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New to Access Tech? Take Our June AT Course

New to Access Tech? Take Our June AT Course

The Access Technology team is delighted to offer an in-person immersion introducing new students to access technology. Join Kacie Cappello, Fernando Macias, and Jacques Law to explore the concepts and tools you will need to use devices confidently and comfortably. We will discuss access technology vocabulary in an approachable, digestible and jargon-free manner. We will provide overviews of low vision enhancements and spoken feedback tools available for computers, smartphones and tablets. There will be workshops on dedicated devices, getting to know your phone, options for notetaking, access-optimized apps, resources and technical support contacts.
 
Please note that lunch will not be provided. Students are encouraged to bring their own bagged lunch.

Class Names & Dates:

 
Class 1: What is Access Technology?
Monday, June 10, from 9:30 am to 3:00 pm
 
Class 2: Access Technology on Computers
Tuesday, June 11, from 9:30 am to 3:00 pm
 
Class 3: Access Technology on Mobile Devices
Wednesday, June 12, from 9:30 am to 3:00 pm
 
Class 4: Workshops 1, 2, and 3
Thursday, June 13, from 9:30 am to 3:00 pm
 
Class 5: Workshops 4, 5, and 6
Friday, June 14, from 9:30 am to 3:00 pm
 
Where:
LightHouse for the Blind and Visually Impaired of San Francisco
1155 Market Street, 10th floor, San Francisco

Course Prerequisites:

 
To participate and fully benefit from this class, students must:
 
1. Live in San Francisco, Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin or Humboldt county.
2. Be new to Access Technology, having not received prior one-on-one or group training.
3. Be curious and open to learning basic, beginner Access Technology specific information.
4. Be comfortable learning in a group setting. This means:
a. Don’t be afraid to ask questions.
b. Do give others a chance to ask questions if they haven’t gotten to do so already.
c. Please refrain from sharing personal, private, or sensitive information.

How To RSVP:

 
To RSVP, please send an email to the LightHouse Access Technology department, at@old.lighthouse-sf.org, and mention that you’d like to enroll in the Introduction to Access Technology course. Space is limited and registrations closes on Thursday, June 6.

Join Us for LightHouse Day on June 27

Join Us for LightHouse Day on June 27

It’s June, and that means it’s time to celebrate LightHouse! As a multifaceted non-profit (and one of the oldest of its kind in the whole state, we might add!) LightHouse has its hands in many pies. From our Little Learners, to Accessible User Experience consulting, to the production of environmentally safe cleaning products, LightHouse does it all! Much like the iconic 1980’s Transformers cartoon, LightHouse is much more than meets the eye. And with every project, every department, every collaboration and client we serve, LightHouse dedicates our efforts in the promotion of independence, community, and equity created by and with blind and low vision people.
 
So, on June 27, we invite our community to join us in celebrating the LightHouse enterprise, LightHouse ECO on LightHouse Day! And who knows? We might just be announcing some very exciting news! (Wink, wink!)
 
What: LightHouse Day 2024
When: Thursday, June 27, 2024, from 2:00 pm to 4:00 pm
Where: The Sirkin Center, 2175 North Loop Rd., Alameda, CA 94502
 
RSVP to LightHouse Day here.
Or copy and paste the following URL into your web browser: https://forms.office.com/Pages/ResponsePage.aspx?id=aDTgw1XvSEKdrcKhdpCdAPLYxxHCW7RBvSswU9wfgWVUMEJEVTVINFpKWFVYTzlJNzFSQlQwWTczSC4u
 
More About LightHouse ECO
In early 2020, LightHouse began moving into our new manufacturing facility, the Sirkin Center, in the Bay Farms neighborhood of Alameda. Then, in June of 2020, while most people were quarantined at home, the blind and low vision community came to work, producing eco-friendly cleaning products to help keep our homes and community buildings safe, clean, and prevent the spread of COVID-19. LightHouse was awarded the EPA Safer Choice Award in 2021 and 2022 for the products we produce in house at the Sirkin Center. Additionally, these products have been added to the federal government’s AbilityOne Procurement List, which not only helps to support the production of products and services by LightHouse’s BVI community, but positively impacts the safety and sustainability of our environment as well.

RSVP to LightHouse Day

 

LightHouse & Xfinity Comcast Host Roundtable Discussion on Latest Accessibility Trends, June 6

LightHouse & Xfinity Comcast Host Roundtable Discussion on Latest Accessibility Trends, June 6

Please join us for an opportunity to meet Tom Wlodkowski, VP of Accessibility at Comcast, during his visit to California. We’ll be discussing the latest accessibility trends along with our efforts for greater digital inclusion and access with LightHouse for the Blind and Visually Impaired – San Francisco. All Access Tech enthusiasts are welcome! Refreshments will be provided.

When: Thursday, June 6, 9:00 am to 11:00 am
Where: LightHouse HQ at 1155 Market St., 10th Floor, San Francisco 94103
RSVP: To attend this free event, please email Jon Koriel at jon_koriel@comcast.com

This event is brought to you by Xfinity Comcast and LightHouse for the Blind and Visually Impaired.  

How Cathy Mulhern’s Technology Journey Led Her to Teach at Earle Baum Center

How Cathy Mulhern’s Technology Journey Led Her to Teach at Earle Baum Center

Cathy, right, stands and smiles as she watches a client seated with their hand on a phone stand that can be used to take photos for text recognition. On the table are a piece of paper, a bag of chips and a Cup of Noodles.

In March, we introduced you to the Earle Baum Center, a blindness center in Santa Rosa that recently joined the LightHouse community. Now, we’re introducing you to the people who work there. First up, an interview with Earle Baum Senior Assistive Technology Specialist, Cathy Mulhern who’s been there since 2009.
 
How did you get interested in technology and technology training?
 
I’ve been working in the field of technology training for 33+ years. After high school, I went to Heald College to get some computer skills to help me get a decent paying entry-level job. I really enjoyed learning the computer and I ended up helping other students in class.

Next, I went to Santa Rosa Junior College to finish my education. During which, I found work which ended me up on the graveyard shift and was looking for other career opportunities. Fortunately, I was introduced to Anne Pierce, who worked for a vocational rehabilitation training facility and later opened J Bass & Associates vocational training. She needed a person who could temp for a week while an employee was on medical leave. So I temped, helping students learn how to do word processing and spreadsheets. I just loved it.
 
When the temp job was over, Anne said, “You know, if you really love doing this, there’s a job out there for you. You might think about starting your own business.” I saved a year’s worth of funding, and in 1990, I started my own business in computer training and consulting.
 
It was a wonderful experience. I wrote manuals for a leading real estate software program and taught workshops for people in the real estate industry. It evolved into doing corporate training and working with clients to help them set up their computer systems and teach them how to work within the new environment.
 
How did I get interested in training? Back when I started looking for a computer in college, the experience wasn’t good. I knew enough to be somewhat knowledgeable about what I wanted, but I didn’t have all the jargon down yet and I was made to feel belittled because of that. I didn’t like that experience. I thought “I can’t be the only person out there who doesn’t know the jargon.” And I thought, “Okay, this is where I can make a niche in life.”
 
So how did you get involved teaching technology to blind people?
 
I had a very close friend named Rochelle Doble. I was her computer consultant. One day she told me that she was losing her sight. She said that she and her husband were driving by a place called the Earle Baum Center. They saw the sign, but didn’t know what it meant, so they decided to drive in. She found out what was going on with her vision and what tools could help her, so that she could continue working in her husband’s office. I went through the learning journey with her.
 
Later, my grandfather passed away, so I became a fulltime caregiver to my grandmother. As a result, my computer training business took a backseat and eventually stopped. I took care of my grandmother until she passed away.
 
A couple months later, Rochelle asked, “Don’t you need a job?” I said, ‘Yes, I’m going to get back to work; I just don’t know what direction I want to go.”
 
She said, “Well, you know, Jacques Law [from Earle Baum Center] is coming over to set up my new computer, but he doesn’t know the medical software I use. Could you work with him and help him get that software set up?” Jacques and I had worked together in the past.
 
Two weeks later, Rochelle said, “Why don’t you call Jacques and see if they need somebody?”
 
I called Jacques and had an over-the-phone interview with Allan Brenner, CEO of Earle Baum Center of the Blind at the time, and a second interview with Allan and Jeff Harrington, Assistive Technology manager of Earle Baum. Two weeks later, I was hired.
 
That’s awesome.

Yes, it was, and it was an incredible fit. I started out doing in-house tech support. We were having problems with our website. I had taught beginning web design at Santa Rosa College, and I was asked to revamp the website. While doing so I learned more about website accessibility.
 
Because of my experience with Medisoft Medical software, I was then asked to assist in starting the Low Vision Clinic at Earle Baum Center.
 
Then an opportunity came up. They saw from my resumé that I had been a trainer and asked me if I was open to doing training again. I said, “Yes, definitely. That’s my niche in life; that’s what I do.” So I was assigned clients, and here I am.
 
Can you talk about what your job looks like day-to-day? How do you balance researching new gadgets and keeping up with computer software with client training?
 
Like everyone at Earle Baum Center, I wear many hats. I am an in-house technical support person, which includes assisting with computer-related issues, helping purchase computers and setting them up for staff. Otherwise, I am working with clients, mostly on a one-to-one basis. As Assistive Technology instructors, our main focus is face-to-face time with clients. When not working with clients, I am working on reports, communication follow-up with clients and preparing for the next client.
 
No matter how booked you are, you’re always going to have those days where you have cancellations. These are the times when I research new gadgets and update my computer software knowledge.
 
What are some of the most fun things you’ve done during your time at Earle Baum?
 
Working with clients and being part of their journey with sight loss. I saw one of my clients get her bachelor’s degree and then her master’s. She’s now working full time. I got to help her through that by providing assistive technology training. It’s great to see that growth from when a client first comes in and says, “How do I do this now? How am I going to get through school? How am I going to get a career?’ To see them go from that to exceeding and excelling is just phenomenal.
 
I also enjoyed working on a grant which allowed me to create a Seeing AI group training program.
 
Now that Lighthouse and Earle Baum have embarked on a new partnership, what are some of your hopes in regard to Earle Baum expanding their own services or doing things in conjunction with LightHouse?

I’d like to see LightHouse and Earle Baum Center both become more of a community again. I think COVID did impact that. I want to see more activities where people are coming to the Earle Baum campus, not just to get services but to have fun. I want to see things like beep baseball, music events and low vision and blind artists getting together and doing a jam session, not focusing on blindness, but their artistic side of life.
 
I feel blessed that we’re able to continue Earle Baum’s mission. Due to the partnership with LightHouse, Earle Baum isn’t closing. We’re not going away. We’re expanding the services and opportunities for our clients/students.
 
The Earle Baum Center is located at 4539 Occidental Rd, Santa Rosa in Sonoma County. If you are interested in services at Earle Baum, please call 707-523-3222 or visit earlebaum.org.

LightHouse Board Meeting Open to the Public on June 6

LightHouse Board Meeting Open to the Public on June 6

Members of the public are invited to attend the Thursday, June 6, meeting of the Board of Directors of San Francisco’s LightHouse for the Blind and Visually Impaired. This meeting will be a virtual meeting held via Zoom and runs from 5:30 pm to 8:00 pm Pacific.
 
30 minutes will be reserved for public comment, and members of the public will have up to three minutes to comment. If you would like to reserve a slot to speak, please complete the LightHouse Public Comment and RSVP Sign Up form. Please submit your comments as far in advance as possible. Comments must be received before noon Pacific on Wednesday, June 5. to be included in the agenda.

If you would like to attend the virtual meeting, please fill out the LightHouse Public Comment and RSVP Sign Up formWhether you plan to have a public comment or not, you will need to fill out this form to get the Zoom info.  Zoom information will be emailed to you closer to the date of the board meeting.

LightHouse Public Comment and RSVP Sign Up form

LightHouse to Screen Cold Refuge, a Film about Open Water Swimmers, May 9

LightHouse to Screen Cold Refuge, a Film about Open Water Swimmers, May 9

LightHouse for the Blind invites our students, volunteers, staff and community members to a free screening of the documentary Cold Refuge. This film is presented as part of our 1155 Performance Salon series.

Cold Refuge, by local documentary filmmaker Judy Irving, is about the physical, psychological and spiritual aspects of full immersion in the natural world: how, though it may seem counter-intuitive, swimming in cold water helps mitigate some of life’s most serious challenges.
 
The film’s diverse film subjects include a wheelchair-using, paralyzed swimmer who faces fear by diving off a high pier; a Black man who was told by white people when he was 13 that “Black people don’t swim” (it took him 30 years to try); a blind man who tethers himself to a sighted swimmer; a woman with aggressive breast cancer who “swims to chemo;” a lawyer who reduces courtroom stress in the open water; and a young woman who communes with her late mother in San Francisco Bay, where they both swam together.

The blind swimmer is Corvin Baazan, a deafblind triathlete who recently joined LightHouse’s Accessible User Experience department as a Support Tester. Stay after the film for a Q&A with Corvin, along with the filmmaker and sound designer. The Q&A will be hosted by Enchanted Hills Camp Director Tony Fletcher.
 
The film will have audio description and open captioning.
 
Learn more about the film Cold Refuge.
 
What: 1155 Performance Salon Screening of Cold Refuge followed by Q&A
When: Thursday, May 9, from 5:00 pm to 8:00 pm
Where: LightHouse for the Blind and Visually Impaired, 1155 Market St. 10th Floor, San Francisco (Directions to LightHouse San Francisco)
RSVP: To Maia Scott at MScott@old.lighthouse-sf.org or 415-694-7608.
 
The 1155 Performance Salon is made possible thanks to a City and County of San Francisco, Office of Economic and Workforce Development grant.

RSVP for Cold Refuge screening

Come Celebrate World Labyrinth Day at EBC on May 4!

Come Celebrate World Labyrinth Day at EBC on May 4!

Saturday, May 4, is World Labyrinth Day! Come celebrate this peaceful holiday at Earle Baum Center of the Blind (EBC) in Santa Rosa. We invite the BVI community to enjoy EBC’s uniquely accessible Labyrinth, specifically designed by EBC staffer, Patricia Jefferson, to accommodate travelers using white canes, guide dogs, human guides and most wheelchairs. The path is a 39-inch-wide smooth concrete surface with a four-inch brick curb. In the center there is a Peace Pole as part of the right-side curb to orient the travelers.
 
The walk will be procession-style and there will be guides provided if assistance is needed. Join us for this meditative, peaceful gathering as our community walks together as one!

What: World Labyrinth Day Walk
When: Saturday, May 4, 1:00 pm to 3:00 pm
Where: Earle Baum Center, 4539 Occidental Road in Santa Rosa, 95401
RSVP: Please contact Patricia at PJefferson@old.lighthouse-sf.org
 
What is a Labyrinth?
 
A Labyrinth is an intricate network of passages or paths in which it can be difficult to navigate upon first observation. They are typically formed as a circle with a singular path leading to the center, almost like a maze. The practice of designing and walking Labyrinths is an ancient spiritual tool meant to foster contemplation, spiritual transformation, and philosophical ideals. Many find inner peace and solace while walking a Labyrinth, leaving their worries outside the paths and letting their mind and bodies wander freely through the Labyrinth.

Join in the Laughter at the next 1155 Performance Salon, April 27 at 2:00 pm

Join in the Laughter at the next 1155 Performance Salon, April 27 at 2:00 pm

It’s almost time for the next 1155 Performance Salon at LightHouse!
 
For April, we welcome talented comedians from Comedians with Disabilities Act. The Comedians with Disabilities Act is “a fabulous collection of comedians who have disabilities, both seen and unseen, and bring forth the humor they find in their experiences” (comedianswithdisabilitiesact.com/about). 
 
These comedians will share their laugh-out-loud stories and sets; here’s a little about each!

Mike Bucci

Photo of Mike Bucci

Mike Bucci’s first comedy set was on the stage of the Punch Line in San Francisco and he’s been hooked ever since. Mike is also a city councilman of Newark, CA and works diligently to balance his comedy life with work and family, all while living with a visual impairment.

Mean Dave

Photo of Mean Dave

Mean Dave is a Bay Area comedian and a regular at comedy clubs such as Cobbs Comedy Club and Punch Line. Dave is also active in 12-Step recovery from substance abuse, thus granting him the joys of the Americans with Disabilities Act.

Loren Kraut

Loren Kraut

Loren Kraut is the funniest retired teacher you can find. A regular of Punch Line and Cobbs comedy clubs, Loren’s invisible disabilities allow her a unique perspective on life, which she mines for laughter.

What: 1155 Performance Salon Featuring Comedians with Disabilities Act 
When: Saturday, April 27, from 2:00 pm to 4:00 pm
Where: LightHouse San Francisco, 1155 Market St. 10th Floor (Directions to LightHouse San Francisco)
RSVP: To Maia Scott at MScott@old.lighthouse-sf.org or 415-694-7608
 
The 1155 Performance Salon is made possible thanks to a City and County of San Francisco, Office of Economic and Workforce Development grant.

RSVP for the 1155 Performance Salon

LightHouse and Guide Dogs for the Blind Hosted their 2nd Annual Spring Celebration!

LightHouse and Guide Dogs for the Blind Hosted their 2nd Annual Spring Celebration!

Spring was in the air last Saturday as the paths that wind around the green lawns and lush gardens of the Guide Dogs for the Blind (GDB) campus in San Rafael were filled with the toddling feet and happy paws of the 2nd Annual Spring Celebration attendees!
 
Together with our friends at GDB, we welcomed 33 families from all over the San Francisco Bay Area for a beautiful day of spring-themed crafts, guide puppy meet-and-greets, photoshoots with Sunny the Bunny and Glinda the Good Witch, and of course— an accessible beeping egg hunt!

“We just love LightHouse and coming here to Guide Dogs for this event!” says a Little Learners Mom as she glances over at her baby crawling towards a beeping egg that big sis rolls to her. “We’ve been looking forward to the Spring Celebration since last year!”
 
The campus echoed with beeps, barks, and delighted laughter as 70 children searched for the accessible, tactile and audible eggs they placed in their decorated bags and baskets, to be exchanged for plastic eggs filled with goodies. Friendships were made between the dozens of families, and our community grew!
 
“Meeting other parents and hearing their stories has been so helpful,” says a Little Learner Mom as she watches Dad sit their daughter down next to another Little Learner Baby on the grass. “I love knowing that my child has a community and kids she can grow up with who will understand her and her needs.”

This spectacular event was made possible by the 45 volunteers from GDB, LightHouse, and friends and supporters of the BVI community. From set-up to clean-up, to facilitating all the activity stations and egg hunts, we had so many eager helpers who brought even more joy to this event. We were so excited for our families to also experience Guide Dog’s Puppy Center and Learning Lab and Gift Shop. And, what a special treat it was to have KRON4 news anchor and GDB docent, Grant Lodes, serve as Emcee for the Spring Celebration, calling out the egg hunts and sharing his passion for Guide Dogs and compassion for the BVI community with the families in attendance.
 
We owe the unwavering success of this event to the dedicated work of the Spring Celebration Event Planning Committee. Much appreciation and gratitude to GDB team members Lynn Dubinsky, Karen Woon, Jane Flower, Chris Clayland, Becky Miller, Morry Angell, Barbara Zamost and Brad Hennig as well as LightHouse team members Pam Chapin, Subira Mayo, Allyson Ferrari, Summer Dittmer, Caitlin O’Malior, Hoby Wedler, Genie Gratto and Lauren Myerscough. This dream team collaborated to plan and organize this beautiful event, down to the very last details!
 
“Guide Dogs for the Blind is absolutely thrilled and honor to partner with LightHouse, not only for this event but throughout the year,” says GDB CEO, Chris Benninger. “We have also worked together on the delivery of orientation and mobility services—critical services that we could not do without the help of our partner, LightHouse for the Blind.”
 
In addition to our fabulous event organizers, we would like to give a warm, heartfelt thank you to other supporters who were a pivotal part of making the 2nd Annual Spring Celebration such a special day for our Little Learners community! Thank you to Marissa Gonzalez, President of World Eye Cancer Hope-USA Chapter, Julie Maier of California Deafblind Services, Gina Ouellette (and family!) Superintendent of California School for the Blind, and the San Francisco Optometric Society. We’d also like to shoutout and thank volunteers from Google and from Kaiser Permanente for their continued support and partnership.
 
“All of your contributions make events like this possible,” LightHouse CEO, Sharon Giovinazzo, thanks our supporters. “Helen Keller said it so well: ‘Alone we can do so little, together we can do so much,’ But of course, a very special thank you has to go to Chris Benninger and all of your staff on this beautiful and wonderful campus. As we come together, let’s celebrate the bonds we share and inclusivity!” 
 
Indeed, it was a beautiful celebration of community, inclusivity, and the joy of springtime! We look forward to doing it all again next year!
 
Click this link to learn more about the LightHouse Little Learners.
 
For more information about Guide Dogs for the Blind, click this link.

Photos by Emmalaine Berry Photography

Level Up Your Auditory Skills with LightHouse Language of Listening Course

Level Up Your Auditory Skills with LightHouse Language of Listening Course

There’s a misconception that people who are blind or have low vision have better hearing than their sighted peers. That’s not true, but what is true is that blind people can be better attuned to their hearing with the right training. LightHouse is providing that training with the return of our online course The Language of Listening.
 
The course runs for six sessions in June, and we want to ensure everyone interested knows as soon as possible, so they can make time in their schedule for the course!
 

Course Description

 
The whistle of a teapot, or bubbles in a pot hint at tasty things to come. The whizz of cars in front of us are warnings, while those traveling beside us are protective. The dial tone that lets us know we are one step closer to speaking to a loved one. In this series of classes, we will discuss the many ways we can sharpen our listening skills to make the most of what we hear. Whether your goal is to get out and travel, prepare a special meal, return to school or work, or write the great American novel, we will help you separate the useful signals from all the noise, and to level up your listening skills.
 

Student Criteria

 
Students interested in this course can be of any skill level and fall anywhere on the spectrum of blindness. They should be comfortable learning in a group setting, willing to actively participate in classes, able to commit to attend all six (6) sessions in their entirety, be able to access the Zoom platform, and be able to hear and understand spoken English and sounds of various pitches/tones.
 
Course Materials: A pair of over the ear headphones with a microphone.
 
Learning Outcomes:

  • Students will be more prepared to transition from utilizing visual input to using auditory input text to speech
  • Students will understand the clues about documents provided by text to speech
  • Students will learn to analyze their environment, identify sounds, and determine how to best use the auditory information they are receiving in order to problem solve and complete various tasks of daily living

Students will be provided with a foundation of interpreting audio cues when traveling indoors and outdoors.
 

Course Schedule

  • Session 1: Tuesday, June 11 – Welcome & Course Overview This session will include staff/student introductions, a course overview, and introduction to auditory skills, the completion of a pre-test, and time for questions.
  • Session 2: Thursday, June 13 – A Deep Dive into “Thinking in Sound”
    The goal of this session is to introduce common examples of how to utilize auditory cues. Students will begin by identifying the type of learner they are and how to supplement that with auditory input. Tips for reading comprehension and interpersonal communication will also be covered.
  • Session 3: Tuesday, June 18 – Around the House
    This session will focus on the application of auditory skills within the area of independent living. Cooking, note-taking, object location-identification, and labeling are some of the skill areas that will be covered.
  • Session 4: Thursday, June 20 – Voices, Tones, and Beeps! Oh My
    This session will introduce students to the audio information provided by various forms of mainstream and access technology. Students will be exposed to various types of voices and indication sounds. They will learn how to determine what the certain indicators mean, and which voice characteristics are most appropriate for various tasks.
  • Session 5: Tuesday, June 25 – Out & About
    An Orientation & Mobility Specialist will join this session to discuss the intersection of orientation and mobility skills with auditory skills. Students will be provided with relevant examples and guided through the process of siphoning out the most useful auditory information amongst the plethora of noise in outside and unfamiliar environments.
  • Session 6: Thursday, June 27 – Putting It All Together
    This session will include time for final questions, a discussion about the process of transitioning to the usage of more auditory input, and a discussion of how to determine when it may be appropriate to use vision as well (this is known as the “Use Your Vision When it is F.U.N.,” technique). Students will also complete the post-test during this session.

Course Info

 
What: The Language of Listening
When: Tuesdays and Thursdays, June 11, 13, 18, 20, 25 & 27, from 10:30 am to 12:30 pm
Where: Online
RSVP: To Bobbi Pompey at BPompey@old.lighthouse-sf.org or 415-694-7613 by June 4.