Commercial Banker James J. Curry Joins Freedom Bank

FAIRFAX, Va.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Freedom Bank of Virginia (Bank) (Bulletin Board:FDVA.OB) announced the addition of James J. Curry as Senior Vice President, Corporate Banking Division. Mr. Curry will be based in the Fairfax office and assist in providing quality service to our existing clientele while fostering new relationships throughout the region. We are very pleased to bring Jim on board, stated Executive Vice President & Chief Lending Officer Kevin Curtis. He brings a wealth of knowledge and will be a great asset to our team. Mr. Curry joins Freedom Bank from Key Bank in Denver, Colorado, where he was Vice President and Senior Business Banker. Prior to his time with Key Bank, Mr. Curry spent six years with WashingtonFirst Bank as a Senior Vice President and Commercial Lender in the Banks Reston and Great Falls offices.

About Freedom Bank

Freedom Bank is a local community bank providing a full range of financial services, including credit and deposit products, cash management, and internet banking services for consumers and businesses. The Bank operates from its headquarters office at 10555 Main Street, Fairfax, Virginia 22030. For more information visit http://www.freedombankva.com.

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Commercial Banker James J. Curry Joins Freedom Bank

Council backs down over freedom campers

Holidaymakers will have the freedom to park on the side of the road in Westland again, after a backdown from the local council.

The Westland District Council has announced it will stop enforcing a local bylaw which prevented freedom camping in the region.

The decision comes after a legalchallenge from the New Zealand Motor Caravan Association (NZCMA), who in January fileda lawsuit in the High Court over the issue.

The bylaw, which came into effect in November, banned freedom camping within one kilometre of 18 West Coast towns and settlements.

NZMCA general manager Bruce Lochore says that the "hard-fought" victory reflected how illegal and unreasonable the bylaw was.

"This decision by the council is a victory for our members. This is a win for us and for the motor caravan community," he says.

"Workable bylaws strike the proper balance between protecting local authority areas and respecting the rights of responsible freedom campers."

The NZCMA claimed the law was in violation of the Freedom Camping Act, as it limited the right to freedom of movement. But Westland District Mayor Marueen Pugh says that fighting the law wasn't an option with the council's current budget, as it could be expensive to defend.

"It was going to cost us around $50,000," she says. "It simply wasn't worth it to us, we're too small to take [on] an organisation the size of NZMCA."

Ms Pugh says the council has stopped enforcing the bylaw but hasn't removed it, meaning it could be brought back into action quickly. The bylaw will be subject to a review but there is no deadline on that process, as the council is planning to wait and see if a legal precedent is set as freedom campers take on other councils.

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Council backs down over freedom campers

Shoelace Killer Sprints to Freedom from Texas Prison

Two inmates one accused of strangling someone with a shoelace used their feet to make a mad dash to freedom Tuesday when they successfully broke out of a Texas prison. The Associated Press reports45-year-old capital murder suspect Brian Allen Tucker (above at left) and 40-year-old suspected burglarJohn Marlin King (right) escaped through the Hopkins County Jail female recreation yard Tuesday in Sulphur Springs, Texas, about 75 miles northeast of Dallas. Tucker was being held on $1 million bond for allegedly "strangling a 63-year-old man with shoelaces then stole his musical instruments in May 2011," according to the Dallas Morning News. The schools in the surrounding Sulphur Springs area have been placed on lockdown.

RELATED: Salary for a Year of Wrongful Texas Prison Time: $160,000

The scariest part is how easy their escape seemed. It was just two guys away from everyone else making a break for it. The Deputy Alvin Jordan told WFAA Dallas the two prisoners were separated from the rest of the inmates when they slipped between a gap in the prison gate and fence after fleeing through the rec yard. Somehow the guy in charge on monitoring the prison's video surveillance missed the whole escape go down. "Undoubtedly, they slipped out and he looked and they were gone," Jordan told WFAA.

RELATED: Texas District Attorney's Death Could Be Part of Larger Plot

So the two men are now out roaming the free world and they're not even in their prison suits, but the Texas Rangers and local authorities helping with the hunt already lost at least one obvious clue. Authorities found the black and white prison jumpsuits on the train tracks near the prison. So now the two men are either naked or in plain clothes, instead of the really obvious prison stripes. But they've got shoes, presumably, and those shoes are important.

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Shoelace Killer Sprints to Freedom from Texas Prison

Freedom award for Olympic gymnast

2 April 2013 Last updated at 11:53 ET

Gymnast Beth Tweddle has been given the Freedom of the Borough of Cheshire East.

Borough mayor George Walton presented the Olympic bronze medallist with the award at a nursery school in Sandbach.

The 28-year-old also opened an adventure playground at the school.

The council has already announced that a road on a new housing development in Bunbury, where she grew up, will be called Beth Tweddle Close.

Ms Tweddle, who won bronze on the uneven bars at London 2012 to add to her four world titles, said she was "proud" to receive the honour.

The most decorated GB gymnast in history said: "I do gymnastics because I love it.

"I don't expect the recognition that you get from it but when your local community comes together and gives you something like the freedom of the borough [and] my street that's been named after me it is a very proud moment.

"It's only when you take a step back that you realise you do have an impact.

"I don't see myself as anyone different.

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Freedom award for Olympic gymnast

‘Tax Freedom Day’ is April 13 in Utah

(Mike Mergen | Bloomberg News) So-called "Tax Freedom Day" will come a little later for Utahns this year.

This year, Utahns would need to work from Jan. 1 through April 13 just to earn enough to pay all their taxes but that, at least, is five fewer days than the national average.

That news came as "Tax Freedom Day" for the nation and each state was announced Tuesday by the Tax Foundation, a conservative but nonpartisan Washington, D.C., tax research group.

The national Tax Freedom Day this year is April 18, which is five days later than last year indicating tax burdens have increased.

William McBride, chief economist for the Tax Foundation, said Americans will pay 29.4 percent of their income this year in federal, state and local taxes. That "amounts to more money than is spent on food, clothing and housing combined," he said during a webinar.

Converting that to calendar terms, McBride said that means Tax Freedom Day does not come until day 108 in the 365-day year.

McBride said three major factors raised tax burdens this year.

"The biggest one is the fiscal cliff deal that raised federal payroll and income taxes. Second, there is the Affordable Care Acts taxes that go into effect this year. Lastly, despite these increases, the economy is continuing to grow. As incomes grow, people are boosted into higher tax brackets so their tax rates go up," he said.

Tax Freedom Day varies greatly among the states, depending on state and local tax burdens.

Mississippi has the earliest Tax Freedom Day, arriving on March 29 slightly earlier in the same day than Louisiana, followed by Tennessee on April 2.

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‘Tax Freedom Day’ is April 13 in Utah

Game of Thrones: Freedom and Giants!

HBO

Spoilers for the season three premiere of Game of Thrones below:

The first time I watched my review copy of Valar Dohaeris through, I was struck by the lengths it went to update us on what seemed like every storyline and setting in Game of Thrones. There was, if Im not missing anything: the Nights Watch beyond the Wall, Jon Snow at Mance Rayders camp, Tyrion (and Bronn) in Kings Landing, Davos coming to after the Blackwater, Stannis licking his wounds in Dragonstone with Melisandre, Robb planning to beseige Harrenhal, Tywin taking office as Hand of the King, Joffrey with his new fiancee Margaery, Cersei adjusting to her future daughter-in-law, Sansa plotting an escape with Littlefinger and Dany at sea and seeking an army in Astapor.

It was only after I finished watching that I realized how many plot threads and characters the episode had not gotten to: No Arya; no Bran, Rickon, Osha and Hodor; no Theon; no Winterfell; no Jaime and Brienne.

After two seasons, in other words, theres Seven Hells of a lot of story to deal with in Game of Thrones. Which means, first, thatthe very focused Blackwater episode notwithstandingwere not likely to get very many traditional TV episodes from Game of Thrones, but rather hourlong chunks that incrementally advance up to a dozen plotlines a week.

And, second, we can therefore expect slow going the first couple of episodes. The Lannisters are victorious in Kings Landing, the Starks are unhoused in Winterfell, but the war is not over. So the series is resetting in many ways, introducing new conflicts and next moves. Valar Dohaeris is like the first jet-lagged hours of a return trip, butwith its flying dragons, family turmoil and, holy crap, giants!it promises an impressive journey to come.

Finally, it means I need to set a ground rule in these weekly reviews: Im not going to write about every character, storyline and cool scene in every episode, because lifes too short. This is a review, not a list. Instead, Im going to focus what was most interesting to me in a particular episode.

This week, that thing is what I hope will be a big theme of season three: freedom, as an absolute, as a relative term, as an ideal and as a liability.

Dany, when we meet her, is a queen in search of an army, and the way to get one in the part of the world where she comes from is to buy oneliterally, in the form of slaves. Shes not keen on the idea, in part, maybe, from the memory of herself being offered up like chattel by her brother Viserys in service of his own royal ambitions. When they get to Astapor, the reailty is even more chilling: the Unsullied are trained efficiently and brutally, proving their detachment and loyalty by killing slave infants.

Dany is repulsed, but I dont think this is only about morality. Its also about duty, and her own quest. Dany wants to rule Westeros, which means more than getting an army; it means learning to lead. As her aide Jorah puts it, Youll have a true khalesar when you prove yourself strong. Can you take a shortcut to leadership by buying strength? (A.k.a. the Lannister Way to Make Friends and Influence People.) Does she have any choice? Jorah thinks not; she needs numbers, and soldiers are soldiers, free or slave. (The episodes title, for what its worth, means All men must serve in High Valyrian.) The distinction means something to some people, she tells him.

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Game of Thrones: Freedom and Giants!

Philadelphia Freedom Valley YMCA Joins With the Silver&Fit(R) Exercise & Healthy Aging Program to Offer No Cost and …

SAN DIEGO, April 1, 2013 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The Silver&Fit Exercise & Healthy Aging program, a fitness program for older adults offered by American Specialty Health Fitness, has signed a contract with the Philadelphia Freedom Valley YMCA to provide no cost or low cost exercise programs to Medicare beneficiaries in the region. The Philadelphia Freedom Valley YMCA is now offering the Silver&Fit program to Medicare members enrolled in Humana, Aetna or Health America Medicare Advantage plans.

Anchored in 15 locations throughout Delaware, Philadelphia, Montgomery and northern Chester counties, the Philadelphia Freedom Valley YMCA serves more than 90,000 members and 140,000 individuals a year, regardless of age, income or background, with the goal to improve the nation's health and well-being.

Silver&Fit currently provides exercise and healthy aging programs to more than 50 Medicare Advantage plans nationwide, covering more than 1.5 million Medicare beneficiaries. The Silver&Fit program is available at nearly 10,000 fitness facilities across the country, ranging from large, national fitness chains to YMCAs to smaller, regional facilities.

"We are happy to welcome the Philadelphia Freedom Valley YMCA's network of Y's to the Silver&Fit family," stated George DeVries, chairman and CEO of American Specialty Health. "Clinical research has demonstrated that older adults who exercise routinely can maintain, or even improve, their health. And regular exercise may slow the progression of certain health conditions, such as obesity, hypertension, depression, arthritis, back pain or heart disease."

The Philadelphia Freedom Valley YMCA contract with Silver&Fit will provide eligible members with:

The YMCA is one of the nation's leading nonprofits strengthening communities through youth development, healthy living and social responsibility.

ABOUT THE SILVER&FIT EXERCISE AND HEALTHY AGING PROGRAM

The Silver&Fit program is an exercise and healthy aging program providing unique, evidence-based fitness and health education activities for Medicare beneficiaries and group retirees. As part of the Silver&Fit program, members have access to: no-cost or low-cost memberships at a participating, contracted fitness club or exercise center, or to the Silver&Fit Home Fitness Program for those unable to participate at a fitness facility or who prefer to work out at home; SilverandFit.com, a website with a variety of health tools and resources specifically designed for older adults; The Silver Slate(R) quarterly newsletter; and a toll-free customer service hotline. Follow Silver&Fit on Twitter @SilverandFit, Instagram @SilverandFit, YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/silverandfit, and Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/SilverandFit.

The Silver&Fit program is a product of American Specialty Health Fitness, Inc., a subsidiary of American Specialty Health Incorporated (ASH).

The Silver&Fit logo is available at http://www.globenewswire.com/newsroom/prs/?pkgid=13048

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Philadelphia Freedom Valley YMCA Joins With the Silver&Fit(R) Exercise & Healthy Aging Program to Offer No Cost and ...

Freedom Of Speech At Risk Says Think Tank

A Westminster think tank has today called for the scrapping of a law which it claims is being used to constrain freedom of speech.

Civitas is calling for the abolition of Section 5 of the Public Order Act, which has been criticised by free-speech campaigners.

David Green, director of Civitas, said: "The freedom to speak our minds without fear or favour is an important part of the live and let live ethos that has typified this country for centuries.

"Throughout most of human history the suppression of unwelcome opinions has been normal, and open societies in which we try to conduct arguments without violence have been a great human achievement.

"Speech laws are an attempt to return to the primitive ways we have left behind."

The think tank has today published a book, Feel Free To Say It, which says Britain is sacrificing its commitment to freedom of speech to protect people from hearing views they do not like.

According to author Philip Johnston, a raft of laws from recent decades are having "a significant and deeply chilling effect" on speech in public.

He warned the law is being used to constrain opinions "because some people may not like them", and claimed the UK was in danger of "throwing away the freedom that makes all other liberties possible".

Home Secretary Theresa May said ministers planned to drop the word "insulting" from Section 5, which saw a number of spurious arrests and court cases.

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Freedom Of Speech At Risk Says Think Tank