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LightHouse News

Now Available: BART, Caltrain, Muni and Samtrans Transit Routes Created by the LightHouse

The LightHouse is now offering Transit Route Orientation Guides for BART, Caltrain, and selected Muni and Samtrans routes to make it easier for blind and visually impaired transit riders in the Bay Area to travel independently.Transit Route Orientation Guide

When a person is blind or visually impaired, traveling independently is a crucial aspect of maintaining a high quality of life. That’s why The LightHouse has been teaching travel skills to blind and visually impaired Northern California residents for more than 60 years. Part of this training consists of familiarizing individuals with buses and other modes of public transportation.

Because the San Francisco area has one of the most extensive public transportation systems in the United States, travelers who are blind or visually impaired have access to most locations in the region. Unfortunately, some aspects of bus and train travel can be challenging for a person with low vision. It can be difficult to keep track of the order of stops along a bus or train route, to know which stop one should use to transfer from one route to another, or to know which stops have shelters for use on rainy days.

The LightHouse has come up with a solution for these particular challenges. Transit Route Orientation Guides are Braille pamphlets which contain lists of the stops along a bus or train route with information about the transfers available at each stop, and the orientation of each stop. For bus routes, the Guides indicate whether the stop is placed before an intersection, a nearside stop, or after the intersection, a far side stop; whether the stop is placed near the corner, in the middle of a block, or on a bus island in the middle of the street; and whether there is a bench or shelter at the stop. For train routes the guides indicate the layout of the train platform; center platform, side platform or complex platform; and whether the train platform is underground, at ground level, or elevated.

Low vision and blind travelers receive orientation and mobility training at the LightHouse to familiarize themselves with the routes for which we provide Transit Route Orientation Guides. For example, if an individual living in Berkeley wants help learning a route from her home to her new job in San Francisco, we’ll supply her, free of charge, with the Guides for BART and for the Muni routes she’ll use to get to her workplace. She can also partake in free orientation training for those transit routes, too.

Funding for these much needed guides is provided by a New Freedom Grant from the U.S. Department of Transportation and administered by the Metropolitan Transportation Commission.

Transit Guides and the related training are available free of charge for Caltrain, BART, about three dozen San Francisco Muni routes and several Samtrans routes. To order a Transit Route Orientation Guide, or to request orientation training to help you make the best use of these guides, contact Frank Welte at 415-694-7363, or fwelte@old.lighthouse-sf.org.

LightHouse Information and Referral Specialist Frank Welte with his dog guide, Jeep, reading a Transit Route Orientation Guide. Frank has been instrumental in gathering the information for these orientation guides.

LightHouse Guide Dog Wash on September 28

Please note: the date of this event has changed to Saturday, September 28, 2013

In September we are hosting a Barks, Baths and Biscuits Dog Guide Wash.

Mingle with other dog owners and leave with a clean and happy pooch. Just bring your guide dog to the Please Touch Community Garden, which is next door to LightHouse San Francisco Headquarters, between the hours of 10:00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m.

The core group of volunteers for this event will be members of the Foresight Optometry Club at UC Berkeley. There’s no need to RSVP, just bring your dog guide!

When: Saturday, September 28, 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.
Where: Please Touch Community Garden, 165 Grove Street
Suggested donation: $5.00
Refreshments provided

dogbath

Life Insurance: Another Way to Leave a Legacy to the Blind and Low Vision Community

Adelyn Byrd was a resident of San Francisco and received LightHouse services 15 years ago. Just last month we were saddened to learn that she had passed – but we were also very touched by the way she has chosen to support and give back to us for those services. She named LightHouse for the Blind as the beneficiary of her life insurance policy.

Perhaps like Adelyn you are a supporter of the LightHouse? Maybe you have responded to our letters about Enchanted Hills Camp, come to events, volunteered your time, benefited as a client of the LightHouse, or read our e-News. Another way to deepen your support is by making the LightHouse a beneficiary of your life insurance. Life insurance may be an attractive way to make charitable gifts for those without a surviving spouse or children or whose progeny are not in need of the funds.

With the funds we have received from Adelyn and other planned giving donors we are able to start new programs and be nimble in our efforts to provide high quality services for the blind and visually impaired. Securing funds for a new and unproven initiative can be difficult. Our Employment Immersion program is one such program that we knew would make a great impact on blind people’s lives, but without the stability and support provided by planned gifts, we could never have gotten it off the ground!

For more information about making the LightHouse for the Blind a beneficiary of your life insurance policy or other estate planning mechanisms, contact Jennifer at (415) 694-7333 or jsachs@old.lighthouse-sf.org.

A Rustic Wedding in the Napa Countryside

Simple flowers, a stunning lakeside location, and your closest family and friends. What more could you need for a memorable nuptial occasion? If you or someone you know is seeking a fairytale setting to say “I Do”, consider choosing Enchanted Hills in the heart of Napa’s wine country. (In fact in August Enchanted Hills hosted two such weddings and the new couples couldn’t be happier.)

Imagine you and your beloved under a white tent, the wind whistling in the trees, enveloped in the dappled light which characterizes Enchanted Hills. Local caterers can utilize our large, well-appointed kitchen. There are accommodations for guests to stay, or Enchanted Hills can be the exclusive venue for the ceremony and reception. With 311 picturesque acres, Enchanted Hills has provided a romantic backdrop for many weddings over the years.

Uniquely, Enchanted Hills is a lovely wedding venue, and all of the proceeds from rentals of Enchanted Hills Retreat support Enchanted Hills Camp for the Blind, providing unparalleled opportunities for mentorship, creativity and exploration for blind and low vision people of all ages. To reserve Enchanted Hills for your wedding or other get-together of 30 to 120, please call (415) 694-7310 or go to www.enchantedhillsretreat.com.

A bride and groom embrace, smiling, in a lush, green outdoor setting

St. Ignatius Sophomores Clean Up Camp

We’d like to express our gratitude to the group of students from St. Ignatius High School in San Francisco who came up to Enchanted Hills in July to work in the beautiful outdoors of our camp while earning service hours for school. Enchanted Hills Camp Director Tony Fletcher stands with students from St. Ignatius High School

During their long weekend at camp they worked on a number of projects. They helped with preparation for the July 27 Open House by cleaning up the camp and setting up tables and chairs. The boys went out on the lake in paddleboats to remove weedy plant life. Using wheelbarrows and shovels they made multiple trips across the camp, moving wood chips to the archery area; these chips will help control erosion and provide footing, making our archery area safer and more accessible.

Perhaps more significantly, the boys participated in team-building exercises with a group of blind and visually impaired kids from our Youth Program. Said Camp Director Tony Fletcher, “Anytime you can bring two groups together and with a similar mission it just builds an understanding of each other’s perspectives on a wide range of subjects.”

LightHouse Youth Coordinator Jamey Gump said, “Thank you to the volunteers from St. Ignatius High School for the long hours they worked alongside our Youth Program participants. Our staff and campers truly appreciated the effort these young men made.”

Thanks go to longtime LightHouse supporter Christina McNair, who was instrumental in organizing St. Ignatius’ visit to camp. Christina is a daughter of the late and greatly missed deaf-blind artist Elva Iacono Vergari, herself a major LightHouse supporter and client.

Kevin Southworth Lands Job in Seattle Thanks to Employment Immersion

Kevin Southworth grew up with limited hearing but learned to deal with it and had a great career. As an adult he worked as an IT professional while at the same time marrying and having three children. Born with Usher Syndrome, a congenital condition which can cause deafness and blindness, Kevin experienced a dramatic vision loss in his late 30’s and found it hard to rally. He quit working. He felt lost.Kevin Southworth stands with the Golden Gate Bridge in view

Kevin told us, “I had been struggling to find a job since 2008. I thought that my jobsearch [efforts] were useless because my resume and interview skills weren’t strong enough…I started to see my future fade away.”

Things began to turn around when Kevin attended the Helen Keller Center in New York and learned skills and tools to communicate. There he met Sook Hee Choi, now Deaf-Blind Specialist at the LightHouse for the Blind. He moved to Sacramento and despite the distance, took his Department of Rehabilitation counselor, Georgeta Tenase’s suggestion to join the LightHouse’s Employment Immersion Program.

Kevin began to attend the 10-week class at the LightHouse’s Ed Roberts Campus in Berkeley in January. He and another student who lived a distance from the Bay Area stayed at the Orientation Center for the Blind in Albany while participating. A translator using tactile sign-language conveyed class content to Kevin. Employment Immersion Program Leader Kate Williams tells us that during the first few weeks of the class, Kevin felt lost and didn’t say much. But the warmth of his classmates broke down his reserve and he started to open up. His fellow classmates began to stay after class to chat with him. When the class did mock interviews which are videoed and critiqued, Kevin gave a very successful interview. Program Leader Kate Williams said, “It was so gratifying to see how our program helped Kevin regain enthusiasm and confidence.”

We are proud to announce that Kevin just landed a job at the Seattle LightHouse for the Blind as a Productions Machinist. He’ll be working on aviation parts which will eventually go to Boeing to be used in their aircraft. He says, “The class helped me improve my job search methods, resume, interview skills, etc. Working in Seattle has been my dream for a long time now and it finally came true because of this program!”
Congratulations Kevin!

Are you ready to re-enter the job market? Or are you looking for work for the first time? It’s a small investment of time – just eight weeks will get you up-to-speed with the latest job-search methods, plus one-on-one counseling and interview practice in a warm, encouraging environment. Our next Employment Immersion session runs from Tuesday, October 15 through Thursday, December 5 and will take place at the LightHouse’s office at the Ed Roberts Campus in Berkeley. For more information, call Kate Williams at 415-694-7324 or email her at kwilliams@old.lighthouse-sf.org.

LightHouse Youth Enjoy a Day of Kayaking and Swimming

This summer LightHouse Youth participants enjoyed a day of kayaking at Willow Creek Recreation Area in Folsom. The weather and water temperature were perfect. Perfect enough for a refreshing swim! The event concluded with a delicious barbecue provided by LightHouse friend Margie Donovan.Three kayaks slice through calm waters: Valentino Benelli, RC Upham and Margie Donovan in a two-seater, and in front, volunteer Cari Butler, paddle away at Willow Creek Recreation Area in Folsom

Thanks to Margie and her experienced friends from Ski for Light who provided training in kayak safety, paddling technique and also instructed the youth on how to prepare and pack up the equipment.

Deaf-Blind Gather in Unique Enchanted Hills Session

For over thirty years the LightHouse has offered a session at Enchanted Hills specifically for campers who are Deaf-Blind. This year 26 campers attended, most from the Bay Area, making it the largest such gathering in California in 2013.

In addition, 30 volunteer SSP’s (Support Service Providers) helped out with intensive communication assistance. [Support Service Providers are specially trained professionals who enable people who have combined vision and hearing losses to access their environments and communicate. Source: http://www.aadb.org/information/ssp/ssp.html.] SSP’s make sure every announcement or instruction between camp staff and camper is communicated to the camper via tactile sign language.

All the campers were able to enjoy recreational activities such as swimming, boating, games, archery, crafts, hiking, parties during the evening and a presentation on the latest in accessible technology. But because Deaf-Blind people are often isolated due to communication and transportation barriers, the most valuable part of this camp session is that it gives Deaf-Blind campers the opportunity to speak to others using American Sign Language.

Says LightHouse Deaf-Blind Specialist Sook Hee Choi, “Everyone enjoys the camp. Campers meet new friends and also talk with old friends, catching up with news. People who are sighted and hearing take this for granted, but for Deaf-Blind campers, this can only happen when they are physically present and able to touch each other through tactile sign language.”

Volunteer Angelica Medina-Boersma using tactile communication with a Deaf-Blind camper during a nighttime social

Professional Hip Hop dance instructor Christiane Crawford teaches hip-hop moves to Deaf-Blind campers and volunteers, including Angelea Palmer and Mark Mellenger, Brianna Quintana and KimYao, Tony So and Don, and David Powell

Deaf-Blind camper Rick Joy chats with volunteer Suzanne Tierney, who is a Bay Area DOR Counselor

Retreat for Blind Veterans – November 8 through 10

In partnership with the Veterans Administration, Enchanted Hills is hosting a retreat for blind and visually impaired veterans from November 8 through 10, 2013. The retreat is designed to bring low vision veterans together from the Bay Area and beyond to convene, identify resources and build a community of support.

If you are a veteran or know of someone that may benefit from this retreat please contact Tony Fletcher at (415) 694-7319 or tfletcher@old.lighthouse-sf.org.