From Governor Glendening's Mail Basket
From Governor Glendening's Mail Basket
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The Braille Monitor – October 2000 Edition
From Governor Glendening's Mail Basket
From the Editor: One of the projects many of us participated in during the
National Convention last summer was the postcard-writing campaign aimed at Maryland
Governor Parris Glendening. We hoped to make the case that people all over the
country urged him and the legislature to earmark $6,000,000 in the next budget
toward completion of the National Research and Training Institute for the Blind
on the grounds of the National Center for the Blind in south Baltimore. A flood
of postcards certainly went to the governor's office, but in the weeks since
the convention lots of folks have also written letters to him. The letters provide
a bit more scope for sharing our vision of the impact the Institute will have
on the lives and futures of America's blind citizens. Here, almost at random,
is a sample of these letters. We can only hope that Mr. Glendening or someone
on his staff pays attention to the opportunity they have at their finger tips
to make a significant difference in the lives of blind people everywhere. This
is what people said:
Kevan Worley
August 2, 2000
Kevan Worley
Denver, Colorado
Parris N. Glendening
Governor State of Maryland
Annapolis, Maryland
Dear Governor Glendening:
Many times over the past fifteen years I have had the opportunity to visit your
state. I have had the good fortune to visit the National Center for the Blind
in Baltimore, Maryland, seeking counsel, instruction, and support. When I learned
that the National Federation of the Blind was planning to build a national research
and training institute devoted to changing the way people look at blindness,
I pledged my time, energy, and effort to help make the new center a reality.
This new research and training institute will, of course, expand economic opportunity
for the citizens of Maryland, but it will also be the focal point for programs
and services for blind people all over this country. As a blind businessman
from Colorado who has achieved some success, in large part due to the programs
and philosophy that already emanate from the NFB National Headquarters in Baltimore,
I can assure you that lending any support to help build this cutting-edge facility
now will be of great benefit to society.
As a blind American from
Colorado I have taken great pleasure to pledge $35,000 of my own money to see
that research that will affect generations of blind people will continue. Of
course that kind of pledge is a great sacrifice for my family and me, but, if
it will mean greater services to blind children and the increasing number of
blind seniors, it will be worth it. I know that the National Federation of the
Blind has called upon you to assist in making several millions of dollars available
for this project. I just wanted you to know that many of us, not only in Maryland,
but all across the country, will benefit if you are able to help us.
Because of the vision of
our blind leaders we chose to relocate our National Headquarters to Baltimore
back in 1978. The National Federation of the Blind has grown and expanded, becoming
a vital part of the Baltimore economy. Of course this new national research
and training institute will help us continue our efforts to change what it means
to be blind, but it will also continue our support, expansion, and interdependence
with the Maryland economy.
Thank you very sincerely
for considering my comments.
Very truly yours,
Kevan Worley
President National Association
of Blind Merchants
August 16, 2000
Judy Sanders
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Judy Sanders
Dear Governor Glendening:
I am writing to express
my appreciation for the possibility that Maryland and, in particular, you can
be a real hero to blind Americans.
Many blind people are subject
to the charity of others. Well-meaning people try to find a way to make our
lives better. I remember my parents meeting with sighted professionals who told
them what would be best for me. Then, when I was a young adult, other sighted
people took over and tried to shape my life.
It was, therefore, a revelation
to me when I discovered that blind people could have a say in their own future
through the National Federation of the Blind. Because of the Federation I have
had the chance to work as a teacher of sighted children, a travel agent, a rehabilitation
specialist with blind seniors, and Director of the District office for Minnesota
Congressman Gerry Sikorski.
And now the Federation
is embarking on an exciting new venture. Our National Research and Training
Institute will provide a bright future for all blind citizens. Parents can take
comfort in the knowledge that much work is being done to ensure their blind
children will be well educated and qualified for productive employment. Newly
blind senior citizens will not end up in nursing homes because they have lost
their sight.
Your support of this initiative
is a win-win situation for the blind and the taxpayers of Maryland. Not only
will this project provide employment for many Marylanders, but blind people
from throughout the country and the world will come and spend their money in
your state. I thank you for making this possible.
Sincerely,
Judy Sanders
September 8, 2000
Barbara Pierce
Oberlin, Ohio
Dear Governor Glendening:
I write to you on behalf
of blind people and those who will become blind in the years ahead in the state
of Ohio. As you know, the National Federation of the Blind is working to build
the National Research and Training Institute in Baltimore. The benefits to the
city of this project are obvious: quality jobs, increased property value in
a marginal part of the city, and increased prestige for the community in which
cutting-edge research and instruction will be taking place.
All these advantages and
therefore arguments for substantial budget support from the state have undoubtedly
been made before and with greater specificity and persuasiveness. But I want
to assure you of the nationwide benefit the Institute will provide. At a time
when the numbers of those losing sight in their later years is growing significantly
and the number of effective teachers of blindness skills at every age level
is falling further and further behind the demand, we must find new and innovative
ways of meeting the need and training people to do the work with dedication
and skill. Someone must tackle the challenge of finding these new ways and tapping
new resources if we are to keep blind citizens living in and contributing to
their communities.
Every day I deal with
individual people losing sight or members of their families. These are mostly
older people, and I have to tell them how little help is out there for them.
I send the material developed by the NFB, and I send them to the overworked
and undertrained agencies charged with providing services. I conduct inservices
for the staff members of those agencies who know to come to the National Federation
of the Blind for help. I make a difference, and I make people feel better and
more hopeful, but I also know how inadequate my help is. We need more and better
materials. We need to develop coordinated programs of staff training and to
find effective methods for teaching people who have seen all their lives to
dare to set foot into the new and scary world of accomplishing things without
vision.
All this is part of what
the Institute will tackle. Blind people are in an excellent position to be effective
researchers and teachers. We know what works, and we carry conviction to those
we teach. Tomorrow's blind population needs what we can do as soon as the Research
and Training Institute begins its work. Maryland can have an impact on the lives
of people across the nation and around the world because NFB members work together
to compound the advances any of us make. We also pass along our discoveries
to people fighting these problems around the world. Please give us a chance
to make a significant difference.
I have talked about the
needs of seniors. I could have talked as easily about blind children. I was
not taught Braille as a young child, and I have paid the price for that neglect
all my life. Teachers still refuse to teach Braille to blind students with a
bit of sight, so the same sacrifices are being made by blind children today.
We know what should be done and how to do it. We can help parents insist on
Braille instruction and help teachers of the visually impaired learn to teach
it effectively.
Whether or not the NFB
gets the chance to make these differences may well rest with you and the Maryland
legislature. Please do what you can to change the course of the lives of all
America's blind citizens.
Cordially,
Barbara Pierce
September 10, 2000
Al Maneki
Dr. Alfred Maneki
Columbia, Maryland
Dear Governor Glendening,
The National Federation
of the Blind requested a $6 million appropriation in the 2002 budget. Please
give this request favorable consideration. Throughout your career you have demonstrated
a keen interest in all areas of education. As governor you have made substantial
improvements in elementary, secondary, and higher education throughout the state.
Since the National Federation of the Blind plans to provide training and research
in the fields of education and literacy for blind persons in this new facility,
you have another opportunity to advance your education legacy.
I am a blind mathematician.
I look forward to research on better methods of teaching mathematics to blind
students. There is also a great need for research in better methods to provide
mathematical materials in accessible formats to blind persons. Your assistance
in this project will lead to endless opportunities for blind people. I hope
you will advance the quality of life for blind people of today and of the future.
Thank you.
Sincerely,
Al Maneki
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