Tag Archive

Community

Still Time to Register for the CABS Breaking Down Barriers Seminar

Come join the California Association of Blind Students (CABS) for a day of fun and learning.

  • Hear from blind students/professionals who have been successful in science related fields
  • Empower yourself to gain the skills and confidence which will help you achieve success in school and work
  • Learn about the technology which is breaking new ground in accessibility
  • Get tips and techniques on advocating for the things you need
  • Mix and mingle with successful blind people

When:   September 21, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Where:  Sacramento State University, 6000 J Street, Student Union, Orchard Suite, Sacramento, CA 95819

Registration will start at 10:00 a.m. and there will be plenty of time to browse the exhibits before the program starts at 11:00.

To RSVP, please visit www.nfbcal.org/cabs or contact CABS president Angela Fowler at 530-902-0987 or fowlers@syix.com.

 

 

 

Fine Art Photographer Looking for Blind Subjects

Carrie Levy is a fine art photographer based in San Francisco Bay.  She is seeking volunteers for her new photography series featuring members of the blind community.

Carrie grew up in New York and attended the School of Visual Arts in New York and the Royal College of Art in London.  She says, “I am interested in the collaborative portrait between a photographer and the sitter. My subjects are often depicted as both vulnerable and stoic, and at times I prefer to photograph by subjects shirtless or nude. During my career I have found that those with sight have developed a possessed response to being photographed. Therefore, as an artist I am now more interested in photographing subjects who perhaps have no common response to the lens. I am also interested in capturing the visually impaired within the context of art history, as there are not many paintings or photographs which capture the essence and beauty of the visually impaired.”

For her next series Carrie intends to highlight the reality of those who have never seen their photographic image and how they interact with the camera. She is seeking blind volunteers who would like to pose for her as part of this series. If you are interested in participating please contact Carrie at Carriejlevy@gmail.com or 415-276-5103.

Enchanted Hills Retreat – The Perfect Place for Your Meeting or Event

Beautiful Enchanted Hills Retreat is located just 25 minutes from downtown Napa on Mount Veeder Road. Want to hold a family reunion but your house is too small and hotels are too expensive? Would your workgroup benefit from an off-site training, team building or retreat? Is your church, club or organization in need of a place to gather where you can get three bountiful meals for a day or a week?

Now that our summer camp season is drawing to a close, we offer rentals of our retreat for groups as small as 20 and as large as 140. For more information and availability, contact 415-694-7310 or email Camp Director Tony Fletcher at afletcher@old.lighthouse-sf.org.

Read more about Enchanted Hills Retreat.

The Gladys Fisher Lodge, one of a group of comfortable and affordable lodgings at Enchanted Hills Retreat

 

Give a LightHouse Legacy

Planned Giving can be good for you and good for the LightHouse! An advantage to planned giving is that a small contribution made today can yield a much larger gift in the future. Planned gifts involve assets, not income, so they need not cost you anything now. In fact, they can save you money. You can design your gift in such a way that you will obtain the best possible tax and financial benefits.

Planned gifts include deferred gifts, such as bequests and life insurance policies, and current gifts, which are designed to maximize tax credits and minimize taxes on capital gains.

Consider leaving a Lighthouse Legacy with a gift that will help us promote independence, self-reliance and confidence for blind and visually impaired individuals of all ages.

For further information, please call our Development Department at 415-694-7365 or giving@old.lighthouse-sf.org.Employment Summit attendee Dexter Thomas using a Braille notetaker - your bequest will help support worthwhile programs such as our Employment Immersion Program

Accessible Video Conference Center Ready to Launch

In March the LightHouse was awarded a generous $50,000 grant from the California Communications Access Foundation to construct an Accessible Video Conference Center in our San Francisco headquarters. The Center has been designed to accommodate the unique disability needs of blind, low-vision, deaf-blind and hearing-impaired individuals and will be available for community events and trainings.

The room build-out is just about complete and includes new giant viewing screens that can be raised or lowered to accommodate a low vision audience, surround sound speakers and the ability to use FM wireless headsets that provide video description for both a blind audience and people with hearing loss. All of this controlled by a PC based computer system that can be run by blind and sighted staff alike.

For years we’ve been asked by blind and sighted professionals, family members and clients if there might be a way for them to experience our seminar presentations. With the help of this grant, the Center can now provide video as well as audio coverage, allowing a much broader community to benefit from the technology seminars we’re already producing.

In addition the Lighthouse will test new technologies with partner Smith-Kettlewell that will allow users streaming video from anywhere on the Internet to link with video description provided by individuals, organizations and professionals. The new video description system has the potential to revolutionize the quantity and timeliness of video description available to blind people who would benefit from it in education, cultural materials and pure entertainment.

We are excited about the possibilities this new Center will offer and can’t wait for you to experience it. Here are some photos from this “work in progress.”

LightHouse Information Technology Manager Brian Hardy installs audio conduit

LightHouse Information Technology Technician Ken Cheung using a drill to hang one of the surround-sound speakers in the Center

Save the Date! Photography Exhibition Fundraiser for the LightHouse on September 15

If you’re looking for a cool thing to do in San Francisco on a Saturday night, don’t miss this event/exhibition:

What: Against the Grain-New Perspectives on Bay Area Photography
When: September 15, from 7:30 p.m. to 11:30 p.m.
Where: ArtZone-461 Gallery, 461 Valencia Street, San Francisco

LightHouse for the Blind invites you to Against the Grain – a photography exhibit and silent auction showcasing Bay Area photographers and photography, some of the photos are taken with photo booths, you can get photo booths from MyBoogieBooth. All proceeds from the event will benefit LightHouse for the Blind. All art will be available for purchase via silent auction. The suggested donation at the door is $10-20. Must be 21 and over to attend.

Image of event flyer consisting of words artistically placed on a red background

Photography has never been more accessible than it is now, in the digital age. From high-end DSLRs to the most basic smart phones, there is a camera for every skill level and an unlimited number of ways to share the photos we take. This gives us many new creative options but also presents us with a new challenge: how do we distinguish ourselves as artists in an age where practically everyone is a photographer? How do we go against the grain in a world oversaturated with imagery? This show explores that theme and challenges artists to bring a unique eye to the people, places and events we see every day.

 

LightHouse Transit Access Volunteer Day

Are you an expert on a Muni or Samtrans route? We need your help. The LightHouse is developing “strip maps” which will present concise transit information about selected transit routes in Braille and large print. We are looking for volunteers who will ride or drive along selected Muni or Samtrans bus routes, and take notes, taking inventory of things such as:

  • bus stop locations (whether stop is on island or street and if mid-block, nearside corner, far side corner)
  • how stops are identified (sign pole, bench, shelter)
  • turns in the route (e.g. left, right and cardinal direction of travel)
  • intermodal connections and transfer points (e.g. BART station)

We are also looking for individuals who can help with the task of entering this information into our bus route database.

When: Saturday, August 18, 2012, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Where: LightHouse San Francisco Headquarters

Come to the LightHouse to help collect transit information that will increase the independence of blind and visually impaired Bay Area residents. The ideal volunteer should be familiar with specific Muni or Samtrans lines. Knowledge of way finding products such as Sendero GPS or Trekker is a plus. Training will be provided prior to the transit excursions.

Those interested in volunteering please contact Frank Welte at 415-694-73663 or email fwelte@old.lighthouse-sf.org.

Overview and Purpose
Maps are an integral aspect of daily life in our society, conveying essential information about the world we live in. Having access to that information is necessary to participate in society and gives people the ability to do what they couldn’t do before: If newly blind or learning a neighborhood from scratch, having access to maps is a real asset. But for blind people, obtaining maps has been difficult and expensive. However, the LightHouse is making significant change in this area by developing accessible transit maps to enhance the ability of blind and visually impaired individuals to effectively use public transit in the Bay Area. We are developing, and will distribute, “strip maps” which will present concise information about selected transit routes in Braille and large print. The strip maps will be developed for BART, Muni, SamTrans and Caltrain routes.

The optimal candidate might be a Bay Area resident who is familiar with specific Muni or Samtrans bus lines, or who is experienced with the use of way finding products, such as Sendero GPS, but anybody who is interested is welcome to help.  Volunteers will be trained prior to their transit excursions.

For more information about this opportunity or to become a volunteer, call Frank Welte at (415) 694-7363 or send Email to fwelte@old.lighthouse-sf.org.

Napa Rotary’s Cycle for Sight Supports Camp in a Big Way

This Spring, Team LightHouse rode once again in Rotary Club of Napa’s annual Cycle for Sight bicycle event, which benefits our Enchanted Hills Camp. Close to 2500 participants rode singly and in tandem along one of three scenic 50-, 25-, and 15-mile courses that wind among the hills and vineyards of the Napa Valley, as well as enjoying the food and wine festival that followed the ride.

We want to express our immense gratitude to Rotary Club of Napa for choosing to support Enchanted Hills. This year’s Cycle for Sight ride resulted in a $30,000 contribution to camp. We want to honor and thank Justin Geissberger and his family who were responsible for raising $3000 of this total. In addition, we thank LightHouse Board member Margie Donovan for raising close to $2000 on her own to support camp. Gary Morris, who originally came to Cycle for Sight through his connection with Margie, has ridden in the event off and on for the last twenty years. He rode with Team LightHouse this year as pilot with Angel, one of the students from Santa Barbara County (see story below), as the stoker. He was excited to find that with Angel’s help, he broke his personal record for speed saying, “Let me tell you, this was the fastest I ever rode around the course.”
EHC Director Tony Fletcher pilots tandem with student from Santa Barbara County
LightHouse volunteer and tandem pilot Gary Morris and his stoker, Santa Barbara County student Angel, stop mid-ride to fix their bicycle chain. Gary stands smiling and with arms spread wide between Angel (left) and unidentified rider (photo by Sandra Caple)

Santa Barbarans Join Team LightHouse

This year, Enchanted Hills Retreat played host to twelve young blind students from Santa Barbara County who partnered with their teachers and volunteers to ride tandem in Cycle for Sight as part of Team LightHouse. The group of young athletes arrived Thursday before the ride and stayed in our comfortable cabins for four days and three nights, experiencing what amounted to a mini-camp session. They enjoyed outdoor activities including boating, swimming, archery and beep-ball, while on Friday, LightHouse volunteer Jerry Edwards instructed the group on the finer points of riding a tandem. After a delicious carbohydrate-rich dinner of spaghetti and meatballs, Camp Director Tony Fletcher led the group in an Earth Day-themed discussion that included topics such as the role Enchanted Hills plays in providing a natural sanctuary for animals that might not thrive in other areas in Napa and how we incorporate energy conservation into the camp routine.
Santa Barbara County students assemble to ride for Team LightHouse
The group rode on Saturday and then came back to Enchanted Hills where they spent a restful night reflecting on the day’s accomplishments. For many students it was the very first time they had attempted such a long bicycle ride and we are so glad to have provided them the opportunity to do so.
Santa Barbara county student shows off Team LightHouse t-shirt

Young Adults Learn the Ropes of Leadership

Employers are looking first and foremost for employees who communicate effectively and have the ability to work well as part of a team. But these skills are not typically taught in traditional school settings, especially to blind and low vision youth. In our efforts to address this need, LightHouse has just completed the first of three workshops aimed at getting blind youth up-to-speed in these areas. We launched the Future Leaders Training Program (formerly known as Transition Summit) last month in the beautiful setting of Enchanted Hills Camp. There, young adults ages 17 through 25 spent a fun-filled yet intensive three-days learning about team-building, clear communication, problem-solving, conflict resolution, leadership, strategic planning, networking, time-management and more.

Whether enjoying a fierce yet friendly four-way tug-of-wits; coaching and encouraging teammates through a rigorous and challenging nighttime ropes course; or tensely negotiating which essential survival items should be kept or left behind before embarking on a strenuous mock survival hike; the young people were introduced to some of the most important concepts and strategies related to effective communication and teamwork. Exploring these vital concepts through active engagement and role play, they were able to demonstrate their understanding of these principles during various skill-building exercises.
LightHouse staffer Brandon Young with 24-year old Micah Aveno and 19-year old Priscilla Jimenez celebrate victory after a rousing round of tug-of-wits
LightHouse Director of Community Services John Liang said, “We saw a considerable transformation in how much more expressive these young people became because of the team building and trust that developed between the participants.”

24 year-old Micah Aveno, usually soft-spoken and shy, summed the weekend up best. “…Thank you for this amazing opportunity – it was a great experience. I learned so much and had a lot of fun. I look forward to attending future sessions.”

The next two sessions of this fun and growing experience will cover subjects such as professionalism and leadership. They are planned for later this year and will be open to previous participants as well as other blind and visually impaired transition-aged youth who are enrolled with the Department of Rehabilitation. For more information contact John Liang at jliang@old.lighthouse-sf.org or 415-694-7334.

Angel Island Adventure

On a sunny Bay Area day in May, a handful of young blind sailors took to the waters off Marin County in kayaks. Their object was to paddle the three miles to Angel Island, in San Francisco Bay, for an overnight stay. “We wanted to provide a great opportunity for outdoor fun and kayaking is a perfect summer activity for a group of young adults,” said trip leader and LightHouse Community Service Coordinator Brandon Young.

The group met at the LightHouse and traveled by Golden Gate transit to well-loved locals, Sea Trek in Sausalito. Sea Trek rented the kayaks and equipment while young adults from the Young Leaders program at Environmental Traveling Companions provided one-on-one training and guidance both to and from the island.

Each kayak housed two passengers, a blind kayaker from our group and a guide from Environmental Traveling Companions. The paddle from Sausalito to Angel Island takes about two hours. According to Young, “it was an absolutely beautiful day: the bay was flat and calm with no wind and plenty of sun. We couldn’t have asked for better weather than this.”
Blind sailor Patricia Jimenez and her guide settle into their kayak and get ready for the paddle
With harbor seals and sea birds accompanying them as they sang sea-shanties, the group enjoyed the challenge of keeping together, but not too close together, in the water. They paddled through Richardson Bay and beyond using whistles and hand gestures to keep formation despite the current. “We didn’t bump into each other too much,” Young said with a grin. “It was all done at a very serene, unhurried pace – there were a few people trying to race a little bit but it was mostly a leisurely journey.”
Blind sailor Fabian Cardona poses in his kayak
After arriving and unpacking, the young people prepared and consumed a fortifying spaghetti dinner, followed by a night hike and games of cards and dice (no betting, please). They slept on the floor in sleeping bags, staying in one of the historical buildings that remain usable on the island.

The next morning they made breakfast (waffles and bacon), hiked a bit, then cleaned up their lodging and headed back out on the water. Those who craved a little more excitement got their wish as the return journey was not quite as calm. The waves were a little bigger, the current was a little stronger, the tide was, as Young put it, “argumentative”. Of course this just added to the experience, and all-in-all the young people had a great time.

For information about upcoming adventures made available through the LightHouse Adult/Senior Program, please contact Brandon Young at 415-694-7320 or byoung@old.lighthouse-sf.org. Learn more about Sea Trek at www.seatrek.com, and Environmental Traveling Companions at www.etctrips.org.