Promoting Harmony in the Field of Work with the Blind
Promoting Harmony in the Field of Work with the Blind
The Braille Monitor
August/September, 2003
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Promoting
Harmony in the Field of Work with the Blind:
Federal
Policies That Enhance Opportunity
by
Joanne Wilson
Joanne
Wilson prepares to deliver her convention remarks.
From the Editor: Tuesday
afternoon, July 1, Dr. Joanne Wilson, commissioner of the Rehabilitation Services
Administration, addressed the Convention of the National Federation of the Blind.
Here is an abbreviated version of her remarks:
After playing in a club
one night, Count Basie, the famous jazz musician, went to the manager rather
distraught and said, "This piano sounds terrible. I will not come back
until it's fixed." A few weeks later the manager of the club called Basie,
assured him that the piano was fixed, and invited him to come back and play
in the club. Once again, Count Basie sat down at the piano to play. Within a
few minutes he got up and went angrily to the manager. "This piano still
sounds terrible. I thought you said you got it fixed."
"I
did," said the manager. "I painted it."
In
the public rehabilitation system we are always looking for better ways to help
blind people and other people with disabilities get more independence and real,
high-quality employment. But often we spend time painting the piano. The challenge
in the public rehabilitation system is to look at why we do what we do.
Twenty
years ago a group of researchers at Harvard University wanted to see how the
environment affects perception. They took two groups of kittens and raised one
group in an environment that only had horizontal lines. They raised the other
group in an environment that had only vertical lines. When the kittens grew
up, they could not function in the dimension in which they had not been raised.
They had not had the sensory stimulation they needed to see in the other dimension.
In
the rehabilitation system we must look beyond traditional dimensions. One way
we can do this is to look at the business world and see what has worked. In
a difficult environment businesses have to cope with a struggling economy, reduced
budgets, consolidations, and competing priorities. Yet some businesses struggle
merely to survive while others thrive and expand. The difference is the way
an organization defines and uses its assets. Some businesses--not the very successful
ones--see their assets as only the traditional resources: staff, budget, technology,
buildings, and so on. They do not notice other under-utilized assets that can
be power resources for their business. Yet other businesses, those that are
innovative and successful, can identify and use their hidden assets. They can
set aside the traditional lens and see things in a different dimension.
Two
examples of these are MTV and ESPN X-Games. These two businesses are successful
even in an environment in which businesses just like them have not been successful.
They have realized that they need to really know and understand their consumers.
Only by direct interaction with their consumers can they really know what they
like and dislike. That's why at MTV the vice presidents actually go and live
in the homes of teenagers and view over an extended period what they really
like and don't like. ESPN has set up in malls and skating rinks, where teenagers
flock. They use these skating rinks as a lab in which to study and see what
folks really like and what they don't like.
Successful
organizations get feedback and innovative ideas from their consumers rather
than only their internal hierarchy. They realize that they can bring new ideas
through consumers from the outside in. The consumer connection can give them
a continual source of feedback that will help them improve their programs.
Consumer
groups are the hidden asset in the rehabilitation system. They are very under-utilized.
My boss, President Bush, really believes in involving consumer-based organizations
in local, state, and federal government. He values it and says, "We need
to look at consumer-based organizations if we are to improve government."
In the rehabilitation system we have a vast network of individuals, ideas, and
experiences that can serve significantly to improve our rehabilitation system.
We need to infuse our already strained system with thousands of experts, individuals
who are dedicated and motivated and have knowledge to help us work and improve
our system.
One
of the primary roles of the rehabilitation system is to empower people with
disabilities by giving them the confidence, the elevated expectations, the skills,
the training, the knowledge, and the equipment and services they need truly
to become independent people and get meaningful employment. Who do you know
that can do this any better than you here in this room? Consumer groups like
you provide core services that can really make a difference in the rehabilitation
system. CORE: C, commitment; O, opportunity; R, role models and mentoring; and
E, expertise.
Commitment.
Let's look at what commitment the National Federation of the Blind can offer
to the rehabilitation system, the commitment that since 1940 has helped shape
the rehabilitation system and has supplemented it with valuable services. Look
at the commitment each of you showed in order to come to this convention. You
spent time and money, took your Fourth of July vacation, and sacrificed to be
here. Every day you go out and do things that are going to help the rehabilitation
process. You are in schools talking with children to educate them about blindness.
You're working to educate policy makers. You're working on IEP's in the rehabilitation
system, helping other blind people to figure out what they want to do. You're
educating employers. You're sitting on advisory boards and our state rehabilitation
councils and doing thousands of other things that are going to make a difference
in our rehabilitation system.
Opportunity.
The National Federation of the Blind offers opportunities for other blind people
out there in this country. You heard a lot of that in the presidential report
this afternoon: America's Jobline; a scholarship program that we have seen at
this convention; NEWSLINE services; Slate Pals; involvement in local and state
affiliates, where people develop leadership and learn how to work at community
services.
Role
models. What more can you ask if you look here at this convention. How many
of you have been asked to mentor someone else? When you look around at this
convention and you see people who are reading Braille at 300 words a minute,
you think, "Maybe I can do that too." You see people traveling independently,
and you think, "Wow, there is a better way to get around." Consider
the jobs you can learn about around here--all the different kinds of jobs that
blind people are doing, and people who are willing to serve as role models and
mentors for you. Advocacy--we learn advocacy and pass that on to other blind
people.
Expertise.
Well, the collective knowledge and experience gathered here from the minds and
hearts and beliefs of blind people can be used in our rehabilitation system
through our NFB centers, through the Braille Monitor, Future Reflections,
and the Kernel Books and other publications. We can look at lots and lots of
things that we do every day to make a difference. Our new national research
and training institute will provide expertise. The International Braille and
Technology Center serves this purpose. The new national blindness professional
certification board is making changes in the field of orientation and mobility.
Each
of you working every day on state and national legislation is truly shaping
the rehabilitation system and making things different for blind people. These
are some of the hidden assets that need to be used in our rehabilitation system,
and when that happens, there will be more involvement and more jobs and independence
for blind people. But any successful organization knows that it's not just enough
to associate with or intellectually understand consumers. They need to have
a dedicated and experiential understanding of the people that they serve.
A
hospital recently wanted to improve its services. It asked a cross section of
its employees to think of the best service experiences they had ever had. They
thought of the service at Disney World and flying first-class on airlines. Then
they were asked to remember these experiences as they became patients in their
own hospital. They wore those gowns that flap open in the back. They lay in
bed for twenty-four hours. They tried to walk around with an IV attached, and
they ate hospital food. They found out that the hospital experience did not
measure up to the first-class services they had been thinking about. They decided
that they needed to make changes in their hospital, not because of an analytical
study or statistics. They were prepared to act because of their experience,
their knowledge, their personal belief about what was important and true.
In
the traditional rehabilitation system we think that, if you are a professional
in the rehabilitation world, you should not associate with and certainly not
go to conferences, conventions, and local chapter meetings of people with disabilities,
of people who are blind. We need to change this kind of thinking. We need to
have immersion experiences within the rehabilitation system. Through immersion
experience we learn a philosophy about disability. We learn techniques that
work for blind people and those that don't. We learn about the needs and the
wants of blind people and understand them better so that we can be better professionals.
The
rehabilitation system has a whole network of volunteers who are willing and
ready to work in an innovative way to help improve our system and make it even
better. As commissioner of the rehabilitation services, I hope that our system
actually recognizes and respects the involvement, the hidden assets of consumers.
We need to infuse into our system the values and expertise of consumers even
though this may cause a lot of hostility and fear in some parts of our system.
What
are some specific ways we can do this? I hope that we can get to the point where
blind people who walk into our system are referred by their counselors to the
National Federation of the Blind and other disability groups so that they can
have the kind of mentoring, role modeling, commitment, and opportunity that
I have been describing. I have been successful in trying to get some extra funding
that will be available for state agencies to apply for to contract with consumer-controlled
membership organizations of folks with disabilities to provide mentoring experiences
to transition-age youth, kids who are in high school.
That
means that the National Federation of the Blind can work directly with young
people, serving as mentors and role models and helping change the system for
them. We in the rehabilitation system believe that we too need to do immersion
experiences. That's why seven of my staff from RSA are here at this conference
with me, including our two new regional commissioners, Joe Cordova and Noel
Nightingale.
We
are trying in little ways and big ways in our central office to include consumers
in our processes--a simple thing like putting the National Federation of the
Blind and other consumer groups on our mailing list for notices of what's happening
in RSA; involving the National Federation of the Blind and other consumer groups
in our leadership training; having consumers be on our committees and work groups
and task forces; and being invited to speak at and help plan our conferences.
You could see this last November in Albuquerque, New Mexico, when RSA put on
the first conference for residential training centers in the country. We have
ninety residential training centers in this country, and for the first time
folks got together and the consumer voice was heard because consumers were on
the committee and consumers helped put on the program. It was a different kind
of conference.
What
else are we doing in RSA? Well, our publication, the American Rehabilitation
Journal, is going to have articles from consumers about consumers, and the
voice of consumers is going to be heard. Our grantees are putting out publications
such as Jim Omvig's book, Freedom for the Blind. We are putting out other
training publications on empowerment and nontraditional ways of teaching orientation
and mobility.
You
may ask if this system can really work. Could we really have a system in which
consumers are truly part of the rehabilitation process, really work with our
state agencies and have a different kind of rehabilitation? This was a question
we asked in 1958 when Dr. Jernigan, Dr. tenBroek, and our Federation leaders
got together and said, "Can we use this concept?" They developed the
first model, the Iowa Commission for the Blind.
Many
in this room are products of that first model. I saw it first-hand, and this
is what I saw: staff people who were different from the norm, believing in blind
people. They had a positive attitude about blindness, high expectations, and
a defined philosophy about blindness different from anything else around. How
did they get that philosophy? They got it because they were immersed in and
surrounded by the National Federation of the Blind and blind people. They went
to conventions like this one, both state and national. They read material that
had been written by blind consumers. They had discussions. They spent time just
hanging around with blind people and listening to what they had to say and learning
from them.
They
passed that philosophy on to us students through day-to-day contacts. They did
it by having us go to conventions and local chapter meetings. They did it by
having us read the material that had been written by the blind people who had
gone before us. They had discussions with us about using sleepshades and accepting
free bus tickets just because you're blind. I remember the famous dishwashing
tape, in which we talked about the hierarchy of sight. Why do we use the word
"blind"? Do we need special gardens for the blind? Should we pay for
banquet tickets for state legislators and why? The staff and the students learned
a defined philosophy of blindness, and we learned it from the collective experience
and knowledge of other blind people. That's what made it different.
We
were taught the skills of blindness, skills that went beyond the normal skills
taught to other blind students around the country. We were pushed to do far
more, and where did they get that notion? Because they had hung around blind
people. They had hung around the National Federation of the Blind and realized
that blind people could do more than the stereotyped notions that existed before.
We were pushed to learn Braille. We were pushed not just to cook ordinary things.
I remember one time being told to go buy a number of small appliances for the
kitchen. They trusted that I could really do it. I remember going to the state
fair and making thousands and thousands of cookies in front of state fair visitors.
That was the kind of cooking we did. I remember taking cane travel. We didn't
just do the ordinary routes; we did drop-offs. We did the 5.6-mile-long walks
in all sorts of situations.
Beyond
that, we did woodworking and water skiing. We went to the governor's ball. That
was part of the stretching of mobility. We were surrounded by role models. Where
do these role models come from? I remember seeing a blind person walking through
big snow drifts, catching the bus, and going home. I thought, "Wow!"
I remember being invited to blind people's homes for dinner and thinking, "Wow!
they cooked this whole meal themselves!" I remember seeing a blind mom
taking care of her kids, and I thought, "Wow." I remember seeing blind
people knitting and dancing and doing all kinds of things.
But
the most important role modeling they did was when I decided I wanted to be
a teacher. They didn't say, "We don't think that as a blind person you
can be a teacher." Instead they introduced me to members of a consumer
group, members of the National Federation of the Blind, who were blind teachers.
They had a resource to show me. If they could do it, I could do it too. I got
new perspective at this training center. I learned informed choice because I
could see what other blind people liked and didn't like. They gave me perspective
so I could make good choices about my employment and how independent I was going
to be.
I
learned advocacy because I saw consumers, other blind people, members of the
National Federation of the Blind, going to the state legislature, going on demonstrations,
writing letters to the editor and politicians about situations where discrimination
was taking place. I saw the power and the strength of an organized voice. So
when I needed advocacy and when I was discriminated against in my student teaching
(they were not going to allow me to student teach), I knew that I could do something
about it. I saw that blind people could make the agency accountable. We knew
firsthand the efficiency of the agency. By collectively working together, we
could make services accountable to us.
Any
philosopher, any great religion tells you that to be a full person you need
to learn how to give. In this first model of consumers working with the state
agency, they taught us how to give, to be truly whole people. They used the
National Federation of the Blind as a mechanism to teach us that. Long after
we had stopped being students, the National Federation of the Blind was there
to keep giving us the boosts, the shots in the arm, so that we could truly live
independent lives. But beyond that, it gave us a chance to mentor others: to
do the candy sales, to give the speeches, to do thousands of other things that
provided us the opportunity to give back.
These hidden resources
help. They helped me and they helped other blind people lead independent lives
and get real jobs. The National Federation of the Blind can help the rehabilitation
system reach another level of service--not just struggle to survive, but expand
and thrive. The National Federation of the Blind can help the rehabilitation
system--not just put on another coat of paint, but really offer core services
that will help blind people lead independent lives and get real jobs.
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