Not With a Bang, But a Giggle
Not With a Bang, But a Giggle
[PHOTO/CAPTION: Peggy Elliott]
Not with a Bang, But a Giggle:
NAC Takes Leave of the Century
by Peggy Elliott
From the Editor: For some years now, NFB Second Vice President
Peggy Elliott has provided occasional reports on the slow demise of the National
Accreditation Council for Agencies Serving the Blind and Visually Handicapped (NAC). There
hasn't been much movement to report for a while, so we haven't had an update for a couple
of years. But we thought that, since the decade is about to end, it is worth cataloging
NAC's activities during the nineties, such as they have been. This is what Peggy says:You
know how there are some subjects that just make you giggle? Well NAC is one of those
subjects for me. Not the least of the causes for chuckling is that most people in the
blindness field today don't even remember what NAC is or why its name should cause such
merriment.
Peggy Elliott
NAC, the National Accreditation Council for Agencies Serving the Blind and Visually
Handicapped, wasn't always quite such a laughing matter. When NAC was founded over thirty
years ago, the Federation itself was barely twenty-five years old and still working to
spread throughout the country. The agency powers in control at that time could see what
was coming. They had, according to them, been appointed—even if only by
themselves—to decide what was best for the blind. That's why they were agency powers.
The blind were, puzzlingly to these powers, organizing among ourselves. Worse, from their
point of view, we were deciding for ourselves what we thought was best for the blind, and
our decisions often included criticism of existing agency practices. After all, who likes
to be criticized?
So the agency network decided to do something about it. At that time it was pretty much
all men at the top, so the old boy network swung into action and created a captive
accrediting agency. The basic concept was: I'll accredit you, you'll accredit me, and
we'll jointly tell the public what great guys we are. That'll keep the public adulation
and funding for helping the unfortunate blind flowing our way and fend off the pesky
Federation blind movement.
It was a great idea, and it might have worked except for the pesky Federation. The
in-group named itself the National Accreditation Council for Agencies Serving the Blind
and Visually Handicapped, not only a mouthful of a name but a protective one. Who could be
against national or accreditation or serving the blind? To top off its opening move, NAC
invited Dr. Jernigan, the Federation president, to sit on its board. He debated the point
and decided to try, in order to see if anything positive could be salvaged from this
obvious attack upon self-organization by the blind. The board turned out to be packed with
old boys from the network, interspersed with the occasional do-gooder friend of a network
member. Dr. Jernigan resigned in the face of such a stacked deck, and Federationists began
picketing NAC meetings, chanting and singing our determination to make our own decisions
for ourselves. Most of the songs and chants were wry, taunting, scornful of the old boys
and their desire to clutch power for power's sake.
In the beginning NAC claimed that it was going to set standards for, as it put the
matter, the "universe" of 500 agencies for the blind. In reality NAC standards
were largely drawn from existing safety codes such as fire and building codes, adorned
with the occasional paragraph from a management text and garnished with condescending
attitudes toward the blind. I remember NAC had a standard for a while that required the
agency to have a place to hang canes when blind people came in the front door, making the
assumption that the canes were so useless that, once inside a building, they needed to be
efficiently gotten out of the way. The blind jeered and told legislators across the
country who funded NAC-accredited public agencies about the waste of money for such
farcical accreditation.
NAC hit its high point in 1986 when the list of accredited agencies reached 104. As you
will see from the maps that appear with this article, NAC's course has been downhill ever
since.
An amusing pastime for Federationists during these past thirty years of NAC's existence
has been to try to come up with a single reason to explain why on earth any agency would
want NAC accreditation. For much of NAC's life the cost has been higher than the cost for
other accrediting bodies, though now it's lower;
NAC's list has always contained agency after agency notorious among the blind people it
claims to serve for ineffective and patronizing service; NAC has never found an applicant
for accreditation unworthy, raising the question (and a giggle) about the purpose of such
a low standard; and no self-respecting agency can associate with NAC while keeping a
straight face and cordial relations with the blind community it serves. To want NAC
accreditation is at the same time a rejection of the opinions of the blind community. So
why would any agency seek expensive, meaningless, insulting, offensive accreditation?
If anyone finds out, please let me know. The only answer I know of is the wish to
remain in some desiccated old boy network, and that makes me laugh. Who on earth would
want to be a part of that? But there are apparently a few folks who haven't gotten the
word.
What do these people think they're doing by hanging on to empty accreditation and, by
golly, paying for it when virtually the whole blindness community thinks it's a joke? Look
at the maps. Look at the numbers. Consider whether or not a NAC-accredited agency in your
state—if there is one—is better than the rest, which is basically the claim made
by NAC. As the ancients asked: cui bono—Who benefits from NAC? It's obviously not the
blind, and it's obviously not most agencies.
Here's a summary of the current state of NAC accreditation by category: no vocational
rehabilitation agencies are still accredited (unless you count Alabama; see note). Only 18
percent of workshops and 15 percent of schools for the blind retain their association with
this national laughingstock of accreditation. Nearly half of the agencies still paying for
their association with NAC are not the mainline agencies listed in the three categories
above.
Note: Alabama is the special case just mentioned. When we started keeping track of
these statistics, Alabama was listed as a single entity which encompassed both the school
and the V.R. agency. Thinking that it was not appropriate to have a two-for-one in the
count, we chose to count the accreditation as a school one. We could have chosen to go the
other way and count it as V.R.; that's just the way the flip of the coin landed. So aside
from Alabama, there are now no other statewide agencies providing V.R. services on NAC's
list of accredited agencies. I still think it's a giggle that NAC is willing to accredit
two separate functions with one accreditation. But I mention this merely as a matter of
disclosure.
At the beginning of the decade ninety-seven agencies were members of NAC, willing to
pay for NAC accreditation. As of June, 1999, that number has dwindled to forty-six.
Following is the list of those forty-six agencies organized alphabetically by state, a
chart recording that decade-long slide, and two NAC maps. The first shows NAC's
penetration of the country in 1991; the second reflects NAC's sharply reduced impact
today.
The NAC Roll Call of Shame
ALABAMA
Alabama Institute for Deaf and Blind
ARIZONA
Foundation for Blind Children
ARKANSAS
Lions World Services for the Blind
FLORIDA
Conklin Center for Multihandicapped Blind
Florida School for the Deaf and the Blind
Independence for the Blind Inc.
The Lighthouse for the Visually Impaired
and Blind, Inc.
Lighthouse of Broward County, Inc.
Mana-Sota Lighthouse for the Blind, Inc.
Miami Lighthouse for the Blind
Pinellas Center for the Visually Impaired,
Inc.
Tampa Lighthouse for the Blind
Visually Impaired Persons of Southwest
Florida, Inc.
GEORGIA
Blind and Low Vision Services of North
Georgia
Center for the Visually Impaired, Inc.
Georgia Academy for the Blind
Savannah Association for the Blind, Inc.
ILLINOIS
Chicago Lighthouse for People Who Are
Blind or Visually Impaired
Deicke Center for Visual Rehabilitation
INDIANA
Indiana School for the Blind
IOWA
Genesis Vision Rehabilitation Institute (Genesis Medical Center)
KANSAS
Envision
MAINE
Maine Center for the Blind and Visually
Impaired
MARYLAND
Maryland School for the Blind
MICHIGAN
Upshaw Institute for the Blind
Association for the Blind and Visually
Impaired Visually Impaired Center, Inc.
MISSOURI
Alphapointe Association for the Blind
NEW HAMPSHIRE
New Hampshire Association for the Blind
NEW YORK
Association for the Visually Impaired,
Inc.
Elizabeth Pierce Olmsted M.D Center for
the Visually Impaired (formerly Blind Association of Western
New York)
New York Institute for Special Education
NORTH DAKOTA
North Dakota School for the Blind
OHIO
Cincinnati Association for the Blind
Clovernook Center for the Blind
Sight Center of Toledo
Vision Center of Central Ohio Inc.
OKLAHOMA
Parkview School (Oklahoma School for the
Blind)
PENNSYLVANIA
Pittsburgh Vision Services
Susquehanna Association for the Blind and
Vision Impaired
SOUTH DAKOTA
South Dakota School for the Blind and
Visually Impaired
TENNESSEE
Alliance for the Blind and Visually Impaired, Inc. (Senior Services)
Ed Lindsey Industries for the Blind, Inc.
Lions Volunteer Blind Industries, Inc.
UTAH
Utah Schools for the Deaf and the Blind
WASHINGTON
Lighthouse for the Blind, Inc.
Summary of Data for Chart of NAC's Additions and Losses This Decade:
Year 1990, 97 accredited agencies
Year 1991, added 5, lost 7, Net Loss of 2, Total Left: 95
Year 1992, added 0, lost 15, Net Loss of 15, Total Left: 80
Year 1993, added 2, lost 8, Net Loss of 6, Total Left: 74
Year 1994, added 2, lost 7, Net Loss of 5, Total Left: 69
Year 1995, added 0, lost 7, Net Loss of 7, Total Left: 62
Year 1996, added 1, lost 4, Net Loss of 3, Total Left: 59
Year 1997, added 0, lost 6, Net Loss of 6, Total Left: 53
Year 1998-present, added 0, lost 7, Net Loss of 7, Total Left: 46
Total, added 10, lost 61, Net Loss of 51
[PHOTO DESCRIPTION: This NAC map shows the states that had more than one NAC-accredited
agency in 1991 as dark. They are AR, AZ, CA, FL, GA, IL, LA, ME, MI, MS, NY, OH, OK, PA,
TN, TX, WA, and WI. The states with only one NAC-accredited agency as of 1991 have
cross-hatching. They are AL, HI, IA, IN, KS, MD, MA, MN, MO, NH, NJ, NM, ND, SD, UT, and
WV. The states with no NAC-accredited agencies in 1991 are white. They are Ak, CO, CT, DE,
DC, ID, KY, MT, NE, NV, NC, OR, RI, SC, VT, VI, and WY.]
[PHOTO DESCRIPTION: This map shows the following states with more than one
NAC-accredited agency as of 1999. They are dark in color: FL, GA, IL, MI, NY, OH, PA, and
TN. The states with just one NAC-accredited agency this year are cross-hatched. They are
AL, AZ, AR, IN, IA, KS, ME, MD, MO, NH, ND, OK, SD, UT, and WA. The states boasting a
NAC-free environment this year are white. They are AL, CO, CT, DE, DC, HI, ID, KY, LA, MA,
MN, MS, MT, NE, NV, NJ, NM, NC, OR, PR, RI, SC, TX, VT, VA, WV, and WY.]
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