Partnership
Partnership
The Braille Monitor
August/ September 1997
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(contents)
Mae Nelson
Director, Louisiana Rehabilitation Services
Partnership:
Working in Cooperation with Consumers
by Mae Nelson
Joanne Wilson: I've been asked to introduce
our next speaker, Miss Mae Nelson. When I was asked to introduce her, I thought
of this saying, "It takes knowledge to build bridges, but it takes wisdom
to know where to put them." As the director of the Department of Social
Services under Governor Roemer for four years and then for the past ten years
the director of Louisiana Rehabilitation Services, Mae Nelson has worked tirelessly
to get rid of the dead wood and to build a strong agency with strong and just
policy procedures and a wonderful staff, many of whom are here at this convention.
Mae has learned and has had the wisdom to know that, if she was going to build
a strong agency, she needed to bridge the gap of suspicion, distrust, and frustration
that had been held by blind people for many years in this state. She developed
a relationship with the National Federation of the Blind that has built a strong
agency. We in Louisiana have learned that, if we're going to have a strong agency,
we need a strong National Federation of the Blind. If we're going to have a
strong National Federation of the Blind of Louisiana, we need a strong agency.
I would like now to present the Director of the Louisiana Rehabilitation Services,
Miss Mae Nelson. [applause]
First I want to add my welcome to the
National Federation of the Blind and thank you for selecting Louisiana as the
site for your 1997 convention. I'm very pleased to have this opportunity to
be introduced to you as the director of Louisiana Rehabilitation Services (LRS)
and as the public official responsible for blind services in Louisiana. More
important, I'm an individual who believes in the ability of blind people. [applause]
One has only to review participating
organizations at this convention to have one's commitment to the abilities of
blind people renewed. What abilities do blind people have? The ability to be
students, secretaries, merchants, lawyers, doctors, and many other professions
when preparation and opportunity present themselves.
The theme of my comments this afternoon
is "Partnership: Working in Cooperation with Consumers." I realize
that, in order for blind people to achieve certain goals, individuals may need
temporary assistance from Louisiana Rehabilitation Services. I believe that
we at Louisiana Rehabilitation Services have demonstrated that we are willing
to work with the National Federation of the Blind to change what it means to
be blind. Louisiana's shining example of cooperation and partnership toward
providing blind people with preparation to take advantage of opportunities is
the Louisiana Center for the Blind at Ruston. We are very proud of the Center,
their accomplishments, and the alumni who are well represented at this conference
and throughout the nation. They provide excellent opportunities to blind people
so that they may be prepared for independence and employment.
Since we believe in the Louisiana Center
for the Blind and, more important, the Director Joanne Wilson, we have consistently
provided resources for the expansion of services at the Center. Louisiana Rehabilitation
Services' most recent cooperative project with the Center has been a total of
one million dollars in grant funds to expand the Center's programs at Ruston
[applause]--not to fund the projects and services that I as director felt were
needed by the blind, but to carry out the values and ideas that were presented
to me by the Director Joanne Wilson.
LRS has provided funding for the Center's
STEP Program, which is a summer training and employment program. This is a new
pilot this year that we are implementing with the Center. This pilot is a transition
program for students. Joanne and I have been talking for years about the inability
of vocational rehabilitation--because we are an employment program--to begin
early enough in the process with students to help them with their self-esteem
and to lift their expectations about what they can do as blind persons. This
year we will start a pilot program where we will take students in the lower
grades and track them through graduation and through their training and college
programs to demonstrate in Louisiana and to provide additional funding and projects
to show that, if students are received early enough in the Center for the Blind
program and provided with opportunities, those students can achieve whatever
goals they set. [applause]
We have utilized the Center as a site
for Louisiana Rehabilitation Services staff training. We feel that our staff,
if they are to believe in the services that can be and should be provided to
people who are blind, need to be exposed to the philosophy and programs at the
Center.
Our cooperation and a cooperative endeavor
with the Center enabled Louisiana to be the first state to come online with
the Newsline(TM) service, pioneered by the National Federation of the Blind.
LRS funded this project with federal grants for the older blind secured through
the grant-writing skills of Suzanne Mitchell, who is a Federationist. I had
the forethought and common sense to hire Suzanne Mitchell as my assistant and
executive director of Blind Services almost three years ago. LRS has also provided
additional financial support to add a pilot job information line to the news
service.
Last year Suzanne came to my office to
discuss with me the shortage of orientation and mobility instructors in the
state and wanted to know from me if I would commit to and if we could write
a grant to try to bring this training to Louisiana. I don't think Suzanne is
quite used yet to coming to my office, proposing an idea, and sitting down together
and coming up with strategies to make it happen. Suzanne wrote the grant, and,
through this cooperative project with Louisiana Tech University for O &
M specialist training, it is now coming online, and the project has come to
fruition. Also last year Suzanne came into my office to say that the need was
overwhelming. We needed additional resources; could she write another grant?
I said, "Sure." So we wrote another grant, and we have secured additional
funding to provide an additional instructor so that we may enroll additional
students in that program through the Center for the Blind and Louisiana Tech.
In terms of partnership, we must thank
our grant partners for those grant funds. If this sounds like bragging, it is
not. I wish to convey to you that Louisiana Rehabilitation Services has made
an investment in changing what it means to be blind in Louisiana. [applause]
We are also a participant in the National
Federation of the Blind's Comprehensive Braille Training Project. Counselors
have received their first in a series of Braille-training activities sponsored
by this project. Three counselors and Louisiana Rehabilitation Services Assistive
Technologies Program specialists have attended Braille technology training at
the National Center for the Blind.
Louisiana Rehabilitation Services regards
the National Federation of the Blind as an excellent resource for consumers
and staff and encourages the distribution of information and publications routinely
to benefit consumers. The Braille Monitor is included in our library in a prominent
place. Our counselors and staff participate in local and statewide meetings
of the National Federation of the Blind. All of our counselors and others of
our staff have been in attendance at this conference, not by mandate, but by
choice. They are true partners in changing what it means to be blind.
I have a lot of other issues here that
I could go on and on with that would demonstrate our commitment in philosophy
and resources, but due to time I will leave some of it out. However, I do want
to say that at our first meeting Joanne and I had a very tenuous kind of meeting,
and not understanding the relationship between the Federation and some commissioners,
I did not understand why it took almost eight years for me to receive from NFB
the Administrator of the Year Award, but it is one of my most prized possessions.
It is because I know through the Federation that, if I received the Administrator
of the Year Award, I got it the old fashioned way--I earned it. [applause]
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