By
R. PATRICK CORBETT
Observer-Dispatch
UTICA — Geno
DeCondo is a banker with a heart that beats in harmony with the
needs of his community, Kelly M. Karrat said.
DeCondo said that rhythm
of giving has its roots in his “great role models,” including
his father, a long-time youth baseball coach, and his first boss,
James Raymonda, a pillar of community service until his death
three years ago.
Karrat, director of development
for the Central New York Community Arts Council, nominated DeCondo
for the 2003 Accent on Excellence program.
The program’s judges validated
her assessment, making DeCondo one of this year’s 10 honorees.
Karrat said she has served
with DeCondo for several years on the United Way board of directors,
where she has “witnessed Geno go above and beyond what would constitute
typical volunteering.”
She said DeCondo, currently
vice president for member support with First Source Federal Credit
Union, has been on the United Way board for 14 years, and for
the past four years he has chaired its allocation committee.
The panel decides how much
member agencies receive, based on community need.
He also is on the boards
of United Cerebral Palsy, Tri-City Lacrosse and the Bragg Open,
a scholarship fund-raising organization.
A person needs a broad base
of support to remain active in community organizations, DeCondo
said.
“It’s pretty difficult,”
he said. “I’m pretty lucky to have a wife who is not only understanding
but encourages me to take a leadership role in the community.
“My parents were always
very much involved, too,” he said. “That started things for me
at a very young age. They’ve always given me the opportunity to
get involved. It’s really a privilege ... to be able to participate
and help out.
“Until I started getting
involved in different areas of the community I didn’t realize
how much positive was going on around me,” DeCondo said. “There’s
so many people dedicated to making things happen.”
He said that after college
in Rochester, “I stayed out there for a little while to see what
the world was about, and I think I learned there was more here
that I missed.”
What he missed about the
Mohawk Valley, he said, was “the way people care ... about each
other. This community rallies around causes. There’s a lot of
positive energy there.”
The future of the region
depends on that energy, he said, and “what you’re willing to give
to make it happen.”
He sees the future in the
organizations he serves. “I’ve just joined the (United Cerebral
Palsy) board and really am very impressed ... with what that organization
does and the way they see,” he said. “They have a different way
of seeing, not people with disabilities but people with abilities.
It’s very refreshing.”
DeCondo said he also plans
to devote even more energy in the months ahead to his “passion
for ... lacrosse.” Tri-City Lacrosse is forming a new non-profit
corporation to run the program, he said, and he is proud of “any
small part I’ve played.”
He envisions a day in the
near future when both boys’ and girls’ lacrosse teams will have
a local sports complex, with several fields to host competitions.
“We’re very excited,”
DeCondo said.
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