Westchester Arc
The Gleeson-Israel Gateway Center
265 Saw Mill River Road
Hawthorne, NY 10532
914.949.9300
info@westchesterarc.org
24-hour
Crisis Intervention:
914.949.8200
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Elected president in June 2006, Anne Majsak has been a Westchester Arc board member since 1991. She was second vice president from 2003-2005 and treasurer from 2005-2006.
She is also co-chair of the Parent Assistance Committee on Down Syndrome (PACDS), a support network that helps new parents of children with Down syndrome to understand their babies and develop their full potential.
Majsak received a B.S. in mathematics from Bates College and an M.B.A. in finance from New York University. She worked for Mobil’s corporation treasurers department for 12 years before devoting herself full-time to family and community life. She lives with her husband Joe and three children—one of whom has Down syndrome—in White Plains.
Since 1975, Richard P. Swierat has worked with people having developmental disabilities. He has been executive director of Westchester Arc for the past 20 years. He frequently speaks at state and national meetings on such topics as guardianship, quality metrics, corporate compliance, person-centered planning in residential and vocational services, board training, family advocacy and the development and management of direct service worker career systems.
Swierat is an adjunct professor at Western Connecticut State University's Ancell School of Business in Danbury, Connecticut. He is on the staff of the graduate school of health care management, with specialties in strategic and financial management. On behalf of the university, he has taught in the Bahamas as a member of the systems change team for health care organizations. Swierat periodically works on these issues with other community organizations as a private consultant.
He has a master's degree in special education from the State University College at Buffalo and is currently pursuing a Ph.D. in administration and decision management sciences at Walden University. His dissertation focuses on the recruitment and retention of direct service workers in the field of developmental disabilities.
Larry McNaughton brings over 30 years experience in strategic planning, market research and advertising experience to his role at Westchester Arc. Using a common-sense sensitivity to the creativity of communications, Larry has helped numerous companies address marketing, product development, and communications issues with differentiating and innovative solutions — all based in a very objective, realistic and “make it work in the real world” approach.
Formerly an owner and managing director of CoreBrand, he built a small marketing communications company into an inter-nationally recognized brand management firm. He has much experience from the corporate world having led much of the marketing effort for TWA early in his career. Larry has held leadership positions at several renowned advertising agencies — DDB, Lord Geller, Anderson & Lembke — and is considered the most practical of managers.
Larry has guided many brands as they came alive in the creative processes of advertising and corporate identity. TWA, Altria, Nortel, IBM, 7-Eleven, Sharp, American Airlines, Kodak, New York Life, The Hartford, Intel, 3Com and Burlington Air Express are a few of the many brands which have benefited from Larry’s very down-to-earth approach.
Prior to joining the Westchester Arc Foundation, he acted in a consulting role during the redesign of the Westchester Arc brand. He also helped design and write brochures describing supplemental needs trusts, which enable funds to be set aside for the “extras” that contribute to a person’s quality of life without jeopardizing publicly funded benefits.
Anne Sweazey, executive director of The Westchester Arc Foundation, directs and coordinates fundraising and development in support of Westchester Arc programs that require private charitable giving to supplement public support. She has extensive experience in fundraising campaigns, including annual, planned and capital giving.
She was previously vice president of development for The Lighthouse, where she was responsible for annual contributions totaling $10 million, as well as the leadership phase of a $60 million capital campaign. Her 25-year career includes work with the Natural Resources Defense Council, Florida International Museum and the Pinellas Association for Retarded Children (PARC), where she received a NSFRE (National Society of Fundraising Executives) 1995 Suncoast Signature Award.
Sweazey has also worked with Chase Manhattan Bank and as an English teacher. She is a certified fundraising executive and holds a B.A. from Hunter College.