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Three (more!) accessible playgrounds being built in beautiful British Columbia…

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009
Filed under: Uncategorized

“Three accessible playgrounds are being built as a part of a legacy of the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Games. The province [of British Columbia], Ronald McDonald House Charities and the Rick Hansen Foundation are each contributing to the $1.2 million project. The playgrounds will be built at Kits Beach in Vancouver, the Middle Arm Waterfront Greenway in Richmond and the Celebration Plaza in Whistler. Those in Whistler and Richmond will be built in time for the Games. Vancouver will get its park by next summer.”

Every single city should have at least one accessible playground in its jurisdiction.

Does YOURS????

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Important statistics

Monday, November 2nd, 2009
Filed under: Uncategorized

Statistics_title_graphicAccording to an article written by Heather Claybrook:

  • People with disabilities are a “huge untapped workforce.”

  • Only 50% of disabled Americans who want to work have a job.

  • Many people with disabilities are actively looking for work—and have the skills employers are looking for.

  • One of the greatest barriers is the perception that people with disabilities can’t do the job, when actually, in some fields, they are more than qualified and often bring a unique perspective to the job.

  • People with disabilities often use a lot of technology in their everyday life. They’re actually very well-suited for working in the technology fields.

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LOOKING FOR WORK: When Should You Reveal Your Disability?

Monday, November 2nd, 2009
Filed under: Uncategorized

Equal_Opportunity_workforce_title_graphicThanks to a tip-off from Karen Putz’s frequently-updated Twitter feed, we recently stumbled upon this fascinating article written by Lizz Carroll, (published on diversityinc.com):

If you’re someone with a non-visible disability, you are entitled to your privacy and are under no obligation to bring it up in the workplace. But are there times when you should tell your employer—particularly if you need an accommodation such as flex time or a specific work environment? DiversityInc spoke to several experts to help you weigh your options and guide you through the process of disclosing a non-visible illness in the workplace.

Click to continue »

SAG Data Released: Casting in Movies and TV Continues to Exclude People with Disabilities

Friday, October 30th, 2009
Filed under: Uncategorized

In our last post, we said that “We think (Broadway-bound) Abigail Breslin will make a PHENOMENAL Helen Keller, even though she’s neither deaf nor blind.”

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Here’s another truly fascinating perspective >>

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Spotlighting Gilbert Smith: a former police officer who has turned disability equality into his life’s mission

Thursday, October 29th, 2009
Filed under: ThemesWheelchairman of the Board

Disabled advocate Gilbert Smith, a former police officer, works to spread awareness and equality for the disabled. The disAbility Resources Center recently presented him with a lifetime achievement Award. (Photo by Tyrone Walker)

Disabled advocate Gilbert Smith, a former police officer, works to spread awareness and equality for the disabled. The disAbility Resources Center recently presented him with a lifetime achievement Award. (Photo by Tyrone Walker)

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Even sitting in a wheelchair, his hands not fully functional, there’s a physical presence about Gilbert Smith, the former police officer who was shot on duty and left paralyzed from the waist down.

Maybe it’s left over from his rough-and-tumble days as a bouncer in his dad’s bar. Or maybe it’s just the force of his spirit.

“He’s left his stamp on a little bit of everything here,” Gwen Gillenwater, executive director of the disAbility Resource Center, said last week when presenting him with a Lifetime Achievement Award for making Charleston more accessible to the handicapped. “He’s one of the real giants in our community.”

Smith will be 63 in December. He was paralyzed Dec. 12, 1970, nearly 40 years ago.

“I’ve outlived the statistics,” he said.

Before he became a police officer, Smith worked as a bartender and bouncer at his dad’s nightclub. It was called the Coconut Grove on Pittsburgh Avenue in North Charleston. Smith also collected loans for his dad.

“I was big and strong back then,” he said.

His dad died in a tractor accident when Smith was 20. He went to work for the Charleston Naval Shipyard before joining the police department.

He took a test in the morning and was given his badge, gun and handcuffs that evening. He spent the first two weeks riding around with an older officer, who was also shot on duty but survived without any permanent damage, and then was sent out on his own.

Fewer than four months on the job, Smith got a call that a man was passed out in the middle of the road in rural Charleston County. Smith loaded him in the back of the patrol car to take him to the jail. He didn’t handcuff him because the man didn’t have a right hand.

Smith would learn later that the man lost his hand in a shootout. He previously had served time for robbing a bank.

The man woke up in the back of the car, grabbed Smith’s gun, shot him in the back and pushed him out of the car. The man later said he saw the devil.

Smith would never walk again.

As a result of the incident, the department installed cages in all the patrol vehicles and instituted a training program … Continue reading this article

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Dignity After Football

Thursday, October 29th, 2009
Filed under: Uncategorized

Brent Boyd #62

Brent Boyd #62

Quoting Brent Boyd, Former Minnesota Viking and founder of Dignity After Football:

“The carnage left behind from decades of NFL concussions is unspeakable. The only thing worse is the NFL’s entrenched stance not to acknowledge or accept responsibility or any liability—as every other American business must adhere to. The NFL, by virtue of compounding billions of dollars each year, is above the law, legally and morally.

I played seven years with the Vikings. I am 52 years old, have been suffering from post-concussions since 1980, and was diagnosed with early dementia and Alzheimer’s at the young age of 49. The NFL insists concussions could not be remotely responsible, despite countless concussions or hitting the rock hard original Astro-Turf. My headaches, total lack of energy (I am reduced to sleeping most of the day after graduating with Honors from UCLA, and being accepted to law school) are only silly coincidences according to the NFL’s corrupt disability system … Continue reading this editorial

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TONY CLEMENS: “Thank God for the Ontario Health Insurance Plan”

Sunday, October 25th, 2009
Filed under: ThemesBum Deal

tony-unlocking-his-chair-june-2-2009

You know how much homeless blogger Tony Clemens’ recently prescribed medications cost per month???

Click here to find out >>

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In other news, Tony’s been “evicted” by the new guys in town >>

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UVic Professor Michael Prince (politely) challenges Vancouver’s reputation as a great city for people with disabilities

Saturday, October 24th, 2009
Filed under: Books & Book Reviews

Quoting Matthew Burrows, writing for straight.com:

“Vancouverites can be forgiven if they believe this is a great city for people with disabilities. After all, quadriplegic former Vancouver mayor Sam Sullivan and paraplegic athlete Rick Hansen are known around the world for their achievements. In addition, Vancouver—the largest city in a province that Premier Gordon Campbell has proclaimed the Best Place on Earth—is hosting the Paralympics in March. Talk to University of Victoria social-policy professor Michael Prince, however, and he’ll tell you he rolls his eyes “a little bit” at the boosterism. [October 22 marked] the launch of his book Absent Citizens: Disability Politics and Policy in Canada (University of Toronto Press). Although not quite a “slap in the face”, Prince said the book is a “challenge” to the conventional wisdom that we are doing enough for people with disabilities in this country.”

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Buy Michael Prince’s new book >>

Then…

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The always-entertaining Tiffiny asks: do you think it’s morally sound for a professional to provide sexual release for a person with a disability, in a group home environment?

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009
Filed under: ThemesWheelchairman of the Board, Campaign Watch

Screenshot_of_Family_Guy_2_wheelchairs_in_bed_title_graphic

Quoting Tiffiny’s October 5th column for disaboomlive.com:

I love hearing stories about sex doing more for humans [than] just helping them procreate. When sex is literally, as silly as this sounds, doing God’s work from making women feel beautiful again to helping men maintain healthy cardio health, I smile inside. When naughty “bad” things are actually good for you? Yeah, that makes life worth living. So when I read about a disabled man in a group home, paralyzed from the neck down and unable to talk, who was running over nurses and spilling trays, basically earning the title of “Official Group Home A**hole,” who was cured of his asshattery after getting some much needed manual stimulation (from one of the nurses no less) I thought, “Wow what a great nurse!” Obviously, it isn’t too surprising that after this 22 year old got some much needed release he was more pleasant to be around, but going from “belligerent” to “serene,” now that’s a big change. It exemplifies just how important sex is to the human psyche (and to overall mental health). But it makes you wonder how priests and nuns, and all the other celibates of the world, do it. Is it unnatural to abstain? A lot of people with disabilities are NOT getting laid. They’re not finding partners and for millions of them, it’s a frustrating daily predicament that never goes away. Try and finagle as they might, whether all they want is to masturbate, or find something even crazier like actual sex, it’s a disappointingly illusive endeavor. Can you imagine being shot down time and time again? This is why Belgium pays for it’s disabled citizens (if they want it) to have a sex worker visit on a monthly basis. The sad part about this story is that someone walked in on the nurse one day, she was swiftly fired, and the guy went back to being an insufferable a**hole. Life isn’t fair. It’s really too bad they weren’t more smart about it and did it off-site. What’s your opinion on all of this? As long as both adults are consenting (despite what the laws say), do you think it’s morally sound for a professional to provide sexual release for a person with a disability, in a group home environment?

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Read more of Tiffiny’s risqué columns

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FOLLOW UP: Stein Family Says Thank You, Looks To The Future

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009
Filed under: ThemesBlind Visionaries, Bum DealCampaign Watch, Irked Videos

Huffington Post:

“After a whirlwind week that saw their family featured on the front page of The Huffington Post (and Irked!) and $30,000 raised to help them pay their overwhelming medical bills, the Stein family is back with a message of gratitude and hope for the HuffPost community. TampaBay.com visited the Steins at home on Sunday morning. They discuss how amazed they are that the [online community] came out in such strong numbers to support them. Gary Stein thinks of them as a symbol of the hardships faced by families across America.

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