends by being part of a club where they attend meetings and participate
in social events. Kiwanis clubs also provide excellent networking opportunities for
professionals. Members meet new people from all over their region and the world
through service projects, fundraising and by attending district and international
conventions.
17
Divisions 1,2,3:
Suffolk East
Centereach Selden
East Hampton
Greater Riverhead
Greater Westhampton
Islips, Bay Shore
The Mastics
New York Young Profession-
als
Patchogue
Sayville
Southampton
Suffolk East Young Profes-
sionals
Three Village-Brookhaven
Township
Suffolk West
Amityville
Copiague
Huntington
Lindenhurst
North Amityville
Northport-East Northport
Division 4:
Long Island North
County Seat, Mineola
East Norwich, Oyster Bay
Glen Cove
Great Neck Peninsula
Hicksville
Manhasset-Port Washing-
ton
New Cassel
New Hyde Park-Floral Park
North Shore
Roslyn
Divisions 5 and 6:
Long Island South Central
The Bellmores
East Meadow
Elmont
Farmingdale
Franklin Square
Garden City
Hempstead
Levittown
Massapequa
Merrick
Nassau County Court Houses
Nassau University Medical Cen-
ter
Town Hall of Hempstead
Uniondale United
Wantagh
West Hempstead
Division 7:
Long Island Southwest
Baldwin
East Rockaway
Five Towns
Freeport
Island Park
Long Beach
Oceanside
Peninsula, Hewlett
Valley Stream
Division 8 and 8A:
Queens East
Cambria Heights
Flushing
Golden K Rockaway Blvd South
Ozone Park
Hollis
Jamaica
Rosedale-Laurelton
Queens West
Astoria-Long Island City
Corona-East Elmhurst
Forest Hills
Glendale
Howard Beach
Jackson Heights
Kew Forest-Richmond Hill Wood-
haven
La Guardia Airport
Lefferts-Liberty
Maspeth
Middle Village
Ozone Park
Queens Boulevard
The Rockaways
Sunnyside
Woodside
Division 9:
Brooklyn
Bedford Stuyvesant
Besonhurst and Bay Ridge
Coney Island
Eighty Sixth Street, Bath Beach
Gravesend
Kings Plaza-Canarsie
Mapleton
Maring Park
Parkway East
West End
Division 10 and 11:
Metropolitan
Brighton
Chinatown
New York City Young Professionals
North Central Staten Island
Richmond County
South Shore
Staten Island
US Fund for Unicef
Clubs by Division
18
Clubs by Division
Division 11 and 12:
Bronx Westchester South
Bronx Shore
East Yonkers
Fordham
Hartsdale
Joseph Michael Wuest, Morris
Park
Mount Vernon
Mount Vernon Golden K
North East Bronx
Parkchester
Riverdale
Westchester Village
Yonkers
Division 12:
Hudson Tri County
Mamaroneck-Harrison Rye
Port Chester-Rye Brook
Putnam County
Rye Online
Spring Valley
White Plains
Division 13: Hudson River West
Callicoon
Chester
Middletown
Minisink Valley
Monticello
Roscoe
Shawangunk Valley, Ellenville
Woodridge
Division 14: Adirondack
Elizabethtown
Lake Placid
Plattsburgh Breakfast
Plattsburgh Noon
Rouses Point Champlain
Saranac Lake
Ticonderoga
Tupper Lake
Willsboro-Essex
Division 15 and 17:
Mohawk
Fonda-Fultonville
Glens Falls
Gloversville-Johnstown
Queensbury
Rotterdam
Saratoga Springs
Schenectady
Schoharie
Scotia-Glenville
Wilton
Division 16:
Hudson River
Beacon-Fishkill
Catskill
Kingston
Newburgh
Poughkeepsie
Saugerties
Ulster
Capital
Albany
Cohoes
Delmar
The Helderbergs
Latham
New Scotland
Western Turnpike-Guilderland
Division 18:
Van Rensselaer
Castleton-On-Hudson
East Greenbush
Hoosick Falls
North Greenbush
Rensselaer
Sand Lake
Troy
Division 19:
Central
Boonville
Central Adirondacks
Clinton
Frankfort
Lake Delta
New Hartford
Rome
Utica
Westmoreland
Division 20:
Susquehana
Broome County
Chenango Valley
Conklin
Delhi
Endicott-Vestal-Endwell
Oneonta
Owego
Tri-County
Division 21:
Ontario
Auburn
Baldwinsville
Dewitt
Eastwood-East Syracuse
Fulton
Liverpool
North Syracuse
Oswego
Owasco-Fleming
Solvay-Geddes-Camilus
Syracuse Young Professionals
19
Division 22:
Chemung
Bath
Corning
Cortland
Dryden
Elmira
Hornell
Horseheads
Ithaca-Cayuga
Painted Post
Southport
Division 23:
Finger Lakes
Brighton
Canandaigua
Farmington-Victor
Lakeshore-Rochester
Newark
Palmyra-Macedon
Penfield-Perinton Town-
ships
Penn Yan
Seneca Falls Waterloo
Webster
Division 24:
Saint Lawrence
Canton
Gouverneur
Jefferson Breakfast
Malone
Massena
Norwood
Ogdensburg
Potsdam
Watertown
Division 25:
Niagra Frontier South
Alden
Buffalo
Chaffee-Sardinia
East Aurora
Elma
Elmwood Avenue
Hamburg
Holland
Java-Strykersville
Marilla
Orchard Park
Springville
Wales
West Seneca
Niagra Frontier North
Amherst
Clarence
Ken-Ton
Lewiston
Lockport
Niagara Falls
Niagara-Wheatfield
Tonawandas
Division 26:
Southwestern
Cassadaga Valley
Falconer
Gowanda
Jamestown
Lakewood
Northern Chautauque
Olean
Salamanca
Silver Creek
Westfield-Ripley
Division 27:
Genessee
Batavia
Brockport
Byron
Geneseo
Greece
Henrietta
Irondequoit
LeRoy-Pavilion-Stafford
Livonia
Mount Morris
Nunda
Pembroke-Corfu-Darien
Rochester
Rochester West Central
Southwest Rochester
Spencerport
Warsaw
York-Leicester
20
Kiwanis Family Relations Committee
LTG Joshua Hill, co-Chair, [email protected]
LTG Jason Roman, co-Chair, [email protected]
LTG Sean Charles, committee member, [email protected]
LTG Victoria Clabeaux, committee member, [email protected]
LTG Helen Wong, committee member, [email protected]
District Bulletin Editor Holy Cheong, [email protected]
District Website: www.nydkc.org
International Website: www.keyclub.org
Join us on facebook!
Facebook Group
Joshua Hill Jason Roman Sean Charles
Victoria Clabeaux Helen Wong
Holy Cheong
Contact Information
21
www.keyclub.org
3636 WOODVIEW TRACE INDIANAPOLIS, IN 46268 • 317.875.8755 • US AND CANADA: 800-KIWANIS