The 2003 Washington Seminar
The 2003 Washington Seminar
The Braille Monitor
March 2003
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The
2003 Washington Seminar
by Barbara Pierce
Priscilla
McKinley and Brian Miller of Iowa and Jerry Darnell of Louisiana enjoy
the student banquet.
In lots of ways this
was the largest and busiest Washington Seminar in our almost thirty years of
conducting this event early each year. The Capitol Holiday Inn provided us 200
sleeping rooms for about 500 visitors from across the country. An increasing
number of workshops, seminars, and meetings took place during the weekend preceding
our Monday morning descent into the halls and tunnels of Congress on our way
to meet with our legislators. Forty-seven states were represented at this year's
seminar. In fact, more than 200 people attended the banquet following the National
Association of Blind Students mid-winter conference on Saturday, February 1,
the first full day of pre-seminar activities.
As usual, the students
kicked off activities with their Friday evening party and then conducted an
excellent day-long seminar on Saturday. Also meeting that day were the lawyers
and, at the National Center for the Blind, the Research and Development Committee.
Dr. Fred Schroeder was the featured speaker at the Saturday evening student
banquet. As part of the festivities the students conducted their most successful
auction to date, raising funds for division activities during the coming year.
The
great gathering in meeting in the Columbia Room.
Sunday and Monday
mornings, buses ferried Federationists to Baltimore for a quick tour of the
National Center and a chance to browse in the Materials Center and the International
Braille and Technology Center.
Sunday afternoon before the Great Gathering In at 5:00
p.m., various events of interest took place in meeting rooms at the hotel: a
background session on the Help America Vote Act; a conference considering quality
orientation and mobility training; workshops on obtaining NFB-NEWSLINE funding
and making the case with state vocational rehabilitation agency officials for
quality blindness training; and a meeting of the National Association of Blind
Merchants.
Jim
Gashel and Jim McCarthy work on their electronic notetakers at the head
table while President Maurer addresses the crowd.
With all that to
do during the afternoon, one might have expected that by 5:00 p.m. Federationists
would have been anywhere but preparing for yet another meeting. But NFB members
are always ready to work hard, so by the time the Great Gathering In began in
the Columbia Room, no chairs, virtually no floor space for sitting, and very
little wall space for leaning were to be found. The area outside the meeting
room, which was equipped with loudspeakers, was full of those who could not
get any closer. President Maurer briefed the group on what has been happening
recently in the organization and with the capital campaign. Then Jim Gashel
and Jim McCarthy of the NFB Governmental Affairs Department reviewed the three
issues for discussion with Congress this year. The texts of the legislative
memorandum and the three fact sheets follow this article.
The
Mercury Room is almost always busy. Here, Sandy Halverson takes a phone
call at her post near the boxes of congressional reporting cards. Jim
Antonacci in the foreground gives a report.
For the remainder
of Sunday and throughout the next three days and evenings the Mercury Room became
the nerve center of the Washington Seminar. Sandy Halverson and her superb team
of volunteers assembled the schedule of congressional visits as they were turned
in and took reports after those visits. They entered the data in the computer
so that the staff knew where to appear for key meetings taking place on the
Hill. People came and went, gathering materials to assemble into presentation
folders to present to each legislator.
If you have never
experienced a Washington Seminar, you cannot fully appreciate the intense and
purposeful activity that goes on every hour of the day and many hours of the
night. It's gratifying to note how quickly and easily Federationists are absorbed
into the daily pace of our nation's capital. Cab drivers migrate to our hotel,
knowing that fares will be plentiful. The security guards at the entrances of
the House and Senate office buildings call to those coming in the doors to direct
them to the
The
hallway outside the Columbia Room just after the Sunday evening meeting
broke up.
security conveyer
belts. Those in the halls give casual directions before going on their way,
rightly presuming that blind citizens who have gotten themselves this far are
going to have very little trouble finding the offices for which they are looking.
By late Wednesday
the final reports were coming in, and the file boxes were being packed up for
another year. The Washington Seminar had come to a close, and the 2003 legislative
work of the National Federation of the Blind was just beginning.
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