[Cinci-NFB] FW: Urgent, Please read!
Christopher Sabine
info at onhconsulting.com
Sun Aug 18 20:28:49 UTC 2024
Please share this email from the Affiliate regarding State Convention.
Chris
From: smturner.234 at gmail.com <smturner.234 at gmail.com>
Sent: Sunday, August 18, 2024 1:23 PM
To: Dr.Carolyn.Peters at gmail.com; mollybrockman83 at gmail.com; 'Kathy Legg' <kalegg0220 at gmail.com>; masquenadadouglas at icloud.com; schiemja at gmail.com; 'Shawn Martin' <smartin494 at roadrunner.com>; babyruth2 at windstream.net; 'Barbara Pierce' <barbara.pierce9366 at gmail.com>; dgventure915 at gmail.com; marianne at denningweb.com; 'Colleen Roth' <n8tnv52 at outlook.com>; luannbowers4 at gmail.com; patrinkle at icloud.com; williamsjoann054 at gmail.com; TurnerW794 at gmail.com; president.capital.nfboh at gmail.com; delcenia at prodigy.net; Christopher Sabine <info at onhconsulting.com>; grobinson513 at icloud.com; 'Shane Popplestone' <spopplestone.nfb at gmail.com>
Cc: rchpay7 at gmail.com; SMTurner.234 at gmail.com
Subject: Urgent, Please read!
Dear Presidents and Vice,
I hope all is well.
As I understand, a few of you serve in various roles, yet I am emailing to urge you to share the following with your Divisions and Chapter members.
After attending a few Chapter meetings, it has been determined that pertinent information is either not received or overlooked. Therefore, I am relying on you to pass along the info below.
Also, I want to put in a plug for all Divisions and Chapters to create a basket to be auctioned at the 78th State of Ohio Convention. As always, the auction is to increase the treasurer of the affiliate. It would behoove us all to make a definitive effort to do this. The Ohio affiliate for years has been gracious in providing various scholarships to its members. We are fortunate that we are such a giving organization. However, to continue our important work, financial contribution, no matter what form is key to Ohio's success.
Finally, I want to make a personal pledge. Would each President and Vice provide a $20 or $25 gift card to help with door prizes at the convention? This can be emailed or brought to the convention and given to Annette. Amazon and other stores have electronic gift cards if you are unable to join us in Westlake. However, I do hope that everyone who is a leader, President or Vice will be in attendance. You are needed and valued! We are all in this together.
Here is the info below to share with your respective Division and Chapter members.
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I would like to invite you to take a moment to read this email on:
1: Background on Section 14C, and My narrative
2: A recording of Dr Kenneth Jernigan, which is relevant today.
3: Then, I highly urge you to sign-up for Advocacy Day, which will be held in Columbus on September 16, 2024, with the 14c taskforce. The link is below.
4: This important issue is why Divisions and Chapters fundraise to send members or a representative to be present in this regard.
So, we need you!
As a member of the National Federation of the Blind, we do not only fight for our rights. We fight for injustices that places a barrier preventing all blind and disabled Americans from living and working as our sighted peers do in the world. Therefore, I know you will take a stand!
If you have any questions, please consult me or President, Payne.
Again, please share with your members and act asap!
Background on 14C
Subminimum wage was a practice created in 1938 under section 14c of the Fair Labor Standards Act. The goal was to provide supportive services for people with disabilities while also receiving a wage. Although the original aim of the legislation was admirable, the use of 14c certificates and the paying of subminimum wage has been used to exploit workers with disabilities and subject them to a lifetime of underpaid labor often in segregated settings. As few as only 5% of workers actually transition into competitive integrated employment.
Suzanne's narrative:
As a blind female, I have come a long way from my days of working in a "sheltered workshop" earning subminimum wage. Previously, I had the hope of attending college in the Department of Music at Jackson State University in 1983 after graduating with honors. I found myself in an alarming situation. I was losing more of my vision, and I did not know how to stop it. However, this is not about my vision, but the barriers I faced seeking competitive and integrated employment.
Because of the inequities in the state in Mississippi Royal Maid's Sheltered Workshop for the blind in 1984, where I worked for $1.98 cents; when the minimum wage was $3.30 cents an hour either packing brooms, mops, plastic flat ware, or strings. I knew that working as a blind person in this environment was not the characteristics that defined me or my future. So, In 1988 I relocated to Ohio to be close to family and for a greater opportunity. But, once again, I found myself introduced to sheltered work in Cleveland Ohio. I put sponges in a box that was around three feet long and three feet deep. Each time I filled a box, I earned $1.fifty cents; not an hour, but by piece. I never could earn what my sighted co-workers earned in a day.
Not only did my working in such an environment assembling brooms and mops not prepare me for my opportunities. However, I have come to realize that someone had to do it. Just think, without a broom or mop, homes restaurants and establishments would be filled with unwanted trash. Nonetheless, the difference for me is the underlining meaning of opportunity, equality, diversity, and inclusion. First, opportunity should be your decision. Secondly, equality has to be fair for all, thirdly, diversity must include multiplicity, and finally, inclusion should be embraced. Without them where do the blind fit in, placing us in a box like sheltered workshops working below the Mississippi and Ohio state wage and isolating the blind was unfair, not right and degrading. We who assembled brooms and mops should have been provided the same wage as the so-called "sighted." So, I am appreciative of all of my experiences. They are what made me who I am today. When I worked on high powered machines, "yes I did that too," I was one of the best workers. I was taught by my grandmother to do the best at whatever is awarded. I still live by that today! Even though this treatment is still a barrier today for persons with disabilities, equal work has dignity. So, employers must provide that same dignity to its disabled employees in Ohio. This unfair treatment has to be abolished in Ohio.
Members, sign up and complete the form, and select a time slot to meet with your legislator. There will also be in-person speaker presentations, including Representative Lipps, Gary Tonks, Suzanne Turner, Katie Hunt, and others. To schedule a time with legislators, please register here:
https://forms.office.com/r/jNGB1FKxTa
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Kenneth Jernigan - Blindness, That's How it is at the Top of the Stairs
https://youtu.be/4ybyQlyRpzw?si=0bMfs9eA8QT3tE0Y
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