[Community-service] Introduction from Jewel of Raleigh, NC

Elizabeth Rene emrene at earthlink.net
Thu Jul 1 20:48:34 UTC 2010


Dear Jewel,

Sorry for the rebuff.

It appears that you did not intentionally email me at home.  My subscription 
to the list was not automatically set to digest mode.

I have gone to the master list and manually selected my communications 
options.

I will look forward to reading your comments on the list.

Best wishes,

Elizabeth Rene'


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Jewel S." <herekittykat2 at gmail.com>
To: <community-service at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Thursday, July 01, 2010 4:38 AM
Subject: [Community-service] Introduction from Jewel of Raleigh, NC


> Dear all,
>
> Good morning! My name is Jewel Shuping. Some of you likely know me
> from one of the several listservs I'm on. I'm very excited to be a
> part of this list. So, a little about me and my community service
> projects.
>
> I ive in Raleigh, NC (for now), and am 25 years old. I have been
> legally blind for two years (to the day) now, as caused by a severe
> facial burn and secondary glaucoma. Though I was lucky to have very
> little obviouis facial scarring (just under my right eye and in the
> corner of my left, and sometimes on the bridge of my nose), it caused
> bad scarring in my eyes. I have been a member of the NFB of NC's Wake
> County chapter for one year as of the second week of July *grin* and
> have been very active in the group from the very beginning, asssisting
> the group with the state convention that September and with Charity
> Days at Belk's and the annual yard sale. Since then, I have started my
> own projects, and gotten involved in legislative work. My first sorta
> community service is my blog, Treasure Chest for the Blind
> (<http://blindtreasurechest.blogspot.com>) and its new sister blog,
> Treasure Chest for the Blind of Raleigh and NC
> (<http://blindtreasurechestnc.blogspot.com>) which I just created
> yesterday. These are there to tell people about technology, programs,
> and other tools that they may not know about, especially free or
> inexpensive ones, that can assist them in daily living, work, school,
> and recreation. The featured tools, both old and new, have included
> NFB-Newline, NVDA, Radegast for Second Life, and Disney's new access
> tool for descriptive services. Please feel free to check it out!
>
> The other project I have currently is for the local public library. A
> young friend of mine told me once that she'd love to use the public
> library to check out books on CD, but it was extremely frustrating for
> her to have to 1) go to the librarian's desk to ask for assistance, 2)
> wait for someone who could take the time to look, 3) listen to them
> read off lots of titles she had no interest in, 4) settle on a book
> she really didn't want, but got so that she didn't feel like she had
> wasted the librarian's time. Why should a blind person have to do this
> just to check out a book that when brought home, is accessible? Thus
> was born my idea to get Braille labels added to each case in the audio
> collection. This is, of course, an enormous project. Our local library
> alone has nearly 5,000 cases in their audio collection (not books,
> just cases-- some cases have more than one case). I am currently
> working on writing a proposal for the Friends of the Library to seek
> funding from there. The Wake Federation of the Blind has agreed to
> assist with funds as needed (within reason, of course, since the
> entire project for this one library will be over $700), and I will be
> seeking funding from the Lion's Club and United Way if the Friends of
> the Library cannot fund it. Thus far, I have four volunteers besides
> me, and once I have funding, I'll be actively seeking more. I hope to
> make this a county-wide project, to have Braille labels on the audio
> cases at all the libraries in Wake County. It has already been quite
> an educational adventure, and I'm extremely glad that I began it. Now
> just to finish it! If anyone has any thoughts, ideas, suggestions, or
> questions, I'd love to hear them!
>
> My proposal outline is currently being gone over with a fine-toothed
> comb by an advocate at Alliance for Disability Advocacy, and I'm
> expecting it back today. Once I make any corrections she suggests,
> I'll post it to this group, and start writing the actual proposal (I
> only have an outline right now).
>
> Glory, Glory Federation,
> Jewel
>
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