Tuesday, November 24, 2009

plus 4, AREA DEATHS - Delmarva Now

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plus 4, AREA DEATHS - Delmarva Now


AREA DEATHS - Delmarva Now

Posted: 24 Nov 2009 12:09 PM PST

Gordon L. Barker

Gordon L. Barker, 75, of Selbyville, died Sunday, Nov. 15, 2009.

He was a teacher for many years and a member of St. Peter Lutheran Church in Ocean City.

He is survived by one brother, Don Barker and his wife, Gail, of Baltimore; two sisters, Nancy M. Barker of Selbyville and Gale Yount of Baltimore; a special niece, Dawn Schultz of Frankford; and nine nieces and nephews.

Services will be held at a later date.

C. Ronald Bilowith

C. Ronald Bilowith, 71, of Ocean View, formerly of Clifton, N.J., died Sunday, Nov. 15, 2009, at the Delaware Hospice Center in Milford.

He was a veteran of the U.S. Air Force and served as a chemical night engineer for Hoffmann-LaRoche Pharmaceutical Company in Clifton, N.J., with 30 years of service before retiring in 1994. He was also an EMT and fireman.

He was a charter member of the East Sussex Moose Lodge 2542 in Roxana, a member of the American Legion Post 24 in Dagsboro and a social member of the Mason Dixon Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 7234 in Ocean View.

He is survived by his loving wife of 50 years Ruth Ann M. (Petrella) Bilowith; three children, John Bilowith and his wife, Susan, of Milford, Mass., Kimberly Connelly and her husband, Daniel, of Skowhegan, Maine, and Michael Bilowith and his wife, Christine, of Herndon, Va.; five grandchildren, Elizabeth and Nicholas Connelly, Jack, Grace and Sophia Bilowith; a brother, James Bilowith and his wife, Delores, of Vermont; and numerous nieces and nephews.

Services were held.

In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to the Moose Lodge Family Center, P.O. Box 400, Ocean View, Del. 19970.

Myrtha W. Calhoun

Myrtha W. Calhoun, 99, of Dagsboro, died Wednesday, Nov. 11, 2009.

She taught piano lessons at home and played the organ for 38 years at Bethel United Methodist Church, where she also directed the youth choir, taught Sunday school, and served as trustee and president of the United Methodist Women.

She was preceded in death by her husband, Herbert Calhoun; her infant daughter, Eva Valeria; two brothers, Russell and Robert Wilgus; and one sister, Evelyn Powell.

She is survived by her daughter, Duane Lynch and her husband, Howard; three grandchildren, Mark Browne and his wife, Pam, Elyce Dodd and her husband, Jess, and Howard Lynch III and fiancé, Jovita; two great-granchildren, Van Browne and his wife, Lisa, and Shawn Mize and her husband, Jeff; and four great-great-grandchildren, Adison, Abott and Ashton Browne and Sydney Mize.

Services were held.

In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to Delaware Hospice Center, 100 Patriots Way, Milford, Del. 19963, or Dagsboro Gospel Fellowship Church, 29585 Armory Road, Dagsboro, Del. 19939.

Lorraine M. Cromer

Lorraine M. Cromer, 65, of Bethany Beach, died Wednesday, Nov. 11, 2009, at Peninsula Regional Medical Center in Salisbury.

She was a computer analyst for many years.

She is survived by her son, Thor Cromer of Boston, Mass.; sisters, Marguerite Bunting of Fenwick Island, Neva West of Bethany Beach, Janice Smith and her husband, Oliver, of Bishopville, Md., and Debbie Clendaniel and her husband, Howard, of Georgetown; two brothers, Raymond McCabe Jr. and his wife, Janet, of Fenwick Island and J. Robert McCabe of Selbyville; and many nieces and nephews.

Services will be private.

In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to the Friends of the Fenwick Island Lighthouse, P.O. Box 1001, Selbyville, Del. 19975.

Patricia Ellen Harmon

Patricia Ellen Harmon, 68, of Millsboro, died Thursday, Nov. 12, 2009, at the Delaware Hospice Center in Milford.

She was employed by the Sussex County Government Administrative Offices as a deed clerk for 26 years until her retirement in 2006. She attended Israel United Methodist Church in Lewes.

She is survived by her mother, Delema Harmon of Millsboro; her husband of 46 years, Clinton Harmon; a son, Chad Harmon and his wife, Sherrie, of Milton, a sister, Marlene Harmon and her husband, Conrad, of Millsboro; one granddaughter, Kyla Harmon; four step-grandsons, George, Cody, Cole and Nicholas Jackson; two nieces, Karen Jackson and Michelle Hitchens; and one nephew, Bryan Harmon.

Services were held.

In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to the Israel UMC, c/o Anthony Street, Treasurer, P.O. Box 482, Nassau, Del. 19969.

Suzanne C. Hartnett

Suzanne C. Hartnett died Wednesday, Nov. 4, 2009, at Christiana Hospital.

She is survived by five daughters, Theresa McAnulty and her husband, Frank, Linda DiMascia and her husband, Ernest, Carolyn Hartnett, Diane Jarvis and her husband, Christopher, and Rosemary Korcheck and her husband, Robert; her children's father, Richard J. Hartnett; four grandchildren, Anna Marie DiMascia, Daniel DiMascia, Grace Korcheck and Andrew Korcheck; and two sisters, Elizabeth Hornsby and her husband, Thomas, and Joan Gill; and family friend, Ann Raskauskas.

Services were private.

In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to Bethany Beach Breast Cancer 3-Day, c/o Tidewater Realty, P.O. Box 539, Bethany Beach, Del. 19930.

Anna Koch

Anna Koch, 101, of Clarksville, formerly of Kenilworth, N.J., died Tuesday, Nov. 10, 2009, at Renaissance Health Center in Millsboro.

She was a retired seamstress.

She was preceded in death by her husband, Hans Koch, and a daughter, Sylvia Skaarup.

She is survived by her son, Ronald and his wife, Joan, of Clarksville; grandchildren, Lori Perkins and Lyn McKinnon; and seven great-grandchildren.

Services will be held.

In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to the Roxana Cheer Center, 34314 Pyle Center Road, Unit 2, Frankford, Del. 19945.

Ella Mary Schell

Ella Mary Schell, 83, of Baltimore, died Tuesday, Nov. 10, 2009.

She was preceded in death by her husband, Thomas Schell, and a daughter, Penny Jacobson.

She is survived by two daughters, Janet Weisman of Dagsboro and Pamela Parlier of Boone, N.C.; three grandchildren, Roger Falsis, Shannon Mathes (nee Ryman), and William Parlier III; and one great-grandchild, Bryan Causby.

Services were held.

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Senator Murkowski Calls For Hearing On New Breast Cancer Screening ... - RTT News

Posted: 24 Nov 2009 11:47 AM PST

11/24/2009 2:51 PM ET (RTTNews) -  Senator Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, joined by a bipartisan group of fellow Senators, called on the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee Tuesday to hold a hearing on the new breast cancer screening recommendations released last week.

Last Week, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommended against routine screening of women aged 40 to 49 years for breast cancer. It further recommended women aged 50 to 74 receive mammograms every other year instead of the yearly mammograms that had been previously recommended.

"These recommendations have caused great confusion among women," Murkowski said. "And to compound that confusion, Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said afterwards that women in their 40s should continue to get mammograms."

Murkowski argued that women are "seeking answers and are asking their elected representatives whether the task force's findings will put them at increased risk for this deadly disease."

Because of this, Murkowski argued, "We clearly need a hearing to better understand how this task force came to its conclusions."

The American Cancer Society, meanwhile, has spoken out to re-enforce its own recommendations that women 40 and older should undergo breast cancer screening on a yearly basis.

by RTT Staff Writer

For comments and feedback: contact editorial@rttnews.com


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Who Decides If Breast Tests Are Best? - Reason.com

Posted: 24 Nov 2009 12:02 PM PST

Who Decides If Breast Tests Are Best?

Patients should make their own choices about mammograms, not bureaucrats.

"The USPSTF [United States Preventive Services Task Force] recommends against routine screening mammography in women aged 40 to 49 years." This simple statement, published on the website of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services last week by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, ignited a firestorm of protest.

"This recent recommendation by the USPSTF is dangerous because it suggests that women lay down their best weapon in the fight against breast cancer, which is early detection," declared Janelle Hall, founder of the National Breast Cancer Foundation. Bernadine Healy, the first woman to head up the National Institutes of Health, advised, "I'm saying very powerfully ignore [the new recommendation], because unequivocally this will increase the number of women dying of breast cancer."

The American Cancer Society immediately rejected the federal panel's recommendations: "The American Cancer Society continues to recommend annual screening using mammography and clinical breast examination for all women beginning at age 40." The ACS also pointedly noted, "With its new recommendations, the USPSTF is essentially telling women that mammography at age 40 to 49 saves lives; just not enough of them." A new USA Today poll finds that 76 percent of women say they disagree or strongly disagree with the panel's recommendation.

In the face of the public anger, a rattled Health and Human Services Secretary (HHS) Kathleen Sebelius immediately disavowed the federal panel's recommendation, declaring that the USPSTF does "not set federal policy and they don't determine what services are covered by the federal government."

Thank goodness that someone stepped in to stop federally-appointed experts and bureaucrats from making health care policy and deciding which patients will get what treatments, right? Actually, no. A federal bureaucrat, namely Sebelius, did decide which patients will get what treatments. The HHS secretary simply rejected USPSTF's clinical cost-benefit analysis for mammography in favor of her own political version of cost-benefit analysis.

The fury and confusion among competing bureaucrats over the new mammogram recommendations is a timely reminder that the proper person to make medical treatment cost-benefit decisions is the patient. Currently, 49 states mandate that health insurers cover routine mammograms between ages 40 and 49. But instead of mandates or potential federal regulations limiting access to mammography, why not let women choose for themselves? If a woman is comfortable with the new recommendations, she should be able to buy a less expensive health insurance policy that does not cover annual mammograms. If she believes that routine mammograms will give her greater peace of mind, she should have the choice to purchase a policy with more extensive and expensive coverage.

And the patient choice principle extends beyond a resolution for the mammogram controversy: One way to encourage consumers to more carefully balance health care risks and benefits would be by allowing them to choose less expensive high-deductible health insurance policies combined with health savings accounts. In such a situation, patients, not politicians, could decide for themselves how much screening tests like mammograms are really worth to them. (By the way, the USPSTF also has concluded that "the current evidence is insufficient to assess the balance of benefits and harms of prostate cancer screening in men younger than age 75." Nevertheless, I choose to get a prostate-specific antigen test every year.) For the record, a quick check with the New Choice Health consumer website finds that mammograms in the Washington, DC, area cost between $140 and $340.

Sebelius' ruling is an example of how politics will overtake decisions about what constitutes appropriate medical treatment as the federal government assumes ever greater responsibility in paying for health care. As health care reform legislation moves through Congress, this controversy should encourage the public do some cost-benefit analysis of its own about increased government interference with health care.

Ronald Bailey is Reason's science correspondent. His book Liberation Biology: The Scientific and Moral Case for the Biotech Revolution is available from Prometheus Books.

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'Special Report' Panel on Health Care and 9/11 Terrorist Trials in NYC - FOX News

Posted: 24 Nov 2009 12:09 PM PST

This is a rush transcript of "Special Report With Bret Baier" from November 24, 2009. This copy may not be in its final form and may be updated.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

SEN. MARY LANDRIEU, D-LA.: I have decided there are enough significant reforms and safeguards in this bill to move forward, but much more work needs to be done.

SEN. JOE LIEBERMAN, I-CONN.: I don't think anybody thinks that this bill will pass as written.

SEN. BEN NELSON, D-NEB.: If the public option is wrong, if the class act is still in it, if there are a whole host of other items that are the same as they are right now, I wouldn't vote to get it off the floor.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

JIM ANGLE, HOST: OK, a little sign of what's to come in the health care debate. Let's bring in our panel, Steve Hayes, senior writer for the Weekly Standard, Mara Liasson, national political correspondent of National Public Radio, and syndicated columnist Charles Krauthammer.

Well, gang, the Senate finally votes to take up health care reform, and several Democratic lawmakers who voted to put it on the table and discuss it say there's no way they could possibly vote for it as it is now written. So I suppose we're at the point where let the horse trading begin. What do you think, Steve?

STEVE HAYES, SENIOR WRITER, THE WEEKLY STANDARD: I think that's exactly right. It's funny but to listen to the speeches and say, look, we really need to debate this, but I don't like it, I don't want to be associated with it.

I think these are people who are worried about their constituencies, obviously, and the opposition that seems to be growing in poll after poll across the country.

What I found most interesting was the number of liberals who came out in the past couple of days and said it's possible that they would not support this bill if the public option wasn't in the final bill.

I don't believe them for a second, but it is clear they are feeling pressure from the moderates who are in a position to get whatever they want with this horse trading so that the liberals are coming out, Bernie Sanders said it, Roland Burris said it, no public option, it doesn't get my vote.

MARA LIASSON, NATIONAL POLITICAL CORRESPONDENT, NATIONAL PUBLIC RADIO: I'll put money on that.

HAYES: I don't believe them either.

ANGLE: And Mara, it's kind of a Rubric's cube. You move to satisfy three or four or five moderates and you get some people on the liberal end who say, wait a minute, you can't go that far.

LIASSON: Sort of. But I don't want to dismiss the liberals' concerns. They are the majority of the caucus. They have to have their concerns in this bill.

But this bill has been moving steadily, tiny step by tiny step, to the center since it was introduced in committee, and that's the direction it is going to keep on going if it is going to get 60 votes in the United States Senate.

I think the Democrats acted like a parliamentary majority when they got this to the floor. That actually is a sign of maturity. There was a time when Democrats wouldn't even do that.

But they hung together on the procedural vote, which is what a mature majority does, and now they're going to work out the details. And there are a lot of alternatives to the public option as written by Harry Reid.

ANGLE: Which is the opt-out.

LIASSON: The opt-out, states can opt-out. There's the trigger idea of Olympia Snowe, who you're going to need if you lose Joe Lieberman, because he says he won't vote for any form of public option. There's some kind of co-ops. There's all sorts of things, and negotiations are about to start on that.

And yes, there are unbelievable hurdles, and this a real minefield ahead of them, but, in the end, I think they will pass something.

ANGLE: If the horse trading is beginning, Charles, then hundreds of millions of dollars should be on the table.

CHARLES KRAUTHAMMER, SYNDICATED COLUMNIST: Literally. We saw Senator Landrieu say, "I decided there were enough significant reforms." Well, one reform that she really appreciated was a $300 million payoff to her state in the bill that was shoved in there as a way to purchase her vote. So that is a reform she could admire.

The reason I think there continues to be erosion of public support for this is there is a realization that that is just one of hundreds of provisions, loopholes, payoffs, extra bureaucratic commissions, mandates stuffed into a monstrously large bill that most people don't even know about. But there is the sense that we have had ever since the middle of the year that this is an attempt not to streamline our healthcare system, which is what it needs. Ours is the best in the world, but it is inefficient. There are a lot of inefficiencies accumulated over decades.

What you want is simplicity, to strip away the inefficiencies. This will add on to them and it's going to make it utterly incoherent.

Two examples, tort reform that would save thank you half a trillion dollars to $2 trillion in a decade is not in here at all. In fact, in the House bill, it's discouraged. You lose federal money if you're a state and you impose tort reform.

Second is the idea of being able to purchase your health insurance across state lines. It's a ridiculous prohibition. You buy life insurance across state lines. You buy auto insurance. You buy oranges across state lines. If you didn't, they like be extremely expensive in Wisconsin in the winter.

And the answer isn't the establishment of a public option in oranges in Wisconsin. It's allowing the competition. But the liberals won't allow competition because they want a public option as an avenue into nationalized healthcare, and the excuse is it will introduce competition.

ANGLE: Now, we were talking about the public support. You mentioned the public support. Let's look at some brand new numbers from Rasmussen, which shows that the support among the public for health care reform and tracking polls going back to June is now at its lowest point, with 38 percent in favor of the plans now on the table and 56 percent opposed. So, lawmakers, as they go back to their districts, or back to their states, are not likely to get much encouragement from the poll, the polls that we see today and the polls that we have seen recently.

LIASSON: No. Look, this is a difficult period for health care, for the president, who dipped below 50 for the first time. He didn't have a he very successful trip, at least the optics of it weren't very successful.

But I think the Democrats are pretty convinced that failing to pass health care would be worse than any poll showing public dissatisfaction with the plans as currently written.

But I just want to say something about what Charles said. Look, intellectual incoherence abounds right now, and it's bipartisan, because you have Republicans who say this bill costs too much and we're against every single cost saving that's in it. In other words, they have to become the champions of giving Medicare recipients every single penny, every single service that they want and more.

And I think that as a former doctor, you know, there are things that have to be done to save costs, and Republicans are in the weird position of saying we don't want to do those but we still think it costs too much.

KRAUTHAMMER: But the Republicans aren't writing the bill.

LIASSON: I agree.

KRAUTHAMMER: If they were I'd be as critical.

What is going to become law is utter incoherence. All of these payoffs and loopholes, 117 new commissions, regulatory bodies and mandates, like the breast cancer commission, all added on to a system which is extremely good but unbelievably inefficient.

And the obvious inefficiencies staring us in the face, and Democrats won't touch it entirely for cynical political reasons.

HAYES: One other thing to watch too is to see how many other moderates begin to speak out against — even more strongly against certain provisions in the bill, wanting to be the moderate who is quoted by the White House and may get some kind of a Mary Landrieu-esque payoff.

I think you saw the emergence today in a New York Times piece by Susan Collins who had been opposed to this kind of reform, all of a sudden out of the blue she says, well, you know, I really want to vote for some health care reform.

I want to be clear. I'm not suggesting she is doing it only for that reason, but you start to see moderates speak out more, I think there is a Landrieu effect.

KRAUTHAMMER: The bidding is open, and it starts at $300 million.

(LAUGHTER)

ANGLE: All right.

Will the 9/11 trials become a propaganda forum? We'll talk about that next.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

SCOTT FENSTERMAKER, DEFENSE ATTORNEY: As far as providing them a propaganda platform, I don't know if I would call it that, but it doesn't bother me in the least. The United States government has been demonizing these men for eight years now, has held them in custody for over six years without given them the opportunity to go to a real court.

And I have no problem with it at all and am quite proud to do it.

DICK CHENEY, FORMER U.S. VICE PRESIDENT: They will simply use it as a platform to argue their case. They don't have a defense to speak of. It will be a place for them to stand up and spread the terrible ideology that they adhere to.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

ANGLE: So there you hear the lawyer for one of the 9/11 defendants, and former Vice President Cheney. Interesting, Charles. He says the U.S. has been demonizing these men as he makes clear that the 9/11 defendants plan to use their trial to rail against U.S. policies. Who would have thought such a thing could happen?

KRAUTHAMMER: Well, actually, I did, as did tens of millions of other Americans whose eyes are open. Eric Holder on this is utterly clueless. And we could see it in the Senate hearings last week in which Senator Graham asked him, he said can you give us one case in American history of an enemy combatant captured abroad who was brought to a civil civilian trial in the United States?

Eric Holder answers, "I don't know. I'll have to look at that." He doesn't know as the attorney general of the United States? And Graham cuts him short, and says, "I'll save you the time. It's never happened in American history."

This is entirely unprecedented because it makes no sense. Even FDR a Democratic liberal president, who when we had the capture of German saboteurs, actually captured on American soil, not even abroad, had them in front of a military court, a secret one. They were executed and the Supreme Court subsequently said it was the right thing to do.

The propaganda here, as we saw in that lawyer speaking, is beginning. Holder tried to say that the reason he is doing it in New York, I think he was saying, because he was almost utterly incoherent, was that he could get a conviction in New York in a civilian court.

In fact, the five defendants last year had demanded to plead to guilty and be executed in Guantanamo in front of a military tribunal, and that would have been obviously a sure thing. It would not have provided the propaganda setting that he is going to have in New York.

And that's why all of a sudden the plea has been changed. It will be not guilty, and they're going to say, of course we did it, and here's why it was an act of justice. And they are going to say it's not just like a scratchy tape out of Osama that will be on some Arab station. It will be on every station, every network, every television in the entire world.

LIASSON: It won't be videotaped.

KRAUTHAMMER: The lawyers will be out there every day. There will be a repetition of this every day. There will be witnesses who are talking about this every day.

It will be the story. As Holder himself has said, it will be the trial of the century. And the last trial of our century was O.J. Simpson. It is going to be the same deal.

ANGLE: What do you think, Mara? Obviously, the lawyers, this guy is obviously going to come out and say what he has already saying, which is these men were demonized and that U.S. policies are wrong?

LIASSON: I think we have to abide the event. There has been a lot of predictions about what this will be like, show trial, propaganda. I really wonder about that.

I think in the end it will be less of a platform. There won't be cameras in there. And I think it's going to be — and the judge will have a lot of discretion about how that courtroom is run, what they're allowed to say, how long they're allowed to talk. I think in the end it might be less of a platform than people think.

ANGLE: Steve, you are shaking your head.

HAYES: I don't agree with that. I think any time you have Dick Cheney agreeing with the defense attorney of Khalid Sheik's nephew, they're likely to be right.

There was a fascinating story back in June of 2009 about the Obama administration's attempt for consideration of a move that would have made it possible for these five 9/11 defendants to plead guilty and to be put to death immediately.

People need to understand that that is what happened here. And Charles' last point I think is the right one to make. They were prepared and said in a December 2008 proceeding at Guantanamo to plead guilty. They said that they did it, they wanted to plead guilty, and they wanted to be put to death.

We have now said to them, thanks, but no thanks. Plead not guilty, say whatever you want. The world will watch. And I think it is a travesty.

ANGLE: We're going to have some 9/11 families who are talking today on air about a big protest in New York, on December 5th. Is there anything that could change the venue at this point, or is it just the families going up there to say we think this is wrong?

KRAUTHAMMER: I think it's a good way to express the feelings of the families, and of course I think the vast majority of Americans, the polls are showing that there is huge opposition. Everyone understands why this move makes no sense in terms of justice and terrible sense in terms of politics and propaganda.

But I'm afraid the administration has cast its lot on this and there is no way it is going to turn back.

ANGLE: It would be hard to see them revisiting this decision after all the flak they took.

HAYES: There are a couple of measures in Congress to get them to revisit the decision. And I think they are probably not likely to succeed. Former Vice President Cheney today says he commends those who are pushing this and encouraging people to actually speak out in the manner that these folks are planning to.

ANGLE: OK, that's it for the panel.

Content and Programming Copyright 2009 Fox News Network, LLC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Transcription Copyright 2009 CQ Transcriptions, LLC, which takes sole responsibility for the accuracy of the transcription. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. No license is granted to the user of this material except for the user's personal or internal use and, in such case, only one copy may be printed, nor shall user use any material for commercial purposes or in any fashion that may infringe upon Fox News Network, LLC'S and CQ Transcriptions, LLC's copyrights or other proprietary rights or interests in the material. This is not a legal transcript for purposes of litigation.

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Fort Myers Web Design Firm Helps to Raise $70,000 for Breast Cancer ... - PR.com

Posted: 24 Nov 2009 12:09 PM PST

Fort Myers, FL, November 24, 2009 --(PR.com)-- Fort Myers web design firm, Brian Joseph Studios donated time and services to the 2009 "All Aboard Against Breast Cancer" Boat Show and Waterside Festival which took place on November 6th - 7th 2009.

The charity festival was organized by Snook Bight Yacht Club & Marina, and Marine Max to generate donations for Susan G. Komen Southwest Florida affiliate, and raised over $70,000 in two days.

Brian Joseph Studios was responsible for the design of all print marketing materials, and the overall online presence of the charity festival event. AllAboardFest.org was developed and launched to provide the event with a powerful website for this new annual event. Facebook and Twitter accounts were also launched as part of an active social media marketing strategy.

As an active member in the Fort Myers community, Brian Joseph Studios donated a large portion of their services to this local charity event and "we are looking forward to assisting with the promotion of this event in the coming years" says Account Executive of Brian Joseph Studios, Sarah McMann.

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