KEEPING THE RENT CURRENT PIONEERINGIN THE COURTS
KEEPING THE RENT CURRENT PIONEERINGIN THE COURTS
KEEPING THE RENT CURRENT PIONEERING
IN THE COURTS
by Hazel Staley
The strength of the National Federation of the
Blind lies in
its members from the very young to the not so
young. Here one of
our senior members tells about her life. Her
story reminds me of
something I frequently tell people about us: We
laugh and cry,
work and play, hope and dream--just like you.
Here is what she
has to say:
I was number five in a line of six children born
to a farm
family in Union County, North Carolina in August
of 1916. I lost
my sight when I was two years old as a result of
meningitis. I
graduated from the North Carolina School for the
Blind and
received by A.B. degree from Flora McDonald
College (now St.
Andrews) with majors in French and English and a
minor in
psychology.
When I first entered Flora McDonald, the faculty
was at a
loss as to how to deal with me. There had been
blind students
there before, but they had all majored in music
and the faculty
didn't know how I was going to do the lab work in
science, which
was a requirement for an A.B. degree.
After considerable discussion they decided to put
me on
probation for the first semester to see if I
could make it.
Science just isn't my bag, but I felt diminished
by being on
probation; so I decided to do whatever I had to
do to prove that
I could handle the lab. My other subjects came
easy to me; so I
zeroed in on science and made the honor roll that
first semester.
I had hoped to teach English in the state
secondary school
system; but finding this field closed to blind
people, I enrolled
in the graduate school of social work at the
University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill. I was employed as a
social worker with
the North Carolina Commission for the Blind for
almost six years.
I met and married Bob Staley and resigned my
position. Bob
was in the U.S. Army, and I wanted to be free to
go wherever he
went. That was in 1947. Our only son, Ken, was
born in 1951. Bob
died of lung cancer in 1986. I have two lovely
little
granddaughters.
We were stationed at Fort Benning, Georgia, when
Ken entered
school, and I immediately got involved in the
PTA. I served as
vice president and president of the PTA, and I
think I must have
served as the chairman of almost every committee
there was. I
received a lifetime PTA membership from the state
of Georgia.
One day in 1969 (I was again living in Charlotte,
North
Carolina) my employer, the director of the local
agency for the
blind, told me that a group of blind people
wanted to meet in our
conference room on Sunday afternoon, and that I
should come and
be responsible for opening and closing the
building.
That meeting turned out to be one of the best
things that
ever happened to me. Leaders of the National
Federation of the
Blind had come to organize a chapter of the
Federation in
Charlotte. I had never heard of the Federation,
but I realized at
once that its philosophy had been mine all my
life. I joined that
day and immediately became active in the
movement.
I have lived a very full life. I served two years
as
president of my homeowners' association and have
been teaching
Sunday School for more than twenty years. I have
also served as
president of my church's Women's Missionary
Society and as
director of church training. In 1978 I was named
Charlotte's
Outstanding Citizen and in 1989 I received the
Jacobus tenBroek
Award for my service in the National Federation
of the Blind.
Someone has said that service to others is the
rent we pay
for the space we occupy on earth. I plan to keep
the rent on my
space current.When it came time to compete for a
job, I was lucky. Very
often when an employer interviews a blind person,
the only
characteristic considered is blindness. But the
judge
interviewing me was different. He wanted someone
who understood
medical terminology and who could take medical
testimony and get
it right.
He was delighted to find someone with both court
reporting
and medical terminology skills. In his view my
years of
experience in transcribing medical records
outweighed my
inexperience in court reporting. I guess he
figured that my
blindness was my problem; and if I had worked out
the techniques
to be a successful medical transcriber, I could
do the same for
court reporting. How refreshing it was to find
this common sense
attitude, and how many of our problems will be
solved when more
employers come to view blindness in this way.
I loved my job as a court reporter; and I am
grateful to the
National Federation of the Blind not only for the
technical
expertise, which made it possible, but for the
emotional support
as I waded through these untried waters.
My job ended with a legislative decision to
replace county
court reporters with tape recorders--a decision
I'm confident
will be reversed at a later date, but because of
my positive
experience, many other blind persons are
considering this as a
career opportunity, which never would have
happened without the
National Federation of the Blind.
Share a Comment