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Enchanted Hills Retreat – Our Improved Connectivity Will Make Your Gathering Connected for Success

Our new roof-mounted antenna with sufficient height for a clear line of sight, brings in a strong internet signal to our visitors at Enchanted Hills Retreat

At Enchanted Hills Retreat, our rustic camp located on beautiful Mt. Veeder in Napa, we are constantly making improvements to make your stay more comfortable and productive. Most recently we completed the installation of a new roof-mounted antenna with clear line of sight. This means no obstacles, such as hills or homes, are in the way of our higher-speed internet capability.

Our clever IT Department, headed by Brian Hardy, worked with contractors to find a 19-mile microwave path in the mountains to make this accomplishment possible. The new service operates at ten megabits per second so that though the Retreat is located in the rural hills of Napa, our internet speed compares well with that found in urban areas. Complimenting this new bandwidth is a wireless architecture that distributes the bandwidth to numerous buildings and locations around the property, literally bringing “wireless to the woods.”

In 2014 both blind and sighted visitors find ever-increasing use for personal technology. Our increased bandwidth adds another layer of services for access and communications and makes our affordable wine country retreat that much more of a desirable place to hold your family reunion, yoga workshop, wedding, spiritual retreat, company off-site meeting or seminar.

Enchanted Hills Retreat, which can be rented nearly year-round, boasts a small lake, several rushing creeks, miles of nature trails for hiking, a heated outdoor swimming pool and a variety of breakout rooms for groups from 30 to 150. There are flexible service options including tasty, home-style meals and more.

For information and reservations, contact Tony Fletcher at afletcher@old.lighthouse-sf.org or 415-694-7310. Read more about Enchanted Hills Retreat.

Beautiful Lokoya lake appears through the trees at Enchanted Hills Retreat

Were You There? Superfest International Disability Film Festival

Were You There? Superfest International Disability Film Festival

Superfest International Disability Film Festival 2014 was a marvelous day highlighting the intersections of disability, art and film. A paramount get together for the Bay Area disability community, over 325 audience members attended the screenings. Over 52 films from around the world were submitted to the festival. We were able to showcase eleven groundbreaking films selected by a panel of disabled judges covering an astounding array of topics dear to our hearts, and those of our patrons. The Interviewer, winner of Best in Festival, earned a resounding ovation, reminding everyone in the room that the most insightful person may just be the least expected. The Mural, a film about a local non-profit, highlighted the incredible creativity that can be unleashed if we give people the chance.

See photos from Superfest on our Facebook page!

Linda Ellerbee once said, “People are pretty much alike. It’s only that our differences are more susceptible to definition than our similarities.” Krutch, winner of the Disabled Filmmaker Award, raised eyebrows and unapologetically reminded us all that our most basic fabric is of the same thread. The poignant film Everything is Incredible filled viewers with wonder, not because a disabled man was doing something remarkable, but because his Honduran community was intimately affected by this polio survivor’s unwavering ability to dream big. It highlighted what we already know: contrasting from typical Hollywood representations that show disability as a burden, disability can open up doors and enrich all of our lives.

Superfest is a cherished community event with international appeal because it is the first, and to our knowledge, the only film festival administered by people with disabilities. We pride ourselves on the fact that 100-percent of our judges are people with disabilities: physical, cognitive, learning, sensory, or emotional. While Hollywood tries to incorporate people with disabilities (or sometimes actors acting disabled) in their big-budget blockbusters, they are unfortunately prone to getting it wrong, exploiting a small feature of a whole person. People like you get it. You understand that the world is ready for more interesting and honest stories of disability than that of the overly heroic or pathetically pitiful. And hence, the need for Superfest!

The Superfest International Disability Film Festival is coordinated by LightHouse for the Blind and Visually Impaired and San Francisco State’s Longmore Institute.

Many thanks to fabulous emcee Nina G. and the filmmakers, judges and audience members who make up our vibrant community.

Very special thanks to our generous sponsors – we couldn’t do it without you!

Superfest Superstar Sponsor
Michele Spitz and Woman of her Word

Venue Sponsor
Contemporary Jewish Museum

Silver Sponsors
Audio Eyes
Amramp
George Lucas Family Foundation
Golden Gate Regional Foundation
Guide Dogs for the Blind
Big Screen Sponsors

Big Screen Sponsors
ABL Denim
City College of San Francisco, Disabled Students Programs and Services
Independent Living Resource Center of San Francisco
Whill

Community Sponsors
Autism Social Connection at Community Gatepath
Bay Area Outreach and Recreation
Blind Babies Foundation
Bridges to Communication
California Foundation for Independent Living Centers
CHADD of Northern California
Changing One Mind at a Time
CIL Berkeley
Cinema Studies, SFSU
Creative Growth Art Center
DCARA
Dept. of Rehabilitation, External Affairs
DeYoung Museum
Down Syndrome Connection of the Bay Area
DREDF
Environmental Traveling Companions
Independent Living Resource Center SF
Law Office of Lainey Feingold
Myers Urbatsch P.C.
National Alliance on Mental Illness, Marin
National Institute of Art and Disability
Parents Education Network
People with Disabilities Foundation
Seesaw Friends
Senior and Disability Action
Sins Invalid
Smith-Kettlewell Eye Research Institute
The Arc (SF)
Young Life Capernaum

Last Chance: Are You a Legally Blind Californian? You May Be Eligible for Compensation From Redbox Class Action Suit

The deadline to apply for compensation from the Redbox lawsuit settlement is November 12, 2014. Claims are expected to pay several thousand dollars to each blind Californian who meets the criteria and fills out the application.

After a 3-year effort by LightHouse and Disability Rights Advocates, blind Californians will be able to access Redbox kiosks independently. The settlement means that Redbox will start designing and emplacing accessible versions of its currently-inaccessible DVD vending machines in the next few years. All inaccessible California DVD rental machines will be converted to ones which have a tactile keypad and talk. This is a major accessibility victory.

Please note: you don’t need to have physically attempted to use a Redbox to qualify for the settlement. If you simply would have liked to use it but have heard that blind people can’t use it because it is inaccessible, this qualifies. There is no age limit – you can apply for the settlement even if you are under 18 as long as you meet the qualifications.

Read more about the settlement here.
Make A Claim Now!

The Blind Community is Giving Back – LightHouse’s 3rd Annual Toy Drive

Bring Food and Toys to the LightHouse!

Our Toy Drive is in full swing as we collect toys. Non-wrapped toys will be given to the Blind Babies Foundation. New toys in original packaging are greatly appreciated. An FAQ as well as a partial list of suggested toys that have proven to be some of the most stimulating for blind and low vision infants and toddlers can be found on our website (see link, below).

When: October through December 15, 2014
Where: Bring your donations of toys to LightHouse San Francisco Headquarters

Read more about our food and toy drive.

LightHouse Student Miguel Lepe places a toy in the toy barrel

Cohort-Based Learning at the LightHouse Supports Individual Growth, Creating a Community and Providing a Base for Success

Sign Up Now – Classes in San Francisco Begin November 11

Webster defines the noun “cohort” as a group of people banded together – working together as a unit. The LightHouse has successfully facilitated cohort based learning for the past three years and on November 4 we will offer our next cohort-based classes for 8-10 blind or low vision students. During these classes you’ll learn be exposed to a hundred valuable techniques, tools and attitudes that are practical ways to deal with changing vision, in an atmosphere of learning and pure enjoyment.

We start with weekly Changing Vision Changing Life classes that include individual and group training. After a few weeks concurrent Computer Keyboarding and Cooking Basics classes begin. Individual orientation and mobility instruction will also be incorporated. Participating in all the classes immerses the student in an atmosphere of accomplishment and progress, emphasizing the key component of working and learning with and from fellow blind and low vision classmates.

During the two-month period, cohort peers who continue the sequence of classes together benefit from the following: training from instructors and guest mentors as well as learning from each other; adjustment to change in their lives with support from their peers; and finding kindred spirits while learning new skills, creating community and moving forward. While it is not mandatory to participate in all facets, it is strongly recommended – priority registration will be provided to those who make a commitment to the full training.

All classes will be facilitated at the LightHouse Headquarters, 214 Van Ness Ave., San Francisco.

Changing Vision Changing Life
November 11 to December 18, 9:30 to 12:30
Tuesdays & Thursdays (no class on Thanksgiving)

Changing Vision, Changing Life is a 6-week class for blind and visually impaired adults who are seeking basic, yet essential daily living skills to live confidently at home and in the community. Each week topics such as tactile/non-visual skills, organizational skills, time management, use of adaptive aids, low vision strategies and accessing print materials provide students with solutions and strategies. In addition, each class session will include a discussion component, addressing both successes and challenges involved in incorporating the material presented in the teaching segments into each participant’s daily life.

Keyboard Training
November 17 to December 19, 9:30 a.m. to Noon
Mondays, Wednesdays & Fridays

Having efficient keyboarding skills is necessary for all computer users to be effective in both personal and professional use. LightHouse students new to keyboarding learn to type by touch using the QWERTY keyboard layout. Talking Typer Teacher (TTT), a program which employs synthesized speech, is the software tool used by the Access Technology Specialists to facilitate the class. Keyboard familiarity, typing accuracy and comfortable speed will be emphasized. As students learn the keyboard, weekly practical assignments are given to increase proficiency. Guided practice during lab time provides students time to gain keyboard fluency to type shopping lists; to-do lists; simple letters and email correspondences.

Cooking Basics – San Francisco
November 20 to December 18, 12:30 to 4:30 p.m.
Thursdays. Also Friday, December 12, 12:30 to 4:30 p.m.

In this five-week class, students will learn low vision and blind strategies and techniques for all aspects of meal preparation, from grocery shopping to hands-on skills and safety training, food labeling and organization and use of kitchen equipment. Students will prepare healthy and delicious recipes and/or meals in each class, along with learning all aspects of kitchen clean up strategies.

To find out more about upcoming classes and fees, including the variety of options available for funding, please contact Debbie Bacon, Rehabilitation Counselor at 415-694-7357 or dbacon@old.lighthouse-sf.org.

Group of LightHouse students stand in a circle, chatting

Blind Teens to Fly High at Hiller Aviation Museum

Celebrate the spirit of discovery and innovation of the aviation pioneers whose creativity made the dream of flight a reality for all of us. Join the LightHouse Youth Program on Saturday, November 22 as we explore aviation and flight at the Hiller Aviation Museum. Spend the day with friends as we travel from the LightHouse to the San Carlos Airport where we will enjoy a guided tour of the facility. Blind and Low Vision students will have the opportunity to get a hands-on experience as they learn about the history of flight.

Who: Low Vision and Blind Youth
What: Hiller Aviation Museum Tour
When: Saturday, November 22 from 11:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

  • We will gather at the LightHouse at 11:00 a.m. and travel to the museum where we will have lunch before the tour. We’ll return to LightHouse by 4:00 p.m., traffic permitting.
  • Lunch: Students must bring a bagged lunch with them. A light snack will be provided.
  • Meet at LightHouse for the Blind at 214 Van Ness Avenue, San Francisco. We will travel to the Hiller Aviation Museum, 601 Skyway Road, San Carlos
  • Tour Time: 1:30 p.m. to 2:30 p.m.
  • Waiver: Each participant must submit a LightHouse Youth Program waiver form, if they have not done so for a previous event.
  • Cost: $15.00 per student – includes museum entry, transportation and light snack. Though light snacks will be provided, please remember to bring a lunch with you.
  • RSVP: For more information or to RSVP, contact Jamey Gump, Youth Services Coordinator, at jgump@old.lighthouse-sf.org or 415-694-7372.
  • Space is limited to 12 participants.

Logo Hiller Aviation Museum

Learn the New UEB Braille in Special November 22nd Workshop

The National Certification in Unified English Braille workshop is designed to assist both professionals and consumers to become familiar with the Unified English Braille (UEB) code and to prepare to become certified in its use. As of 2016, UEB will be the United States’ official literary braille standard as adopted by the Braille Authority of North America (BANA).

When: Saturday, November 22, 2014 from 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Where: LightHouse San Francisco Headquarters
RSVP: By Wednesday, November 12

This workshop will consist of two sections–an overview of the changes in Literary Braille which are contained in UEB and test preparation for the National Certification in Unified English Braille exam. Participants will have the opportunity to interact with materials produced in UEB including specific comparisons with Literary Braille and potential strategies as to how to effectively make the transition to UEB.

Breakfast and check in will begin at 8:00 a.m. and the day will conclude at 4:00 p.m. Lunch will be provided by the Northern California Association for Education and Rehabilitation of the Blind and Visually Impaired (Northern California AER).

Each participant is requested to bring his or her own Perkins braillewriter, slate and stylus, or any electronic note taker that can utilize 6-key entry.

Register for the workshop here. Cost is $25 for blind consumers, $50 for students or $150 for professionals in the blindness field. A certificate of completion will be provided to those requesting continuing education credits.

For more information, please contact Lisamaria Martinez at 415-431-1481 or info@old.lighthouse-sf.org.

Adaptations in November – Say Turkey and Receive 10% Discount

At Adaptations we want to say “Thanks!” this giving season by giving a discount to all customers who can “talk a little turkey.” Simply say “Turkey” when checking out and receive a 10% discount on most products at the LightHouse Adaptation store.

For more information or to ask questions of the Adaptations staff, please call 415-694-7301. Store hours are Monday through Friday 10:00 am to 5:00 pm. Pssst! Be on the lookout for special December sales.

image of turkey

LightHouse Hires New Deputy Director, Scott Blanks

The LightHouse is proud to announce that we have hired Scott Blanks for the new position of Deputy Director. Scott will assist CEO Bryan Bashin in developing and implementing the organization’s strategic plan.

He said, “I’m excited beyond words to be at the LightHouse.” Scott, born and raised in Los Alamitos in Orange County, California, moved to the Bay Area fifteen years ago. “I heard that the Bay Area is a great place for a blind person to live independently, so I relocated, took classes at and began working for the Hatlen Center for the Blind.” Later he moved to Lions Center for the Blind as a teacher of adaptive technologies and became their Director of Rehabilitation Services. He said, “It was during my tenure at Lions Center that I developed a love of creating life-changing programs for the blind.”

As Lions Center focuses primarily on rehabilitation counseling, Scott found himself looking for career opportunities that would fulfill his need for creating more all-encompassing programs that include community services and access to information.

At the LightHouse, Scott coordinates services offered by our Access to Information Services (AIS), Rehabilitation Department, and Community Services with the main goal of creating a continuum of services that will appeal to all of our students. “I plan to integrate our programming between departments to make LightHouse even more relevant to a broader range of the blind community. I want people to be healthy and live rewarding lives. That means ensuring people know how to travel with a white cane, access email, engage in cultural events, go to sporting events, pretty much do anything they want regardless of their blindness.”

One of Scott’s first projects is to increase the amount of accessible technology training we offer our students. He will accomplish this by initiating classes taught interdepartmentally that will appeal to a broader range of students. “Newly blind students require 101 training, but for individuals who have been blind for years, we need to offer classes that are cutting edge and go beyond the basics. To accomplish this, I am working with my incredibly gifted staff to meet the needs and desires of our students by creating opportunities for everyone to grow.”

Scott is an avid reader, often juggling five books at once, though his two-year-old twin boys make reading a luxury. “They keep me busy when I’m not at work. Thank god for my wife, Carleigh, who keeps the family sane.” Scott is also a hockey enthusiast, “Hockey is sonically pleasing: the skates on the ice, the puck hitting the walls and hockey sticks, players ramming into barriers and other players; all of this makes hockey a highly engaging sport for blind spectators. Part of my mission at the LightHouse is to encourage our blind students to consider interests that at first blush may not seem engaging to blind people, such as reading, music and hockey.” Watch out though, Scott is a Ducks fan, which may be a dangerous admission as hockey season ramps up.

LightHouse is fortunate to have Scott join our robust community. If you’re interested in learning more about Scott, consider slap-shooting him an email at sblanks@old.lighthouse-sf.org or giving him a call at 415-694-7371. Scott will attend the Wednesday LightHouse Town Hall Meeting on November 5 to introduce himself to the community.

 

LightHouse’s Kate Williams Awarded Prestigious Purpose Prize

Kate Williams of LightHouse for the Blind and Visually Impaired Wins The Purpose Prize® 2014 for Work that’s Changing the World

Kate Williams
On October 28, in Tempe, Arizona, Encore.org honored the achievements of six outstanding Americans, including LightHouse Employment Immersion Program Leader Kate Williams, with prizes from $25,000 to $100,000, awarded to recognize and support their ongoing efforts. The awards ceremony was held at the Tempe Center for the Arts in Tempe, Arizona.

Before joining the LightHouse, Williams worked for decades in human resources as a recruiter. When she began to lose her vision, she worried about losing her career and her independence; she now uses the adaptive technology that kept her in the workforce to help the blind find jobs, at a pace that exceeds many conventional employment job-placement programs. For her dedication and creative leadership by example, Williams was awarded a $25,000 Purpose Prize. Kate is perhaps the first winner of the Purpose Prize with a disability.

Watch a video about Kate and the Purpose Prize.

Kate said, “I am honored and moved at The Purpose Prize award, granted in recognition of my work helping blind jobseekers find employment,” Williams said. “Although the program has garnered over 1.5 million annually in salaries, and saved taxpayers literally millions of dollars in benefits, the real joy is receiving a phone call from a graduate announcing they have accepted a job offer. Seeing peoples’ lives change as a result of securing employment, and watching them grow in self-sufficiency and independence is the real reward.”

LightHouse CEO Bryan Bashin is very proud of Williams and the Employment Immersion Program. The success rate of the program ranks highest in California and climbs steadily higher as the program grows. One of the goals of the program is to encourage Bay Area employers to recognize the value of hiring blind and disabled employees. Studies have shown that blind workers increase diversity, increase productivity and improve stability through reduced job turn over.

Now in its ninth year, The Purpose Prize is the nation’s only large-scale investment in people over the age of 60 who are combining their life skills and experience for the social good. Created in 2005 by Encore.org (then called Civic Ventures), the prize aims to recognize social innovators with the drive to be a part of the solution to some of society’s most pressing challenges – and the wisdom to know how to do it. Their work showcases the enormous, and too-often overlooked, value of long experience, and soundly disproves the notion that innovation is solely the province of the young.

Emmy-award winning journalist Jane Pauley and 2013 Purpose Prize winner Ysabel Duron emceed the event, which included hundreds of Encore leaders and the Purpose Prize winners. Twenty-four jurors – leaders in business, politics, media and the nonprofit sector – chose the six winners of The Purpose Prize. An additional 30 Purpose Prize fellows were selected from a pool of nearly 800 nominees. Jurors include Sherry Lansing, former CEO of Paramount; David Bornstein, author and New York Times columnist; Eric Liu, author and founder of Citizen University; and Sree Sreenivasan, Chief Digital Officer for the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.

“Kate Williams and the 2014 winners of The Purpose Prize have applied their significant talents to address poverty, community health, disaster relief and disabilities,” said Eunice Lin Nichols, director of the Purpose Prize. “Despite their superficial differences, these extraordinary individuals share the belief that the work they are doing now ranks among their most significant accomplishments, impacting thousands of people, across the U.S. and the world.”

“Encore.org is proud to recognize their achievements. They stand as powerful examples for the millions of Americans who believe that leveraging their life experience in order to make a difference – big or small, across communities, continents and generations – is a vital responsibility,” Nichols said.

If you or someone you know is interested in finding employment or returning to the workplace, contact Kate Williams at kwilliams@old.lighthouse-sf.org or 415-694-7324.

Read more about Kate.

Read more about the Purpose Prize.