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LightHouse News

This Sunday – Superfest 2014 – Everything is Incredible

Join Superfest for a film extravaganza on November 2, 2014. Be provoked and entertained by eleven short films that portray disability culture in all its diverse and empowering facets.

The entire event starts promptly at 11:00 a.m. and ends at 5:30 p.m. The films are divided into two sessions, each highlighting a unique group of films. You may purchase a ticket for each session or buy an all-day pass. For more details about the event and show times, visit superfest.com.

One of the films being showcased is “Everything is Incredible,” which highlights how perseverance, resilience and unwavering glee emanating from one individual can have vastly impactful positive effects on his entire community. Agustin, the film’s central character, reminds us all that everything can truly be incredible if only we dream big enough.

We already have sold an unprecedented number of tickets and anticipate selling out, so do not delay in purchasing your tickets! Our morning session is quickly filling up, and our afternoon session is almost completely full. All-day passes remain available, but not for long.

Tickets may be purchased directly on the Contemporary Jewish Museum’s website. We cannot guarantee that tickets will be available the day of the event because of the extreme outpouring of support for this year’s festival.

PLEASE NOTE: Sunday is the end of daylight savings time, which means that we must “fall back” one hour. Plan accordingly and set your alarms to be at Superfest on time. You won’t want to miss a minute!

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

Smiling man in wheelchair holds a sign that says “Happy”

Trouble Voting? Disability Rights California Operates Hotline on November 4 for Voters with Disabilities

Californians with disabilities who are voting in the statewide general election on November 4 have an ally in ensuring that they have full and equal access to the process. With funding from the Help America Vote Act, Disability Rights California will operate a toll-free hotline for voters with disabilities who have difficulty accessing polling places, casting ballots or simply have questions about voting. The toll-free number for voice calls is 888-569-7955.

The primary purpose of the hotline is to fix problems on Election Day, so people with disabilities can vote independently and privately. Examples of barriers experienced by voters with disabilities include:

  • Inoperable accessible voting equipment
  • Insufficiently trained poll workers who cannot meet the needs of voters with disabilities
  • Voters with disabilities being told they cannot vote because of their disability
  • No access to ballots for voters living in nursing homes and other residential facilities
  • Polling places with inaccessible parking or steep curb ramps
  • Narrow doorways and aisles at poll sites
  • Voting equipment placed on inaccessible tables or stages
  • Poll sites said to be “accessible” but are not

Disability Rights California will also use the information it receives through the hotline to identify and respond to systemic issues to make it easier for voters with disabilities to cast their vote privately and independently in future elections. For example, during the primary election, the hotline received a call from a concerned citizen informing that his polling place was not accessible to voters with disabilities because of a construction project outside. Disability Rights California reported the concern to the County Department of Elections, who agreed to, prior to Election Day, make sure that there are no construction projects scheduled that may block access to a polling place.

The hotline will be open between 7:00 a.m. and 8:00 p.m. on Election Day, the same hours the polls are open. Individuals who speak languages other than English should state their language and an interpreter will be connected to the call. Callers using the California Relay Service, including Speech-to-Speech, can dial 711.

Disability Rights California has several publications regarding the rights of voters with disabilities. Examples include publications about: the voting rights of people with developmental disabilities; how a person using a signature stamp can vote; how a person who is hospitalized on Election Day can vote; and the voting rights of people who are in a nursing home or other institutions outside of their county of residence. These and other resources regarding the voting rights of people with disabilities are available at http://www.disabilityrightsca.org/pubs/PublicationsVoting.htm.

For further information about Disability Rights California, see their website (www.disabilityrightsca.org), Facebook page and Twitter @DisabilityCA.

Scholarships Available – New Opportunities for Careers in Rehabilitation of the Blind

Scholarships are now available!

The Professional Development and Research Institute on Blindness at Louisiana Tech University is excited to announce that along with its O&M program, it has expanded its training and is launching a brand new concentration in Rehabilitation Teaching for the Blind.

Structured Discovery Cane Travel (SDCT) and Structured Discovery Rehabilitation have been demonstrated to be among the most innovative and effective forms of rehabilitation training for individuals who are blind or visually impaired. Louisiana Tech University has operated its Orientation and Mobility program on this model successfully for 18 years, with upwards of 90% successful employment and employer satisfaction rates.

Scholarships are now available for qualified individuals seeking one of the following degree paths:

  • Master of Arts in Industrial/Organizational Psychology with Concentration in Orientation and Mobility
  • Master of Arts in Counseling and Guidance with Concentration in Rehabilitation Teaching for the Blind
  • Orientation and Mobility Graduate Certification

Why apply?

  •  The field of educating and rehabilitating children and adults who are blind is deeply rewarding and life-changing.
  • The job market is wide open; currently, we receive four times the number of employer requests than we have graduates to provide.
  • Training occurs on campus in Ruston, Louisiana, and can be completed in as little as one year.
  • No prior background or experience in blindness is necessary—we’ll teach you everything you need to know.
  • Scholarships are provided on a competitive basis to qualified persons and can cover costs for attending the university.
  • Scholarship also support travel to conferences, trainings, and field-based experiences at Structured Discovery training programs.

Who can Apply?

Individuals must already possess a Bachelor’s (B.A.) degree from an accredited university, have a grade point average of 2.5 and obtain a minimum of 287 (Verbal and Quantitative) on the Graduate Records Examination (GRE). Individuals must also be willing to attend courses on campus in Ruston, Louisiana on a full-time basis.

What’s the Catch?

  • Payback through service is required. Agreement to receive scholarship funding requires commitment for you to work in the field of rehabilitation for two years for each year of scholarship support you obtain.
  • Scholarships cover at least tuition and fees but may cover living and travel costs as well.
  • You have to move to Ruston, work hard, study harder, and have the heart to be an O&M or Rehabilitation Teacher of blind persons.

Where do I get started?

  • For program details, visit: www.pdrib.com.
  • Send an email for more information to: dreed@latech.edu.
  • Or contact Edward Bell, Director, Professional Development and Research Institute on Blindness Louisiana Tech University to discuss your application: 318-257-4554 or ebell@latech.edu.

 

Essay Contest for Youth

Lions Clubs International (LCI) is sponsoring an international Essay Contest on Peace for blind and visually impaired students.

The deadline for submission of essays is November 15, 2014. Blind and visually impaired students between the ages of 11 to 13 can participate in this exciting competition, which is a rare and wonderful opportunity for young students to showcase their writing talent and personal vision about the contest theme “peace, love and understanding” on a worldwide stage. The winner will receive a monetary award of $5000 and the experience of sharing his or her essay at the next Lions International Convention which will be held in Hawaii in July, 2015.

Any interested student must be sponsored by a Lions club to participate and can not directly submit an application for consideration.  Here are the contest rules and application procedures.

 

 

Enchanted Hills Highlights – A Glorious Summer of Blind Camping

Kiwanis Club of Greater Napa, EHC Neighbors Spruce Up Lower Chapel
At the beginning of September, members of the Kiwanis Club of Greater Napa as well as EHC Neighbors and Staff cleaned up the lower chapel at Enchanted Hills.

The chapel is a shaded area at Enchanted Hills that brings into play all aspects of nature: Surrounded by trees and next to a stream, it is a place of quiet and light breezes – the perfect place for our community to gather. As a program area, the chapel has been used since 1928. It was also Rose Resnick’s favorite location at Enchanted Hills.

The Kiwanis helped restore the pathway to the chapel, including patching and smoothing and building retaining walls. Neighbors and staff added new benches and created terraces to place them on. All cleared debris and vegetation, making the area look attractive and sparkling and returned it to its natural beauty.

Many thanks to Bill Cinquini and the Kiwanis Club of Greater Napa, the EHC Neighbors, including Tony McClimans, Gary Margadant and Bob Hayes, for their hard work and efforts.


Neighbors Build Awesome Picnic Tables for Enchanted Hills

For generations kids, teens and families at Enchanted Hills have memories of outdoor gatherings that included the use of a variety of accommodating picnic tables. The closeness and community that breaking bread together fosters is so important that we’ve decided to vastly increase these rustic gathering places throughout camp.

Last month, EHC Neighbors and friends, including LightHouse Board member Todd Stevenot and his family, began an ongoing effort to build us twenty new tables. With their help we first identified fallen Douglas fir trees on Enchanted Hills and our neighbors’ property that could be used to construct the new tables. Superstar neighbor Tony McClimans milled this wood to perfection, creating lumber vastly stouter than that found at hardware stores, and worked in collaboration with next-door-neighbor Andrew Cates to get the wood cut and formed for assembly. Some of the tables we are building are 14 feet long and take at least six strong people to move them. They will be used in a number of locations all over camp. Ten tables have been completed so far, and we want to thank everyone who involved with the project, including Tony McClimans who milled the wood at his sawmill and lead builder Andrew Cates.


LightHouse Friends Gena Harper and Mike May Tie the Knot
Last month LightHouse Board member Gena Harper and former camper, staff member, current volunteer and supporter Mike May hosted their lovely wedding at Enchanted Hills Retreat. The guests enjoyed delicious food, including a “wedding cake” made of beautifully decorated individual cupcakes, and witnessed the inaugural public use of our new Redwood Grove Theater for a full-blown amplified musical performance featuring singer-songwriter Sara Beck and husband Park Chisolm.

We are grateful for the new couple’s generosity in asking their guests to make monetary gifts to support Enchanted Hills, a place Mike has been coming to since 1962.

Congratulations, Gena and Mike!

EHC staff member Tom Cassidy assists volunteers with terracing and placement of new benches in lower chapel

Neighbors and friends work on a large picnic table

Gena Harper and Mike May sit at their wedding table

Thanks to our Community Partners

Wells Fargo logo, Herbst Foundation logo

 

 

 

 

 

Thank you to the following individuals and corporations who have recently shown their support by providing significant funds to help our programs go further and reach higher:

The Annunziata Sanguinetti Foundation – supporting youth camperships at Enchanted Hills Camp for the Blind

Herbst Foundation – for unrestricted support

Wells Fargo – supporting our Employment Immersion Program

Reasons Why You Should Learn Braille

LightHouse braille student Geneice Hawkins became blind six years ago. She began learning braille four years ago but due to health reasons, was unable to hone and practice her braille skills. Now she has returned to the classroom, relearning and revisiting those familiar dots and cells. She uses braille to label medications, herbs and spices and other household items, and much more. “I love to read and use audio books when I’m multi-tasking, like cooking or washing dishes. But I was inspired to get back to studying braille,” she told us, “by the birth of my nieces and more recently my 20-month-old granddaughter. She loves to be read to and is always walking around with a book in her hand. I really want to be able to read to her and to my nieces.

Despite the fantastic access technology available to most folks who are blind, braille, even basic braille, is eminently useful for essential everyday activities such as household labeling, writing notes, calendaring appointments, creating grocery lists as well as using computers and smart phones with refreshable braille displays.

If you are blind or low vision and would like to find out how you can learn braille, contact LightHouse braille instructor Divina Fontanilla Carslon at dfontanilla@old.lighthouse-sf.org or 415-694-7367.

Student Geneice Hawkins works with LightHouse braille instructor Divina Fontanilla Carlson

Staff Profile: Christina Daniels, Accessible Technology Specialist and Music Aficionado

“LightHouse is a place I’ve wanted to work at for a long time,” Christina Daniels, our Access Technology Specialist, said when asked what made her consider working for us.

After graduating from our Employment Immersion program, Christina, an experienced accessible technology instructor, got her foot in the LightHouse door when she was hired as receptionist for the LightHouse in May, 2013. By hiring Christina we gained an important ally.

Employment Immersion was not Christina’s first introduction to LightHouse. A Bay Area native, and high school graduate of Ygnacio Valley in Concord, Christina first came to the LightHouse to receive low-vision cooking training from our instructor, the late David Baioni. “It was David’s class that piqued my interest in establishing a career in helping blind people such as myself live passionately.” Little did Christina know that she would one day call LightHouse home.

As LightHouse’s morning receptionist, Christina’s light shined brightly as she ushered people in from the windy Van Ness Ave. corridor. “It’s great to see you Mrs. Wright, come on in and take a seat just to the right of the front door. I’ll let Debbie know you’re here.” Her smile and reassuring, pleasant voice welcomed morning students and clients to our office. Once LightHouse students learned that, in addition to being a jovial woman of confidence, Christina is also tech savvy, and a master at using accessibility software, our clients couldn’t resist asking her for help. “Christina, I can’t seem to open my email on my iPhone. What have I done?” Christina to the rescue.

Christina’s work was impressive and it didn’t take long for LightHouse to recognize this by offering her first a part-time and then a full time position as an Access Technology Specialist. Christina now helps students navigate braille displays connected to their computers, smart phone accessibility features, and accessibility software such as JAWS, Zoom Text, and Dolphin Guide for computers. She is fulfilling one of her life-long goals: working to help blind people thrive independently by using technology.

Christina works with LightHouse student Erik Ealy on his technology skills

When describing her approach to teaching accessibility technology, she emphatically states, “I don’t preach dogma; I listen first and then make suggestions to meet each person’s needs. People should dispel the ‘one size fits all’ mentality for blindness training. I urge my students not to focus on what others are doing, but instead concentrate on learning what is important to them personally. For some students this means learning how to access online bank accounts; for students entering the workforce, it means learning adaptive techniques to navigate around excel documents and create professional looking resumes.” Further hitting home the importance of individual learning, Christina stresses, “there are no wrong ways to learn, which is why I focus on the needs and desires of each student, and create a plan with the student to meet those needs.”

While Christina’s approach to teaching students makes her a superstar Access Technology teacher; her zeal for musical theater makes her a humming queen. “I love live theater, particularly musicals. Last year I visited Manhattan and saw twelve Broadway shows in seven days. I guess you could say I ‘went for broke.’” She fastidiously catalogues her massive collection of Broadway albums, programs, posters, signed photographs of actors, and other memorabilia. “Live theater is about being in the middle of art being made, talking with your neighbors during intermission, feeling the energy in the room. It’s about the orchestra tuning their instruments – first middle C on the piano, then the strings, then reeds, then brass, and finally a gentle drumming of the percussion instruments. Live theater is so much more than a visual experience; it’s an every-sense-and-emotion experience. Listening to theater at home is never ever as electrifying as witnessing it live.” Christina’s interest in theater leads her down dark alleys where she patiently waits to snag her favorite actors’ signatures and photo-ops, often catching them before they dash between exit door and town car. “You can’t get a picture with Idina Menzel while listening to an album in your home,” she laughs.

One of Christina’s favorite musicals is The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee, a show that includes audience participation and actor improvisation, making a unique show at every performance. Christina rattles off another life goal: “One day I hope to have my own acting company, a company for blind actors to come and perfect their craft, then bring their shows live to a stage near you.”

Christina graduated with a degree in literature from San Francisco State University and though her career has led her to teaching technology, she still loves reading. “I often have two books going at once, one that’s erudite, and one that’s fluff. People think the blind don’t have access to good literature, or current literature, but many of my blind friends read more than my sighted friends. One of the prominent concerns I hear from students new to blindness is, ‘I won’t be able to read ever again.’ I immediately dispel that misinformation, providing my students with a dizzying but gratifying array of options to meet their needs. I’m blind and I read books and enjoy theater as thoroughly as any of my sighted friends. I just use alternative methods to get there.”

If you want to practice your spelling with Christina in case you happen to be picked as an audience participant at the next showing of The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee, or if you are eager to make technology your friend as you pursue a joyous life with low vision or blindness, be sure to contact Christina Daniels at CDaniels@old.lighthouse-sf.org or call 415-694-7315.

In a favorite stage door photo, Christina Daniels poses with the actors of the Million Dollar Quartet. From left to right Cody Slaughter (Elvis Presley), Derek Keeling (Johnny Cash), Martin Kaye (Jerry Lee Lewis), and Lee Ferris (Carl Perkins)

 

Employment Immersion Graduate Scores Coveted Paid Internship

No stranger to Employment Immersion News, Vanessa Braasch embodies the “can do” spirit. Immediately following her participation in the March 2014 Employment Immersion Program, Vanessa secured a position with fashion retailer Uniqlo. It was not her ultimate career job choice, but it allowed her to have an income while seeking a position more closely aligned to her education and goals. When Employment Immersion Program Leader Kate Williams called with news about a one-year, paid Human Resources internship with the City and County of San Francisco, Vanessa thought it would be a great opportunity to put her BA in psychology to work and applied.

“It was a very competitive application process that included a 3-hour written aptitude exam; a group leadership problem solving competition; and two intensive panel interviews. I scored 40 out of 41 on the aptitude test, so I was hopeful, but when I did not hear any news right away, I thought I did not get the position. But they called a week later and offered me the internship. It sounds very exciting. I will be learning their software system and rotating through different positions – employee relations, working with unions, etc. – in order to learn all about HR. I am so excited to have the opportunity to keep striving, learning and growing, and it’s a generously paid internship that allows me to get off Social Security. They have been wonderful about working with me to provide accommodations as well.”

Earlier this year Vanessa said about our program, “I highly recommend the Employment Immersion class. You get a lot of information you would have trouble finding for yourself, such as how working affects your benefits. And the program taught me about some of the little things that can be really helpful to getting a job, like asking for the interviewer’s business card at the end of the interview so that you’ll have their contact information and can quickly send a thank you note. The lectures are not boring and it’s a fun environment.”

Vanessa will be eligible to apply for a permanent Personnel Analyst Trainee position in the civil service system after the successful completion of the structured intern program. Kate Williams notes, “I knew Vanessa was working the ‘night shift’ at Uniqlo. I thought her determination and desire to start a professional career might pay off – and it has. She has earned a highly coveted HR Analyst Internship with the City and County of San Francisco. We are so proud of her amazing accomplishment.”

 

For more information about our Employment Immersion Program, please contact Kate Williams at kwilliams@old.lighthouse-sf.org or 415-694-324.

Vanessa Braasch

Retreat Guests Laud their Enchanted Hills Experiences

“The staff was wonderful, they couldn’t have been nicer –and they really took care of us. The food was very, very good. Friday’s dinner was outstanding, as were the breakfasts. All the fruits and veggies were much appreciated, but please don’t ever stop making those chocolate chip cookies. The rooms were clean with plenty of hot water. And, the forest was absolutely beautiful. Next year we will set aside time for a second hike.”

Every year Enchanted Hills Director Tony Fletcher receives scores of thank you letters from retreat customers complimenting the tireless staff, excellent cuisine and outstanding natural environs of Enchanted Hills Retreat. The quote above is from one group that loves to come to Enchanted Hills for group bonding and training. 4Paws is an organization based out of Santa Rosa, CA dedicated to improving lives through the human and canine emotional bond.

In addition to staying with us during their own yearly training session, 4Paws returns to Enchanted Hills with their dogs to interact with our blind and low vision kids during summer camp sessions. Their visit is enjoyed by all.

Discover what Joanne is talking about. Enchanted Hills Retreat is an affordable place to enjoy the quiet beauty of wine country, with rustic accommodations, great food and shady nooks to explore. Are you looking for a place to come together with your group of 30 to 120? Reserve now for a family reunion, spiritual group, wedding or company retreat. Call 415-694-7310 or visit www.enchantedhillsretreat.com.

Young camper David DeGrande holds a dog visiting through 4PAWS