Presidential Report, 7/93
Presidential Report, 7/93
PRESIDENTIAL
REPORT
National Federation of the Blind
DALLAS, TEXAS, JULY 6, 1993
by Marc Maurer
During the past twelve months the National Federation of the
Blind has experienced substantial progress. Our extensive programs have expanded,
and our activities have diversified. As we gather for this convention, our feelings
are harmonious and enthusiastic. This by no means suggests that we are passive.
There is a restless, throbbing energy throughout the Federation. That driving
force is focused, and we are finding solutions to our problems.
Within our movement (the organized blind movement) there is
a place for blind professionals, for blind students, for parents of blind children
and the children themselves, for blind merchants, for blind workers in industry
and the sheltered shops, for administrators and workers in the field of work
with the blind, for sighted family members and friends, for blind people hunting
work, and for blind retirees—for everybody. The only requirements are that
we possess belief in the founding principles of our movement and that we be
willing to put that belief into practice. We have forged an agreement. Our organization
is for everybody—everybody, that is, who is prepared to work, to believe,
and to dream. As we prepare for the year ahead, and as we review our progress
during the past twelve months, that commitment remains the vital connective
tissue of our organization.
Increasingly the National Federation of the Blind is recognized
by governmental agencies, nonprofit institutions, and commercial companies as
the most knowledgeable organization in the nation regarding blindness. The Golden
Corral Restaurant chain provides activity books to the children who come to
dine. One of these books contains a story about a blind child named April, who
travels in time. April is depicted using a cane and reading Braille. We were
asked to review the story and offer comments. Included in this Golden Corral
Restaurant publication is a message from the Federation, which says: "For
more information about blindness, contact the National Federation of the Blind."
This booklet is scheduled to appear in September. Our message will be included
in each copy distributed—all two million of them.
Our interaction with Golden Corral Restaurants is indicative
of a growing phenomenon. Ever more frequently the National Federation of the
Blind is consulted when the subject of blindness is being considered. When one
of the readers of "Dear Abby" wrote to inquire about blindness and
newspapers for the blind, "Dear Abby" called us. When the Washington
Post needed background information about the capabilities of blind people, it
called the National Federation of the Blind. When editors at the Simon and Schuster
publishing company were seeking information about Braille literacy, they called
us. When planners at the Senate Printing Office wanted to know the best way
to produce Braille, they visited the National Center for the Blind.
The National Federation of the Blind was instrumental in making
the 1993 presidential inauguration accessible to the blind. Several of the documents
prepared by the inaugural committee were Brailled by the National Federation
of the Blind for distribution to blind participants in the inauguration ceremonies.
The inauguration was carried on television nationwide. The visual portions of
the broadcast were described for blind people in the television audience through
the Descriptive Video Service. One of the major sponsors of this descriptive
video broadcast, prepared by WGBH television of Boston, was the National Federation
of the Blind.
On November 16, 1990, on the fiftieth birthday of our movement,
we established the National Braille and Technology Center for the Blind. Because
of the scope of activity in this Center, it has been renamed the International
Braille and Technology Center for the Blind. This facility houses the most extensive
collection of technological devices for the blind anywhere in the United States—or,
for that matter, the world. We are committed to including among the devices
in the Center at least one of every piece of useful hardware that can be obtained
(along with all of the useful software packages) capable of producing information
in speech, in refreshable Braille, or in hard copy Braille. Although this Center
is less than three years old, it has already outgrown its original quarters,
a spacious demonstration hall twenty-six feet wide and one hundred twenty feet
long with accompanying offices and classrooms. Nothing like it exists (or has
ever existed) anywhere in the world.
Available to be examined in the International Braille and Technology
Center for the Blind today are twenty-five kinds of speech synthesizers; five
kinds of stand-alone reading machines; nine kinds of computer-based reading
systems; eight kinds of refreshable Braille displays; two kinds of Braille laptop
computers; seven kinds of portable electronic note takers; twenty kinds of Braille
embossers; nine kinds of Braille translation software; twenty kinds of screen
review programs; five kinds of printers for creating Braille and print on the
same page; numerous pieces of miscellaneous software, such as scientific calculators,
banking programs, speech-based reference materials, database managing systems,
and other computer programs; miscellaneous hardware, such as graphics devices;
a talking cash register; and the computers needed to make all of this work.
The second floor of the Johnson Street wing in the main building
at the National Center for the Blind is presently being remodeled to house the
ever-expanding International Braille and Technology Center for the Blind. In
addition to extensive demonstration space there will be eleven new offices,
meeting facilities, a museum, and a kitchen. The International Braille and Technology
Center for the Blind will, in these new quarters, be more than two and a half
times as large as it is today.
One aspect of the Technology Center is our computer bulletin
board, NFB NET. This service makes available by telephone, to people with a
computer and computer modem, information about blindness, services for the blind,
the organized blind movement, computer technology of interest to the blind,
computer programs, and suggestions that will improve information availability
to the blind. In addition, this service provides a communications system where
topics of interest to the blind can be researched and discussed. There have
been 9,215 calls to the bulletin board within the past twelve months. There
have been 1,924 files sent to the board by phone, and over 6,000 transmissions
of information from our service.
The International Braille and Technology Center for the Blind
is valuable because it brings opportunities to blind people who would not otherwise
have them. But this is only part of the reason for its existence. The cooperation
among agencies doing work with the blind, organizations involved in the blindness
system, and blind consumers is stimulated and enhanced through meetings that
are planned to discuss technological applications and related matters. In 1991
the National Federation of the Blind sponsored and hosted the first U.S./Canada
Conference on Technology for the Blind. This conference brought together for
the first time the decision-makers of all of the major manufacturers and distributors
of technology, organizations working with the blind, and organizations of the
blind in the United States and Canada. We are now planning to sponsor and host
the second U.S./Canada Conference on Technology for the Blind. Again, it will
be convened at the National Center for the Blind. The specific results coming
from these conferences are far more than the improvement and dissemination of
technology. They also encompass a new spirit of harmony and cooperation among
all of those involved in blindness and work with the blind on the North American
continent.
Dr. Kenneth Jernigan, President Emeritus of the National Federation
of the Blind, serves as President of the North America/Caribbean Region of the
World Blind Union. His leadership has created greater unity of purpose and a
clearer focus regarding the common problems of those involved in work with the
blind than there has ever been in the past. Last fall Dr. Jernigan led the North
America/Caribbean delegation to the third quadrennial convention of the World
Blind Union, held in Cairo, Egypt. In addition to Dr. and Mrs. Jernigan, Federationists
who attended included Don and Betty Capps; Patricia Miller; my wife, Patricia
Maurer; and me.
Before reaching Cairo, Dr. and Mrs. Jernigan visited programs
for the blind in Athens, Greece; Amman, Jordan; and Istanbul, Turkey. While
in Istanbul, Dr. Jernigan was invited to an audience with the then Turkish President
Turgut Ozal. For almost an hour, Dr. Jernigan and the members of the Turkish
Federation of the Blind discussed with President Ozal matters dealing with blindness
in Turkey and throughout the world.
The participation of the National Federation of the Blind in
the World Blind Union has not only given those of us in the United States perspective
about what we are doing in this country, but it has also produced a spirit of
cooperation in the blindness field throughout this region of the world which
would have been unimaginable even as recently as a decade ago. The Committee
on Joint Organizational Effort (JOE) has grown out of the international meetings
which were initiated through the World Blind Union. In the spring of 1993, the
members of the JOE committee met at the National Center for the Blind, in Baltimore.
For the first time in affairs dealing with blindness there was general agreement
among the agencies and organizations present to cooperate to seek major changes
in programs for the blind. These changes are expanded availability of Social
Security Disability Insurance for the blind and a much broader scope of education
for blind children in the reading and writing of Braille.
To the extent that we can, we are providing encouragement and
assistance to the blind not only of this country but also throughout the world.
Literature and materials about blindness are being distributed to: Angola, Antigua,
Argentina, Australia, Austria, Azerbaijan, Belgium, Bermuda, Brazil, Bulgaria,
Canada, Chile, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, Egypt, England, Ethiopia, France, Gambia,
Germany, Ghana, Greece, Guatemala, Haiti, Holland, Hong Kong, India, Iran, Iraq,
Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Kenya, Liberia, Lithuania, Malaysia, Malawi,
Mali, Mauritius, Mexico, Monaco, Morocco, Nepal, Netherlands, New Guinea, Nigeria,
Pakistan, Panama, Poland, Portugal, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Scotland, Sierra Leone,
South Korea, Spain, Sri Lanka, Sweden, Switzerland, Syria, Tanzania, Tobago,
Trinidad, Turkey, Ukraine, Uruguay, Uzbekistan, and Zambia.
Early last fall two members of the Turkish Federation of the
Blind, Lokman Ayva and Selahattin Aydin, visited the National Center for the
Blind for several weeks of intensive training in the techniques of blindness
and the use of computer technology. When blind people from other nations are
seeking to expand opportunities for the blind and to encourage independence
by blind people within their borders, we feel a natural kinship with them. When
working together, the friendships we form are lasting and deep. Dr. Jernigan's
visit with the President of Turkey, accompanied by members of the Turkish Federation
of the Blind, is one instance of our continuing relationship, but this is not
all. Mr. Lokman Ayva graduated with a bachelor's degree in management this spring.
He applied immediately to take the Turkish national scholarship examination
for study in other nations and paid the required fee. Scholarships are awarded
based upon performance in this examination. One of the questions on the application
asked if he was disabled. Lokman Ayva replied that he is blind. Eight days before
the examination was to occur, the Turkish department of education denied him
the opportunity to take it on the grounds of blindness. But Mr. Ayva did not
give up. He protested to the department of education and the newspapers. He
also contacted his friends in the National Federation of the Blind of the United
States. At Mr. Ayva's request, we sent letters of protest about the denial to
the department of education in Turkey and to the principal newspaper. Three
days before the examination was to be given, the Turkish department of education
changed its mind. The administrator of the department complained to the press
that the denial of opportunity for Mr. Ayva to take the examination had received
more attention in the papers than the news about the presidency of Turkey. Lokman
Ayva competed with the others who are seeking scholarships to study management
outside the borders of Turkey. Blindness has not prevented him from further
education even though the attitudes of administrators in the department of education
might have. Such is the measure of international cooperation between the National
Federation of the Blind and like-minded individuals throughout the world.
We have also been involved during the past year with a number
of legal cases. Jillian Brooks is a blind X-ray technician living in California.
She was hired by Redding Radiology late in 1990. Although she had discussed
the alternative techniques she would use to perform the daily functions of a
radiologist, officials at Redding Radiology had not regarded her as a blind
person until they saw her adaptive aids being used on the job. One week after
she was employed, Jillian Brooks was fired on the grounds that she is blind
and that no blind person can do the work of a radiologist.
Jillian Brooks was not only fired; she was told that if she
complained, Redding Radiology would have her blacklisted—banned from the
profession altogether. It is not a coincidence that Jillian Brooks turned for
assistance to the National Federation of the Blind. She is president of her
local chapter, and she is one of our leaders in California. A lawsuit was filed
charging discrimination on the grounds of blindness. That case has now been
settled. There is a price to be paid by those who discriminate against the blind.
The payment to Jillian Brooks came to one hundred eighty thousand dollars. And
there are those who wonder what value there is in becoming a member of the National
Federation of the Blind.
In Alabama, we are facing a situation which is complex, unconscionable,
and ugly. There is extensive systematic discrimination in the Alabama vending
program. An investigation conducted by the Office for Civil Rights of the United
States Department of Education discovered that the average income in the vending
program for white vendors is $6,000 greater than the income for black vendors.
During the past three years, ninety-five percent of the new locations in the
state have been awarded to white vendors. The locations received by black vendors
produce the smallest amounts of money, and they are in high-risk areas. It was
noted in the report that two of the vendors had been killed while they were
operating their vending facilities. Both were black.
Although these findings are, to say the least, shocking, the
agency for the blind in Alabama has shown virtually no interest in taking action
to correct this pattern of discrimination. We have proposed to officials of
the state agency that affirmative action programs be implemented to accelerate
the advancement of the black vendors who have been systematically deprived of
promotions in the program, that facilities in high-risk areas be closed and
the operators transferred to safer and more lucrative locations, and that additional
training be offered to black blind vendors to compensate for the past refusal
to teach the basic skills required for business. When the Randolph-Sheppard
Act was adopted, it created a vending program for blind vendors—all blind
vendors, not just those of a particular class. Those who believe that it is
all right to discriminate against one or another segment of the blind must learn
that they will have to face the united force of the National Federation of the
Blind. We are the blind, and we stand together. That is why we have the National
Federation of the Blind.
Two years ago I reported to you that we were helping with a
lawsuit on behalf of Larry Reynolds. The case involved his right as a blind
father to have his daughter visit him without sighted supervision. Now, the
case has come to an end. The blatantly discriminatory requirement that a sighted
supervisor be with him twenty-four hours a day is no more. A father and his
daughter have been reunited without artificial barriers and discriminatory conditions.
It happened because of the National Federation of the Blind.
Maureen Symes is a student who has earned an A-average at Linfield
College in Oregon. Last year she applied to travel to Mexico for an extended
period to study art. Students were accepted for the trip based upon academic
standing and their responses to questions in a personal interview. Although
Maureen Symes received high scores in the interview (and she does have that
"A" average), she was denied the opportunity to take the trip because
of her blindness. Then, she learned of the National Federation of the Blind,
and she asked for help. When we informed the president of the college that there
had been violations of both state and federal law, the college changed its ruling.
It is worthwhile to be a member of the National Federation of the Blind. Maureen
Symes can tell you the reason why.
Henrietta Brewer is a child-care provider in Michigan. Last
fall she applied to be director of an after-school day care program operated
by the public school. However, the state of Michigan denied her the necessary
license. The reason is the same old tired piece of make-believe that is almost
always trotted out safety. Knowing that Henrietta Brewer was thoroughly capable,
the local school offered to hire her anyway without state approval, but officials
from the certifying agency threatened to close the child-care program. Henrietta
Brewer called upon the National Federation of the Blind. With our help a complaint
has been filed under the Americans With Disabilities Act. There is no reason
why Henrietta Brewer cannot perform child-care duties. She knows it; those in
the school district know it; the blind know it; and state certifying officials
are about to learn it.
Janet Roberts had been an exemplary employee at Sacred Heart
Hospital in Eugene, Oregon, for seven years when she became blind. Although
the hospital employs 2,500 people in dozens of different work assignments, Janet
Roberts was informed that she would be terminated because of her blindness.
There was no talk of reasonable accommodation, no discussion of retraining,
no consideration of the alternative techniques that Janet Roberts could use
to perform the essential functions of the job that she had managed with an outstanding
record for seven years. Janet Roberts was blind; that, according to the hospital,
was enough.
With the help of the National Federation of the Blind, Janet
Roberts commenced legal action. Just before Christmas of 1992, the hospital
offered Janet Roberts a new job, and she was paid a sizable cash settlement.
Although the settlement agreement prohibits disclosure of the dollar amount,
I strongly suspect that Janet Roberts is now able to consider the purchase of
a new home. A job, a home, and no more discrimination—this is what comes
of being a member of the National Federation of the Blind.
Connie Leblond serves as President of the National Federation
of the Blind of Maine. Several years ago she applied for a job as a telephone
answering machine operator at Sentinel Service of Portland, Maine. Sentinel
had advertised that the job paid $5 an hour, that no experience was necessary,
and that on-the-job training would be provided. Nevertheless, when Connie Leblond
appeared for an interview, she was summarily dismissed without being given the
chance to demonstrate her ability to do the work. Sentinel personnel said that
the operator of the telephone answering machine must be able to read and that
blind people are not able to do that. Despite her protests, Connie Leblond was
peremptorily rejected. Using the combined know-how of the Federation at the
national and state levels, we brought legal action against Sentinel. A trial
occurred, and the decision has now been reached. Although the order of the court
has been appealed to the Supreme Court of Maine, the decision is clear and unequivocal,
and I suspect that it will not be overturned. Sentinel has been ordered to cease
and desist its discriminatory policy, to pay $1,000 in civil damages to Connie
Leblond, to reimburse us for the attorney fees expended in the case, and to
issue a check for back wages to Connie Leblond amounting to $20,700. This is
one more reason for the National Federation of the Blind.
The National Federation of the Blind has been active in protecting
the rights of blind vendors. In 1987, the Maryland state licensing agency was
taking seventeen percent of vendors' net income in set-aside payments. These
charges had not been approved by the federal government even though the Randolph-Sheppard
Act requires it. Furthermore, the agency had proposed set-aside charges of over
twenty percent. These practices are clearly contrary to the federal requirement
that such charges be approved by the Department of Education, so with the support
and encouragement of the National Federation of the Blind seventeen Maryland
vendors decided that they would make no further payments until the Maryland
agency came into compliance with federal rules. The state agency responded with
an ultimatum to the protesting vendors, saying that they must pay up or be expelled
from the program in thirty days. The termination notices served as the basis
for a complaint in the federal court.
The Maryland vendors' case lasted five years. In 1992, settlement
papers were signed. No vendor was terminated for failing to pay set-aside, and
the state agency may not retaliate against blind vendors for participating in
the lawsuit. The extraordinary set-aside rates have been dropped to eight and
a half percent and will be dropped to three percent by 1995. Every vendor's
personal income will increase as a direct result of our efforts, and each vendor
will also receive $2,000 per year for fringe benefits. The set-aside rate may
not be increased by the state licensing agency before 2009. Vendors in Maryland
would still be paying an exorbitant amount to the state agency if it had not
been for the work of the National Federation of the Blind.
One of the ongoing activities of the Federation this year has
been assistance to individuals with Social Security problems. Because the specialized
rules regarding disability claims for the blind are different from those for
other disability groups, mistakes sometimes occur. The Richard Realmuto case
is a striking example. He became blind in December of 1989. He took a leave
of absence from his industrial arts teaching job with the New York public school
system and applied for Social Security Disability Insurance. After the five-month
waiting period, he was awarded benefits, but three months later (in September
of 1990) with assistance from the National Federation of the Blind, Richard
Realmuto returned to his position as an industrial arts teacher. Indeed, the
experiences of Richard Realmuto as a blind teacher of the sighted are illustrative.
He will be making a presentation later during the convention.
Not long after his return to work, the Social Security Administration
notified Richard Realmuto that he would be required to refund the entire amount
paid to him from June of 1990. However, our examination of the case indicated
that Richard Realmuto was entitled to every penny of the Social Security benefits
that he had received—and then some. We proved it in a hearing. Rather than
being required to repay almost $10,000 to the Social Security Administration,
Richard Realmuto and his dependents received more than $12,000 of additional
money. The outcome would undoubtedly have been the reverse if it had not been
for our knowledge, our ability to do the research, our determined effort, and
our capacity to apply the law to the facts. Richard Realmuto is bright, but
he is not accustomed to the intricacies of federal regulation. When it comes
to blindness and fighting for his rights, he is a relative newcomer. He needs
the National Federation of the Blind, and of course, we need him, too. Working
together we can solve the problems we face. This is why we have the National
Federation of the Blind.
The National Federation of the Blind is among the most outspoken
proponents of Braille. We produce and distribute more Braille each year than
any other organization in the United States except the National Library Service
for the Blind and Physically Handicapped. Through our Parents of Blind Children
Division, we conduct the Braille Readers Are Leaders Contest to promote the
learning of Braille for blind children. We have this year promoted the study
of Braille by sighted students in the high school grades, and we have granted
scholarships to attend this convention to three who have completed the National
Library Service transcribing course. We have established and continue to expand
the International Braille and Technology Center for the Blind. We have been
working jointly with the American Printing House for the Blind to create teaching
materials for courses of study in Braille. We have joined with the Creative
Director of the nationally-syndicated cartoon "Pluggers" to employ
the blind character Zackaroo to promote Braille literacy. In this effort we
have adopted the slogan "Braille is finger food for the mind." And
we promote Braille literacy programs in schools and in libraries throughout
the United States. As an example, early in August, I will be reading Braille
to five-year-olds who are participating in the story hour program of the Baltimore
County Public Library. Within the past year the Blind Person's Literacy Rights
and Education Act (more commonly known as the Braille Bill), which we drafted,
has been adopted in one form or another by the legislatures of five states.
So far, eighteen states have Braille literacy laws on the books. Although there
is a great deal of work yet to be done, literacy for the blind is today more
of a reality than it has ever been. Reading is essential. We of the National
Federation of the Blind know this in our minds and our hearts. We will never
quit until every blind child has the chance to learn to read.
At our convention last year, we discussed at length a plan
which had been proposed by a small group within the rehabilitation establishment
to create a national commission on blindness. The purpose of this commission
was ostensibly to conduct research and provide advice on the subject of blindness
to Congressional leaders, to officials in the executive branch of government,
and to all other interested persons. The real purpose behind the proposal was
to take control of the rehabilitation establishment for the blind and to prevent
blind consumers from having significant input into the decision-making process.
This proposal was included as a part of the Rehabilitation Act Amendments of
1992. Although the bill to reauthorize the Rehabilitation Act was signed by
the President last October, the national commission on blindness was no longer
a part of it. We, the organized blind of this country, had voiced strong opposition
to a commission that would interpret for us our needs and wants. Our voice was
heard in the halls of Congress. We opposed the commission on blindness, and
it was defeated.
I am pleased to report that included in the Rehabilitation
Act Amendments of 1992 are provisions that those who are blind are presumed
to be eligible for rehabilitation services and that blind clients have a right
to choose among those who will provide those services.
During the past year we have initiated (in conjunction with
others) three new programs. The Information Access Training Program, funded
by the National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research, is devoted
to training blind people in the requirements of the Americans With Disabilities
Act regarding accessible information. The Work Incentive Training Program, funded
by the Rehabilitation Services Administration, is designed to provide information
about the Social Security and Supplemental Security Income work incentive provisions
to rehabilitation professionals and consumers. The Braille Literacy Training
Program is a cooperative venture with the American Printing House for the Blind
to develop improved Braille training systems and materials for blind adults.
The in-depth experience of blind people throughout the nation is essential to
all of these programs. There is no other organization that can provide the kind
of experience and background that we can bring to the performance of these endeavors.
Hank Dekker is a blind sailor. We will be hearing from him
later during the convention. Ten years ago he sailed alone from San Francisco
to Hawaii. A second solo trans-Pacific voyage was completed three years later.
This summer, on July 26, Hank Dekker plans to pilot a sailing sloop, the "NFB,"
from Baltimore harbor into the Atlantic. His destination is Plymouth, England.
This event, named "To Sea with a Blind Sailor," will demonstrate the
capacity of the blind and will focus attention on the fundamental reality that
we who are blind have the same hopes, desires, abilities, and dreams possessed
by everybody else—including the dream to sail alone on the high seas. As
we have so often said, blindness cannot stop us, but misunderstanding may. This
summer, we the National Federation of the Blind will be supporting the blind
blue water sailor, Hank Dekker, in his voyage. We believe in the blind; we believe
in our member Hank Dekker; we believe he will successfully complete the voyage;
we believe in the National Federation of the Blind.
With the adoption of the Americans With Disabilities Act, many
who hoped to make a bundle by restructuring the world for what they perceive
to be the unfortunate blind began to create proposals to install raised warning
surfaces for us all over the country. Bumpy handrails; knurled doorknobs; sandpapery
strips at the tops and bottoms of staircases; specialized tiles with large rounded
bumps on them called Braille tiles, pathfinder tiles, or the like; and even
homes with rounded corners and easy-to-follow floor plans specifically designed
for the blind. All of these have been promoted as essential architectural alterations
mandated by the Americans With Disabilities Act. Such modifications are not
required by the Act, and they do more harm than good. Changes to the environment
should be welcomed when they help but rejected when they don't. Our focus in
the Federation is not on modifying the world but on having the opportunity to
live in it as it is.
Last fall Peggy Pinder, Second Vice President of the National
Federation of the Blind, was appointed by the President of the United States
to serve as a member of the Architectural and Transportation Barriers Compliance
Board, the federal agency responsible for deciding what modifications are required
to ensure that handicapped people have full access to newly-constructed or remodeled
public buildings and facilities. Her service as a member of this board has already
been effective. The Architectural Barriers Board has for the first time reviewed
the standard for Braille which should be used in creating signs for the blind.
Prior to this review (even as recently as six months ago) much of the Braille
produced on signs was completely unreadable. In addition, the Architectural
Barriers Board has rejected some of the harmful proposals which have been made
such as the one to require the installation of tiles with raised surfaces. We
believe that this board should adopt the policy that those architectural changes
which clearly do some good will be considered for inclusion in federal regulations—and
that those which do not won't. This spirit seems evident in recent decisions
of the board.
Fred Schroeder is Executive Director of the New Mexico Commission
for the Blind and a Member of the Board of Directors of the National Federation
of the Blind. He is one of the most knowledgeable individuals about Braille
in this country. For several years he has served as the representative of the
National Federation of the Blind on the board of the Braille Authority of North
America. He has been an active proponent of a unified Braille code in the United
States, and his influence in promoting Braille has been felt in other nations
as well. In 1992, the International Council on English Braille was established
to serve as a catalyst to bring uniformity in the printing of Braille to all
English-speaking countries. Fred Schroeder was elected as its first President.
In June, a few weeks prior to our convention here, Fred Schroeder presided at
the conference of the International Council on English Braille in Sydney, Australia.
While in that country, he appeared on the program of the National Federation
of Blind Citizens of Australia. He also traveled to New Zealand to present the
keynote speech at the Braille Conference of the Royal New Zealand Foundation
for the Blind in Auckland. Although it is essential that we address problems
in our own country, it is also beneficial to have interaction with those abroad.
We continue to publish and distribute the most extensive array
of information about blindness produced in the United States. Our magazine,
the Braille Monitor, provided in Braille, in print, on cassette, and
on talking book record, is the most widely-read general information magazine
in the field of work with the blind, having a circulation of more than 30,000
a month. Our publication the Voice of the Diabetic, with a circulation
of over 60,000, is the most widely-distributed magazine about blindness in the
nation. The magazine for parents and educators of blind children, Future
Reflections, is being sent to over 10,000 individuals and institutions.
And there are also the publications of state affiliates, other national divisions,
and local chapters. In our studios at the National Center for the Blind, in
addition to recording the Braille Monitor, Future Reflections,
and the Voice of the Diabetic, we produce a number of other publications,
including Job Opportunities for the Blind Bulletins, the American Bar Association
Journal, Presidential Releases, recorded issues of our books, and a number
of specialized publications and materials.
We are releasing at this convention two new books in the Kernel
Book series: As the Twig is Bent and Making Hay. These general-interest publications
about blindness capture the essence and spirit of our movement. We who are blind
yearn for the opportunity to be independent and successful. These volumes bring
inspiration and education to the homes of the general public. The response from
those who have received our books shows that our approach to the subject of
blindness is new, impressive, exciting, and convincing. We have now distributed
more than two million of the Kernel Books, and more are coming.
Our public education program continues through our public service
announcements. The capabilities of blind people have been broadcast this year
on all of the major television and radio networks, and our service message has
reached the homes of an estimated two hundred million people.
And then, there is the balloon. The name of the National Federation
of the Blind may appear almost anywhere. Our flag and our banner were flown
from a hot air balloon that participated in the 1992 Albuquerque International
Balloon Fiesta.
There are now more than 200 types of aids and appliances being
distributed from our Materials Center. We also distribute literature—now
over 800 different items. Our reference book, What You Should Know About Blindness,
Services for the Blind, and the Organized Blind Movement, has been sent to over
40,000 people this year, and a newly-published critical examination of the social
status of the blind, entitled The Struggle of Blind People for Self-Determination
by Professor C. Edwin Vaughan, has recently become available. The items that
have been distributed this year from our Materials Center number about two million.
Among them were 16,806 cane tips. I asked certain members of the Federation
how long a cane tip lasts. The information I collected indicates that tips are
good for at least thirty miles. At thirty miles a tip this is over half a million
miles of cane travel. One thing is certain, Federationists get around.
This has been a year of accelerated growth for the Federation,
but not all of our encounters have been positive. In 1992 David Robinson, a
Federationist of long standing, was appointed as Administrator of the Ohio Client
Assistance Program—the agency funded under the Rehabilitation Act to assist
rehabilitation clients in gaining their rights. The Client Assistance Program
is supposed to be an independent agency; the provisions of the Rehabilitation
Act make this clear. Soon after his appointment, David Robinson learned that
the Client Assistance Program in Ohio was being directed by the same administrators
who were expected to provide rehabilitation services. This watchdog agency was
(in violation of federal law) under the thumb of the people it was intended
to watch. David Robinson complained about this condition and tried to get it
changed. Within a few months, he had been relieved of his duties. Shortly before
he was discharged, David Robinson was ordered to stop talking with Federation
members—all Federation members—at least while he was at work.
We in the Federation have a right to be a part of this movement,
and working for the state of Ohio cannot strip us of that right. It is guaranteed
to us by the Constitution of the United States. In May of this year David Robinson
and the National Federation of the Blind of Ohio filed suit. The case is not
over; indeed, it is only beginning. But the principle that we will speak and
act freely and independently, and work with each other to bring opportunities
which have not previously been available to the blind is fundamental to us.
We must and we will protect our right to be a part of the movement and to speak
our minds. Such action is essential to maintain and achieve our freedom, and
freedom of action we will have. In other words we intend to win the David Robinson
case. This, too, is the meaning of the National Federation of the Blind.
As President of the National Federation of the Blind this year,
I have encountered blind people matriculating in the schools; participating
in civic affairs; working in offices, factories, and workshops; engaging in
politics; creating art; writing books; planning international travel; sailing
the seas; raising families; and enjoying leisure activities—in short, participating
in every aspect of daily life. Although I am pleased to work with those outside
our organization (public officials, representatives of agencies for the blind,
members of the business community, and individuals from the academic world),
my inspiration and my faith in the future come from you, the members of the
National Federation of the Blind.
As I come to this convention, I know that the problems in the
weeks, the months, and the years ahead will be great, but I also know—I
am absolutely certain—that we as a people will do what we need to do. We
will muster the resources; we will find the strength; we will have the dedication
to meet the challenge. We in the Federation have made a commitment and a solemn
promise. We will believe in each other and in ourselves; we will care for our
blind brothers and sisters; and we will support our organization. Our movement
is a sacred trust. We cannot do less than give it the energy, the resilience,
and the spirit that is ours. This is the promise of our movement—this is
the reality of the National Federation of the Blind. And this is my report for
1993.
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Updated: March 14, 2002
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