[NFB-Maryland] Spring 2020 Braille Spectator
president at nfbmd.org
president at nfbmd.org
Sun Jul 5 02:41:59 UTC 2020
Braille Spectator, Spring 2020
THE BRAILLE SPECTATOR, Spring 2020
A semi-annual publication of the National Federation of the Blind of
Maryland
Ronza Othman and Sharon Maneki, co-editors
Published on www.nfbmd.org and on NFB Newsline by The National Federation of
the Blind of Maryland
Ronza Othman, President
Comments and questions should be sent to <mailto:President at nfbmd.org>
President at nfbmd.org.
In this issue:
· Celebrating Our Stories, Defining Our Future
· Using the Three Hands of the Federation Led to Success in the 2020
Session of the Maryland General Assembly
· NFBMD Protects the Rights of the Blind During the COVID-19
Pandemic
· The Rachel Olivero Accessibility Innovation Award
· Dr. Jonathan Lazar Wins the Inaugural Rachel Olivero Accessibility
Innovation Award
· Protecting Voting Rights During the Coronavirus Emergency: A
Victory for the Blind and Voters with Disabilities
· Chapter Spotlight: Greater Carroll County
· Segregated Voting: When Will It End?
· Senior Spotlight: Wendy Ruth
· A Magical Meet the Blind Month Event
· Profile of an NFBMD Leader: Shawn Jacobson
· Why I Write
· Students Speak Up for Accessible Instructional Material in Higher
Education
· Student Spotlight: Briana Broadwater
· There Are Blind People Out There Who Want to Play
· Spectator Specs
Celebrating Our Stories, Defining Our Future
By Ronza Othman
[Editors note: Ronza Othman serves as president of the National Federation
of the Blind of Maryland (NFBMD). Below is the Presidential report she gave
at the NFBMD state convention on November 9, 2019.]
Barack Obama once said, A good story gives you the chance to better
understand someone elses life. It can help you find common ground. We,
each of us, though all being members of the Federation family, come from
different backgrounds. We have unique experiences that have shaped who we
are today. Those experiences color how we view the world and what we expect
to take from it and give to it. We have a great deal that distinguishes us
from one another. We have much more that we share with one another, and Im
not referring to our shared characteristic of blindness. And yet, our
individual and collective stories, while helping to shape our present, will
only define our future in the ways we choose to let them.
Sometimes the stories people construct around us are inconsistent with what
we want our stories to tell. These authors incorporate their own
perceptions of who we are, what we experience, and what we are capable of
doing (or are not capable of doing) when they craft those stories. It is
our responsibility to correct the misinformation in their stories and
reclaim our own narratives as blind people. We do this through our advocacy
in areas such as education, employment, social services, and access to
information.
It also is necessary for us to reflect on our stories in order to appreciate
what weve experienced and what weve learned from those experiences. More,
it is necessary to assess whether the stories that define us are truly the
representations we want to show to the world. Do we own our stories, or do
they own us? The author Anika Utgaard stated, One day, I woke up and began
to question my story, and it is precisely when I began to question my story
that I began to integrate that story and learn from it.
And when we assess our stories to determine if they are authentic
representations not just of our past, but also who we are now, we can
redefine our own narratives. We also can define the future we want to have,
not the future that has to fit within the construct of the stories of our
past or the stories others tell about us. We, in the NFBMD, are defining a
future full of love, hope, and determination. Every day, we reshape the
narratives of the lives of our members, whether through advocacy,
legislation, outreach, or the myriad of ways we fight for our freedom.
Imagine the blind child who struggles to read alongside her sighted
classmates. Imagine the anxiety and frustration she feels every time her
class sits down for a reading lesson. Her classmates, and perhaps even her
teachers, tell themselves a story about her one of lack of ability,
perhaps even lack of intellect. The story she tells herself is one of
failure, perhaps even that she is not as bright as her classmates. However,
we in the NFBMD know that in fact this child is living a different story.
This child, like so many others, is not receiving appropriate Braille
instruction, and she cannot read with her classmates because she hasnt been
given the tools to do so. Now imagine the story told a different way, when
the child reads her first complete story in Braille for the first time. The
frustration and anxiety will float away as she discovers the wonder of the
written word.
This hypothetical childs story is unfortunately not unique to us, and it
takes place all too often. In fact, the NFBMD helped Kenny Smith, an
8-year-old, from Saint Marys County, and his parents work to change Kennys
story just like the hypothetical little girl. Kenny has lived his entire
life in Saint Marys County, and he attends the Saint Marys County Public
School system. At the end of the 2017-2018 school year, the only Teachers
for the Blind and Visually Impaired (TVI), and Orientation and Mobility
(O&M) for the county left the district. Despite Saint Marys County knowing
well in advance that these key positions were going to be vacant, the school
system did not make much effort to fill the positions. As a result, when
Kenny and other Saint Marys County blind students began the 2018-2019
school year, there was no one to teach them Braille, assistive technology,
O&M, or any of the other skills necessary for children to access the
curriculum.
Despite all of the efforts of the NFBMD, Saint Marys County did not hire an
on-site TVI or O&M instructor at all for the 2018-2019 school year.
Eventually, more than halfway through the year, they engaged a TVI to teach
Kenny remotely by computer. Its not clear how they believed that someone
could teach Braille, including proper hand techniques, to an 8-year-old
remotely from hundreds of miles away. Its even less clear how they thought
remote Braille could be taught using an outdated computer system, that for
several months, never connected the video chat program used to conduct the
lessons.
Meanwhile, Kenny continued to fall farther and farther behind his classmates
due to the lack of Braille, technology, and O&M. Finally, late in the
school year, after it became clear that Saint Marys County was not
addressing Kennys needs, not only for the current school year, but also not
attempting to secure effective instruction for the upcoming 2019-2020 school
year, the NFBMD decided it was time to rewrite Kennys story from this point
forward.
The NFBMD, with support from the NFB, filed a complaint against Saint Marys
County based on Kennys lack of access to appropriate special education
services. We will not rest until Kenny receives the education services to
which he is entitled under the law. Kennys story will be one of triumph
overcoming an indifferent school district and the lack of meaningful
Braille, technology, and O&M services for more than a year, because he has
the NFBMD behind him.
Now imagine a blind employee. Her employer refuses to provide her with
meaningful reasonable accommodations because the employer believes that a
blind person is not capable of performing the job. The employers version
of the story is that it is looking out for the employees safety and that of
the people the employer serves.
Now heres the real story. Olivia Chamberlain is a blind childcare worker
with the Department of Defense (DOD). She has been in her job for four
years and consistently received outstanding performance ratings. She has
been promoted twice in the four years she has worked for the particular DOD
childcare at issue. Olivia had informal reasonable accommodations for four
years because her previous managers had no concerns about her blindness.
She also had assistive technology accommodations.
In the summer of 2018, Olivias employer hired a new supervisor to manage
the childcare program. This individual did not believe that a blind person
could perform childcare duties safely. In fact, she ordered Olivia to have
a fitness for duty evaluation, which in federal speak, means the new manager
felt Olivia could hurt herself or the children if she continued in her
current job. The new boss told Olivia that she did not believe there was
anywhere at DOD, even in the kitchen, where a blind person could safely
work.
Olivia contacted the NFBMD. We worked to first ensure Olivias area of DOD
was educated about what a blind person was capable of doing and that
discrimination solely on the basis of blindness is illegal. We then worked
to ensure that Olivia received her reasonable accommodations formally so no
supervisor in the future could arbitrarily take them away. We worked with
Olivia to determine what additional accommodations would be helpful to
perform her position and insisted that DOD provide them, particularly since
the new manager was so abhorrent about reasonable accommodations that Olivia
was working much too hard to perform her work without any accommodations.
We also assisted Olivia in filing a discrimination complaint against her new
manager and DOD for failing to provide her with appropriate reasonable
accommodations and for subjecting her to a fitness for duty exam simply due
to her being blind. Then, when her new boss retaliated against Olivia, we
amended that discrimination complaint.
We, in the NFBMD know the blind are perfectly capable of being competent
childcare workers, teachers, and parents. We will not allow anyone, not
even the Department of Defense, to craft a narrative where an employee is
shut out of this sort of work, or virtually any type of work, simply due to
blindness. When Olivia contacted the NFBMD, she took control of her story,
and the version she is writing is an authentic representation of the
abilities of the blind.
Desiree Gonzalez is a blind employee of Delaware North, a food service
contractor that does substantial business with the Baltimore Orioles.
Desiree was hired in the winter of 2019 to provide catering assistance.
However, once she showed up on the first day of work with her guide dog,
suddenly Delaware North claimed they didnt have any work for Desiree and
would call her if something became available. Desiree knew that the story
that Delaware North was telling her didnt add up, because the Orioles play
81 games at Camden Yards, and there are dozens of other events at the park
requiring catering services. Desiree took control of her own story when she
contacted the NFBMD.
When we met with Delaware North, we learned the story they were spinning to
themselves was the food preparation area was not a safe place for Desirees
service animal. They also believed the dog was not hygienic and thus it
could not be in the food preparation area. They indicated they were
researching options, and that is why they hadnt called Desiree back into
work.
The National Federation of the Blind of Maryland very quickly disabused them
of this false narrative about guide dogs. We worked with Desiree and
Delaware North to ensure she was granted a reasonable accommodation to bring
her guide dog into the park, that the dog was given an appropriate location
to be while Desiree was working in the small kitchen area, and that Desiree
was given the opportunity to take breaks as needed during longer shifts to
care for her dog.
The NFBMD and Desiree changed the direction of her story by educating
Delaware North about Desirees rights and abilities. Once again, we refused
to allow someone elses version of our stories to keep us from meaningful
employment.
Sometimes entities fight hard to retain the right to write our stories.
This seems to be the case with the Maryland State Board of Elections (MSBE).
Prior to 2014, everyone in Maryland used an electronic voting system.
However, the Maryland State Board of Elections claims it changed over to a
paper ballot for the 2016 election cycle because Federal law required a
paper audit trail. However, we know that electronic ballot machines are
capable of creating a paper audit trail. The real reason the Board of
Elections changed to paper ballots is because it succumbed to bullying by
candidates who were going to be placed lower on the ballot, requiring voters
to move to a second or third page in a particular contest. Ill just note
in the dozens of states that continued to use electronic ballot marking
tools since 2016, no state believed its citizens were too incompetent to
click Next page except for Maryland.
The Maryland State Board of Elections maintained an electronic Ballot
Marking Device (BMD) for individuals with disabilities. They did so because
the Help America Vote Act (HAVA), which the National Federation of the Blind
helped get enacted, requires individuals with disabilities be able to vote
independently and secretly. But since the BMD ballot is distinct in shape,
size, and appearance from the paper ballot, it is easily identifiable.
Individuals with disabilities are given access to the BMDs, but individuals
without disabilities are, for the most-part, only given access to the paper
ballot, resulting in segregated voting in Maryland based on disability. And
yet, the Maryland Attorney General had to tell MSBE that it had to increase
the sample size of individuals using BMDs in order to protect the secrecy of
voters with disabilities.
So MSBE implemented a two BMD user minimum in each voting precinct. And
they claim they believed this would be sufficient to mask the votes of
individuals with disabilities. In what world do two ballots ensure
secrecy? What mathematical genius decided that two was a large enough
sample size? Probably the same person who didnt think Maryland voters
could click next page on the BMDs.
As you would expect, MSBE data proves that in many, many precincts, there
were not two ballots cast using BMDs, not just in the 2016 elections but in
both the 2018 primary and 2018 general election. In fact, in dozens of
precincts, only one person, or even no people used the BMDs. So, how is a
single BMD ballot going to mask a single BMD ballot at a precinct?
It doesnt, of course. We tried working with MSBE in 2016, 2017, and 2018
to get them to change their two-voter policy, but they were not interested
in doing so. We tried working with the Maryland Legislature in 2019 to pass
legislation to reinstate the secret ballot and desegregate voting based on
disability. However, MSBE opposed the bill.
So, because voting is at the core of the American story, and because we have
a fundamental right to vote privately and independently and for our ballots
to be indistinguishable based on disability, we felt we had no choice but to
sue the Maryland State Board of Elections.
Let me tell you about Marie Cobbs, Ruth Sagers, and Joel Zimbas voting
stories. Many of you have similar stories, but these three individuals are
our named plaintiffs in our lawsuit to desegregate voting in Maryland.
Joel Zimba is the only person who voted using the BMD at his local precinct.
All of the staff at the polling location and many of the candidates know him
and call him by name. Thus, Joel is deprived of a secret ballot because his
ballot is the only one that looks different and everyone knows that he is
the person who produced it.
Ruth Sager went to her polling precinct and was told that the BMD was
broken. Incidentally, each voting location has, since 2016, only had one
BMD. She was instructed to have her husband fill out a paper ballot for
her. She declined and a poll worker attempted to read her the ballot; that
worker had difficulty pronouncing names and with referendum costs. Once
that poll worker finished, the ballot scanner could not read Ruths paper
ballot and a second poll worker had to act as her reader / scribe. Ruth had
to share her private voting choices with two different poll workers. She
spent nearly an hour voting at a location with no line.
Marie Cobb arrived at her polling location and the staff told her they did
not know how to operate the BMD. She attempted to use the machine
unsuccessfully before asking her 13-year-old granddaughter to help her.
Carly realized that the BMDs electrical cord was not plugged in and was in
fact still wrapped up and affixed to the machine. Marie and Carly had to
plug in the BMD, set it up, and figure out how to use it on their own.
Marie arrived to vote in the afternoon, and none of the poll workers had
thought to engage the BMD before her arrival. Marie has had similar
challenges in every election since 2016. It has taken her 30 to 60 minutes
to vote in each election despite there being no line at her voting precinct.
Maries, Joels, and Ruths voting horror stories demonstrate how we are
being denied our civil rights due to how Maryland operates its elections.
Their stories, and all of your stories, are why we will continue to fight to
restore the secret ballot to the blind and desegregate voting based on
disability in Maryland.
Jackie Anderson irrevocably changed our story when she had the idea to
establish a program to teach children the blindness skills that they were
either not receiving in school or that needed to be re-enforced. Jackies
idea for the NFB Braille Enrichment Literacy and Learning (BELL) Academy,
which was piloted in Maryland, has flourished into a national program with
dozens of iterations. We were delighted Jackie returned to us last summer
to lead our Baltimore NFB BELL Academy. The Baltimore, Salisbury, and Glenn
Dale NFB BELL Academies provided blindness skills training, socialization,
and access to blind role models to 23 blind children in Maryland. I believe
that the NFB BELL Academy is the most important program we operate as an
organization. We have determined that we will shape the narratives of our
blind children when they are young so that they have the skills and
confidence to write the stories they want for their lives. We thank all our
volunteers who made a difference by touching the lives of the 23 students
who attended our NFB BELL Academies this year.
We remain committed to giving young people the tools to define their
stories. This year, we established the NFBMD Internship Program to help
give a high school or college student, or recent graduate meaningful work
experience. Tonight, at our banquet, we will award John T. McGraw
Scholarships to two deserving students. We have awarded Sharon Maneki Youth
Empowerment Grants to two young people pursuing training and access to
technology. We not only give these young people the freedom to write their
own stories through these scholarships and grants, but we grant them the
control and confidence to do so.
Maryland is piloting a Career Mentoring Program, along with Nebraska and
Mississippi. The National Federation of the Blind is working with the
Maryland Department of Rehabilitation Services (DORS), Office on Blindness
and Vision Services (OBVS) to implement a mentoring program for transition
age youth emphasizing the skills for college preparation and job readiness.
We are grateful to all of the mentors who are sharing of themselves and
their stories with their mentees to help lay the foundation for success for
Marylands Career Mentees.
I congratulate and welcome all the staff and students from BISMs CORE and
SAIL training programs who are attending this convention. Your choice to
get adjustment to blindness training is the manifestation of you making the
choice to control your own story.
We continue to publicize that we own our stories and that we are the experts
on blindness in our work with the Maryland legislature. This year ushered
in a new General Assembly, nearly 100 of whom were brand new. We worked
tirelessly to educate them about our issues related to equal access. We
attended more than a dozen hearings and testified at more than half a dozen.
We even attended four hearings at the same time one day.
Though we did not get our voting bill passed and only some of our dockless
scooter concerns were addressed by the 2019 legislature, we will not give up
on these matters. The General Assembly continues to support our work at the
Center for Nonvisual Access (CENA). CENA, in conjunction with the Maryland
Department of Disabilities, has implemented a fellowship program to higher
education institutions to incorporate accessibility concepts within the
minimum areas of instruction within at least one course. To this end,
students will learn about accessibility concepts in their course of study,
resulting in more accessible websites, applications, and materials. This is
one more way we are redefining our story, by ensuring that those who
communicate information to us do so in a way that is accessible to us.
This past year has been a year of transition for the NFBMD. At last years
convention, Sharon Maneki passed the mantle of leadership on to me, and her
faith in me has meant the world. Ive been working to learn her story,
including the manual on how to run the myriad of programs and initiatives
here in Maryland, and Ive come to learn that what Sharon knows in her head
would fill more than 100 encyclopedias. Sharons story is intertwined with
the NFBMDs story, and she has been the driving force behind much of our
activism these past 30 years. But more amazing than the endless knowledge
and skill she possesses is her heart. Fortunately, Sharon remains an
active, vital member of our organization with many pages of her story yet to
fill.
We implemented a membership initiative to formalize joining the National
Federation of the Blind this year. New members partake in an orientation
and development process prior to even joining the organization so that they
know the essence of what our organization is and so that we get to know them
prior to accepting their membership dues. We also memberized existing
members throughout the spring and summer months, and this morning, we held
our final Memberization Ceremony for existing members. I traveled the
state of Maryland and visited with all 10 chapters and four divisions
throughout our Membership Initiative. I met members I hadnt had the
opportunity to meet previously and got to know many Ive known for years in
deep and more meaningful ways. I can say whole-heartedly that getting to
know you all has been one of the best chapters of my story, and I will
treasure it.
In February, we lost one of our key leaders, Rachel Olivero. Rachel managed
our web and technology initiatives, including our website, our member and
contacts database, and our convention registration platform, just to name a
few. Rachels sudden passing was devastating to many of us on a personal
level. We also struggled operationally as an affiliate because we were so
dependent on Rachel for our technology needs. Following Rachels passing,
the Board and I worked to shore up our web and technology assets. We also
worked to institute a continuity of operations plan so that if any key
member of the affiliate leadership team were to become unavailable or
incapacitated, the affiliate could continue to operate seamlessly. We hope
to never need to deploy our continuity of operations plan, but should we
ever need it, it is ready to go.
We also introduced a number of committees in the NFBMD. It is my hope to
grow and develop leaders in a myriad of ways, including by empowering
members to take ownership of our programs and initiatives. You will find a
list of our committees in the agenda. Please let me know if you are
interested in serving on a particular committee.
We are working hard to get our story out to the public and to narrate it in
our own words. This fall, we embarked on a marketing campaign with local
area radio stations to advertise our convention. We also held numerous Meet
the Blind Month activities. One Id like to highlight in particular is the
jointly sponsored Wizarding Weekend on Main in Old Ellicott City by the
Parents and Central Maryland Chapter. This incredible event resulted in
blind Federationists interfacing with an estimated 10,000 people over two
days. We are raising expectations for the blind by getting out in the
community.
I am inspired by you every single day, whether it is sitting among you at a
legislative hearing that was coordinated by our Legislation Committee,
hearing our radio advertisement for this convention that our Public
Relations Committee developed, attending the dozens of IEPs this year with
members of the Advocacy Committee, giving out NFB scavenger hunt maps and
instructions at the NFB Wizarding Weekend on Main that was organized by the
Parents Division and the Central Maryland Chapter, eating crab alongside you
as we raise funds for our students, or one of the dozens of experiences
weve shared. You are indelibly interwoven into my story. I am so honored
to fight alongside you to secure our right to equal access to education,
employment, social services, voting, information, and freedom for the blind.
We have chosen to make our story about our fight for freedom and we refuse
to allow those who will take that freedom from us to shape the narrative.
President Riccobono said, in his 2019 banquet address entitled Choice,
Exploration, and Resistance: The Road to Freedom for the Blind,
[W]e are working closely with a diverse range of companies and
organizations on partnerships to raise the expectations for the blind in
this nation. Despite this progress, we have not yet advanced far enough on
our road to freedom to avoid all conflicts. There are those who simply do
not believe what we do about blindness. There are those who fear we are
pushing too hard for change. There are those who believe that conflict is to
be avoided at any cost. To these individuals, we say that we do not seek
confrontation as a matter of course. We seek freedom for the blind as
defined by our growing expectations for equality. When we can combine our
efforts with others to build that future, we choose that path. However, if
our freedom is in question, we are not afraid to choose confrontation if it
is necessary to go the rest of the way to equality. For nearly eight decades
we have committed to take freedom for ourselves, to own it, shape it, and
strengthen it into a powerful force that allows all blind people to enjoy
the full rights and responsibilities of our nation.
Anika Utgaard said, I had to remind myself that I am the author of my own
life, not anyone else. Not society. Not my family. Not my friends. And
certainly not my enemies. The sooner I decided to write myself a better
story for my life, the sooner I could live the life I had dreamed of
living.
Fellow Federationists, it is precisely by choosing to write our own stories,
from our perspectives, focusing on our fight for freedom and equality, that
we will define our individual and collective future. It is this very story
that will turn our dreams into reality and empower us to live the lives we
want.
Using the Three Hands of the Federation Led to Success in the 2020 Session
of the Maryland General Assembly
By: Sharon Maneki
[Editors Note: Sharon Maneki serves as NFBMDs director of legislation and
advocacy. One function of this role is spearheading our legislative
advocacy efforts. Sharon is well-known in Annapolis for her tenacity and
innovative methods for garnering support for our initiatives. Below is a
round-up of our 2020 legislative efforts.]
Did you ever wish you had a third hand when carrying groceries or turning
the mattress over on the bed? Think of how much more you could do if you
had a third hand. One reason for the success of the National Federation of
the Blind (NFB) is its three-handed structure. The three hands of the
federation are the national organization, the state affiliate, and the local
chapters. Our experience in the 2020 session of the Maryland General
Assembly illustrates the benefits of three hands.
Many of our ideas for state legislation come from national issues. Access
to information is one of our national priorities. The state affiliate
implements national issues in the state. This year, in the Maryland General
Assembly, we promoted access to information for the blind by:
* advocating for funding for the Center of Excellence in Nonvisual
Access (CENA) to Education, Public Information, and Commerce;
* initiating the renaming of the Maryland Library for the Blind and
Physically Handicapped;
* seeking nonvisual access to electric low speed scooter (E-Scooter)
information;
* ensuring access to materials used in higher education; and
* assisting with a change in the executive branch that will improve
access to information for deaf-blind individuals.
We also attempted to end voting segregation in Maryland. Our efforts with
regard to voting will be described in the article Segregated Voting: When
Will It End?. The state convention determines the issues for the coming
year, and the state president coordinates the work with the board of
directors and the local chapters. As the third hand, local chapters play a
crucial role because they must visit the delegates and senators, write the
letters of support, and attend the hearings. How did the three hands of the
federation and our partners in the Maryland General Assembly accomplish our
agenda?
We got off to a great start on our agenda with our day in Annapolis on
January 16. More than 60 Federationists visited the 188 members of the
general assembly and their staff to tell them not only what we need, but
that we also are their resource on blindness. One of the highlights of the
day was our meetings with the new President of the Senate, Bill Ferguson,
and the new Speaker of the House of Delegates, Adrienne Jones. We offered
congratulations to these new leaders and presented each of them with an
NFBMD crab stress ball to release the stress and a Louis Braille
commemorative coin as a symbol of the innovative leadership that they will
provide in the coming years. Ferguson and Jones pledged to remember blind
citizens of Maryland have much to contribute to the state and will promote
equality and opportunity for all citizens including the blind.
Success in the general assembly is built on relationships and partnerships.
Many thanks to Governor Hogan for appropriating $250,000 and to the Maryland
General Assembly for protecting that appropriation in the budget. Through
its many programs, CENA teaches how to make websites and applications so the
blind can achieve full participation in all aspects of community life.
The three hands of the federation are actively involved in the national
trend to change the names of libraries for the blind and physically
handicapped to libraries for the blind and print disabled. The National
Library Service changed its name on October 1, 2019. This change was
initiated to clarify the mission of these libraries and to align with the
terminology of print disabled used in the Marrakesh treaty. Our national
organization was a strong leader in making this treaty a reality. The NFBMD
initiated the name change of the Maryland library and members from our local
chapters worked to make it happen.
Many thanks to longtime friend Senator Nancy King for sponsoring SB326.
Special thanks to the following senators who cosponsored this bill: Senators
Augustine, Beidle, Benson, Carozza, Eckardt, Edwards, Ellis, Feldman,
Griffith, Guzzone, Hayes, Hershey, Jennings, Kagan, Klausmeier, Kramer, Lam,
Lee, Miller, Patterson, Peters, Reilly, Rosapepe, Salling, Simonaire, Smith,
Waldstreicher, Washington, West, Young, and Zucker.
A new friend, Delegate Cathi Forbes, sponsored companion bill HB604. Many
thanks to Delegate Forbes and to the following delegates who cosponsored
this legislation: Acevero, Bagnall, B. Barnes, Barve, Boyce, Brooks, Cardin,
Carr, Chang, Crosby, Cullison, Ebersole, Feldmark, Ghrist, Guyton, Haynes,
Henson, Hettleman, Ivey, C. Jackson, Kerr, Kittleman, Korman, Krimm, Lehman,
R. Lewis, Lopez, Mosby, Solomon, Stein, Terrasa, ValentinoSmith, C. Watson,
Wells, and P. Young. In addition to renaming the library, this legislation
stipulates that at least one member of the State Library Board which advises
the State Library Agency, must always be a blind person to ensure the unique
needs of the Library for the Blind and Print Disabled are always properly
considered.
Oriana Riccobono offered the following testimony in favor of these bills to
the House Ways and Means Committee on February 13, 2020.
My name is Oriana Riccobono. I am in the fourth grade and I attend
Patterson Park Public Charter School in Baltimore, Maryland. Please vote yes
for HB604.
This bill says that a blind person should always be on the State Library
Board. This is a good idea because someone needs to make sure that kids like
me dont run out of books to read. Adults like my mom need to have their
books too. We need books in specialized formats and sometimes they are hard
to get.
I read audio books or Braille books. I like to read Harry Potter, the Magic
Treehouse books, and any books I can find about cats. My mom and I are
reading the Little House on the Prairie books together.
Please vote yes on HB604 so that we can have fun reading just as sighted
people do.
The three hands of the federation are agile and flexible. Although the
state affiliate implements many ideas from the national office, local
chapters also can bring problems to the state and national organizations.
The e-scooter issue is a good example. E-scooters are a new form of
transportation that are popular in many cities. They are hazardous to blind
people and other pedestrians. The Greater Baltimore, Sligo Creek and
Central Maryland chapters have been working with jurisdictions to protect
the rights of pedestrians. We decided to facilitate the introduction of
state legislation to make sure blind pedestrians had the same access to
e-scooter information as the sighted public. The legislation requires
e-scooter companies to maintain accessible websites and phone apps, and to
place tactile identification on each scooter so blind people can communicate
with the appropriate company. Many thanks to the Bird and Lime scooter
companies who supported this legislation. Our partnership with the Lime
company was especially effective.
Many thanks to our legislative sponsors and cosponsors. A longtime friend,
Senator Joanne Benson, introduced SB607 and Delegate Dalyia Attar, who is
serving her first term in the general assembly, introduced companion bill
HB557. The following delegates cosponsored this bill: Anderton, Arikan,
Bagnall, Barve , Boyce, Brooks, Carr, Chang, Charles, Ciliberti, Clark,
Cullison, Feldmark, Forbes, FraserHidalgo, Gilchrist, Guyton, Harrison,
Haynes, Healey, Hettleman, Hill, Holmes, Jacobs, Korman, Krebs, Krimm,
Lehman, Lierman, Lopez, Love, Malone, Moon, Otto, Palakovich-Carr, Ruth,
Shetty, Smith, Solomon, Stein, Stewart Terrasa, Wells, and Wivel.
Dezman Jackson offered the following testimony to the House Environment and
Transportation committee on February 20, 2020.
Please support HB 557, a bill that will provide information to blind
pedestrians so that they can communicate with companies that offer electric
low speed scooters (e-scooters) as a method of transportation.
I am active in the community and frequently travel throughout the streets of
Baltimore. I also teach orientation and mobility to blind people, which is
using a cane to travel. As their instructor, I travel with them to many
places. My students and I frequently encounter e-scooters.
Blind people need access to the website and phone app to communicate with
e-scooter companies. We need to inform them when one of their scooters is
impeding our ability to enter a building, get to the curb to cross the
street, and other points of access. Frequently scooters fall over and are
laying on the sidewalk. If we cannot read the information on the scooter,
then we dont know which company to contact. If we cannot fill the
complaint form out on the website or use the phone app, we cannot provide
information to the company. I deserve the same access to information that
sighted pedestrians have. Blind people also have the right to use the
streets just as all other citizens have.
Please vote in favor of HB 557 to protect the rights of blind people and all
pedestrians.
We monitor all bills introduced by the Maryland General Assembly to see if
they will have an impact on blind people. This year, we supported two
additional bills in addition to our own priorities. The first bill, SB667
will help college students because it requires all institutions in the
University of Maryland system to advertise in the online schedule which
courses will require the use of low cost or free digital materials and
textbooks. This bill will go into effect in July 2021. We supported this
legislation but wanted the committees to strengthen the accessibility
requirements by removing the phrase to the extent practicable. The
committees did remove this phrase.
Lizzy Muhammad Park, who recently moved from Pennsylvania to Maryland and
won a national NFB scholarship in 2014, argued our point in the following
testimony.
My name is Lizzy Park and I am a blind graduate of Bryn Mawr College. I am
writing to advocate the use of concrete language in the bill regarding the
accessibility of digital textbooks. Several courses, necessary for my
Bachelor of Arts degree, required students to use Vital Source (an
affordable alternative to paper textbooks). Without accessible digital
materials my degree in International Relations would have been impossible.
I was fortunate enough to attend a school that ensured the accessibility of
all educational materials. However, that is not the case for many blind
students, especially when educational institutions assume that digital
materials come with built-in accessibility features. We are in the 21st
century after all. Students with print disabilities need to access
educational materials without worrying about whether or not the information
will be accessible.
The use of equivocal language allows companies to forget about
accessibility. In contrast, firm language will hold companies accountable
for various accessibility features. I urge the committee to improve the
wording in this bill so that accessibility is a requirement for all digital
textbooks. Digital avenues were created to make learning more accessible
for all students: providing less weight to carry, lower cost, and the
ability to read anywhere. I believe that blind and print disabled students
should be included in the quest for access.
Precarious language will only hinder disabled students as they fight for
equal access to materials while simultaneously trying to learn said
material. Blind students should be given the opportunity to succeed in
academics alongside their nondisabled peers. As digital materials become
more prevalent on campus and online, the only way to achieve this goal is to
clearly state the need for accessibility in the bill.
We also supported an administration bill, SB851, which would move the
Telecommunications Access of Maryland program that includes the Maryland
Relay system from the Department of Information Technology to the Department
of Disabilities. We believe that this change will bring about better access
to information to deaf-blind individuals.
President Ronza Othman offered the following testimony to the Senate Finance
Committee on March 10, 2020.
Members of the National Federation of the Blind of Maryland (NFBMD) urge
the Senate Finance Committee to ensure that the Deaf-Blind citizens of
Maryland receive effective and necessary telecommunications services by
voting in favor of SB851. For years, NFBMD has advocated for the relocation
of the Telecommunications Access Maryland (TAM) program from the Maryland
Department of Information Technology (DOIT) to the Maryland Department of
Disabilities (DOD) and for the establishment of a Deaf-Blind Facilitator
Program. DOD is best positioned to administer TAM and its programs as a
result of DODs proven expertise in disability policy, deeply rooted
understanding and belief in the abilities of those with disabilities and
different communication methods, experienced staff that have a variety of
disabilities including blindness and those who are deaf and hard of hearing
(DHOH), and a solid history of managing, implementing, and modernizing
programs. We have the greatest confidence in DODs ability to administer
the TAM program so that Marylands deaf-blind population finally receives
the services to which they are entitled under the law.
The Problem:
- In its current location at DOIT, deaf-blind Marylanders are not
able to receive effective or necessary telecommunications services and they
are shunted aside by the needs of the larger population of deaf and hard of
hearing individuals despite various Federal laws that define deaf-blind as
a category of disability that entitles such individuals to access to
telecommunications services in a manner that is accessible given the
individuals specific limitation. This means that though they qualify for
and are entitled to services, they are often not receiving the services that
would enable them to communicate given their unique needs.
- Though there is an urgent need for deaf-blind individuals to
receive telecommunications facilitation services, and though the funding for
such a program has been earmarked, there is nothing in statute that permits
(AG opinion) any Maryland State entity to provide it. As a result, the
money sits unused and the deaf-blind population does not receive a needed
service.
- Certain members of the DHOH community have historically prevented
the Deaf-Blind Facilitator Program from moving forward by arguing that the
Governors Office of Deaf and Hard of Hearing would be the best place to
administer TAM. However, this is impracticable and would further harm the
deaf-blind community. The Deaf and Hard of Hearing community do not consider
the deaf-blind to be part of their DHOH community and consider them to be
individuals with physical disabilities. As a result, ODHH does not attend
to the needs of the deaf-blind and moving TAM there would further
disenfranchise the deaf-blind. Moreover, ODHH does not have the
infrastructure, operational capacity, or expertise to administer TAM (ODHH
is a policy shop, not a program management office).
- DOIT is an internally-facing operations entity whose mission,
resources, and expertise are to support state employees and other
departments, not the public. TAM service recipients are members of the
public and thus not receiving the best service possible given that TAMs
mission of serving the public is inconsistent with DOITs.
Why Does NFBMD Care About TAM?
- TAM administers telecommunication access services for deaf-blind
individuals in Maryland, and NFBMD is Marylands oldest and largest advocacy
organization representing the blind and deaf-blind.
- The Deaf and Hard of Hearing community do not consider the
deaf-blind to be part of their DHOH community and consider them to be
individuals with physical disabilities. As a result, deaf-blind
individuals are generally not represented by DHOH advocacy organizations.
- Deaf-blind individuals use a combination of communication tools
including sign language, Braille, large print, finger spelling, and other
methods. Thus, traditional services like Relay do not work in most
instances without additional modifications such as Braille displays or other
supports. NFBMD is experienced in, and knowledgeable about such
communication methods that augment traditional DHOH communication. TAM
currently provides some deaf-blind technology services including Braille TTY
or text telephone, where the sighted person in the conversation types into a
keyboard and the deaf-blind user communicates back using Braille. However,
these methods can and should be modernized.
- TAM also coordinates, in collaboration with the Maryland State
Library, NFB-NEWSLINE, which is a free audio and app-based news service for
anyone who is blind, low-vision, deaf-blind, or otherwise print-disabled
that offers access to more than 500 publications, emergency weather alerts,
job listings, and more.
Reasons for Supporting the Bill:
- The law will finally permit the Deaf-Blind Facilitator Program to
be established, tapping into funding that is already earmarked and providing
a service that is desperately needed.
- DOD will fairly and appropriately manage the resources in TAM
consistent with the law to ensure that only the eligible programs receive
funding, as defined by the bill.
- DOD, because of its experience and expertise with the deaf-blind
community, deaf community, and blind community, will ensure that the
specialized telecommunications needs of the deaf-blind citizens of Maryland
are addressed and will no longer allow them to be shunted aside.
- DOD has a proven record of understanding disability and special
needs and emphasizing the abilities of individuals. This philosophy will
enhance the TAM program.
- DOD, the entity which will manage and administer TAM, is an
outward-facing entity whose aim is to serve the public, particularly the
disability population in Maryland. This mission is consistent with that of
TAM.
- Cross-collaboration among The DODs Advisory Board, which is the
Maryland Commission on Disabilities (of which NFBMD President Ronza Othman
is a member), the Governors Advisory Board of Telecommunications Relay
(GABTAR), and the Governors Office of Deaf and Hard of Hearing will ensure
that the entities that are experts in DHOH and deaf-blind matters are
working together rather than independently. This will improve efficiency
and effectiveness.
The National Federation of the Blind of Maryland enthusiastically and
fervently asks you to vote favorable on SB851, Human Services Department
of Disabilities Accessibility Programs. We believe that this bill is
critical to ensure equal access to necessary and effective
telecommunications services for Marylanders who are deaf-blind. We have
tremendous confidence in the Maryland Department of Disabilities ability to
administer TAM and believe it can do so in a manner that enhances and
modernizes TAM. Further, given the experience and expertise of DOD and its
staff, and given that they both understand disability on an innate level and
live it every day as members of the communities covered by this bill, DOD is
the best and only entity that can effectively and fairly administer TAM.
All of the bills discussed in this article became law without the Governors
signature. Governor Hogan did not hold any bill signing ceremonies because
of the COVID-19 virus. Thanks to the work of the three hands of the
federation, the governor, and our partners in the Maryland General Assembly,
the blind citizens of Maryland will have greater opportunities to live the
lives we want.
NFBMD Protects the Rights of the Blind During the COVID-19 Pandemic
By Ronza Othman
[Editors note: The 2020 COVID-19 global pandemic has arguably caused the
biggest public health, economic, and access challenges of our lifetime.
Below is a description of how the National Federation of the Blind of
Maryland has met these challenges while preserving the rights of the blind.]
This spring, Maryland, the nation, and the world experienced unprecedented
challenges as a result of the COVID-19 global pandemic. The National
Federation of the Blind of Maryland (NFBMD) continued fully operating during
the global emergency, and our operations have been consistent with, and in
adherence to, all public health requirements including social distancing.
In addition to our regular work advocating on behalf of the states blind
and low-vision citizens, the public health emergency created unique
challenges for blind and low-vision Marylanders and our families. Below are
just some of the challenges we have faced and the actions we have taken in
response.
During the past few months, we worked on the following matters:
- Establishing NFBMD COVID-19 Emergency Assistance Fund
- Ensuring access to voting through on-site voting sites
- Ensuring instructional materials and platforms for students who
are engaging in remote learning are accessible
- Working on ensuring transportation is accessible
- Ensuring drive-up COVID-19 testing facilities serve those who
cannot drive and other mechanisms exist for testing
- Providing unemployment application and recertification assistance
- Providing economic impact payment application assistance
- Ensuring kiosks are accessible and/or alternatives are used
besides inaccessible kiosks
- Working with other disability organizations on a myriad of issues
NFBMD established a COVID-19 Emergency Assistance Fund to support Marylands
blind residents and their families who are adversely impacted by COVID-19
and the resulting closures. This fund provides financial assistance for
groceries, medication, and other essential needs. To be eligible, the
requestor has to be legally blind or have a legally blind family member and
has to be a resident of Maryland. The need must have arisen due to COVID-19
directly or changes in employment or housing due to COVID-19. NFBMD
contributed the initial funds, but members of the community are able to
contribute financially as well. Anyone who needs to request financial
assistance or anyone who wants to contribute should contact Ronza Othman,
NFBMD president, at 443-426-4110 or at <mailto:President at nfbmd.org>
President at nfbmd.org.
NFBMD is fighting to ensure Marylands blind and low-vision citizens are
able to exercise our civil right to vote anonymously and independently
because voting is segregated in Maryland due to disability. To that end, we
have been advocating to the Maryland State Board of Elections (MSBE) for
four years and attempting for two years to get legislation passed by the
General Assembly to ensure people with disabilities and non-disabled voters
use a single, accessible voting system so that the ballots of voters with
disabilities are not identifiable, which currently is the case. MSBE has
not taken action to effectively desegregate voting in Maryland, and the
General Assembly has failed to act on our legislation. We also filed suit
in federal court in 2019 to try to get a judicial fix for the problem. That
case still is pending. However, when the COVID-19 pandemic began, Maryland
initially decided to move its elections to entirely vote-by-mail, which
would disenfranchise voters with disabilities who cannot independently vote
a paper ballot, sign the certification on a paper ballot, or mail in a
ballot without assistance. NFBMD worked tirelessly to ensure that in-person
same day voting sites were included in the states voting plan for the
Special District 7 General Election on April 28, and the state-wide primary
election on June 2. This required direct efforts with the MSBE, the
Maryland Department of Disabilities, and the governors office. NFBMD
worked with other disability advocacy organizations, such as Common Cause
and Disability Rights Maryland on this effort, as this is a pan-disability
issue. (See Segregated Voting: When Will It End? later in this issue.)
Governor Hogan specifically referenced the blind as needing in-person voting
locations on a national Sunday news show following our advocacy. NFBMD also
organized transportation to the polls for those who were unable to get to
same-day in-person voting locations via public transportation, paratransit,
or other means. Such services have been disrupted and altered due to
COVID-19, and the voting locations were usually not in close proximity to
the voters homes.
NFBMD is working with school districts to ensure blind and low-vision
students have access to accessible materials and platforms for learning.
Since school buildings are closed, teachers of the blind who produce
Braille, large print, and electronic materials are not able to access the
equipment and technology they need to alter the formats of documents and
materials to comport with students IEPs. General education teachers also
have been procuring commercially off-the-shelf instructional materials that
are often not accessible. NFBMD-linked school districts and teachers with
external entities that can produce materials in accessible formats. We also
met with entities that produce inaccessible instructional materials to
educate them about how to make their materials accessible.
NFBMD is working with MTA, WAMATA, and other local transportation agencies
to ensure fixed transit and mobility continue to operate during the global
pandemic in a way that is accessible to the blind, so our members can get to
work, medical appointments, dialysis, grocery stores and pharmacies, and
perform other essential travel. Some challenges members experienced
included:
o Buses no longer operating in areas where they are needed;
o The policy of boarding the bus in the back causing some riders with
disabilities not to be able to identify the bus (the audible announcement is
located at the front entrance), locate the back entrance for boarding in the
short time the bus is stopped, and verbally communicate with drivers when
audible announcements are not operating.
o Some passengers with disabilities have been forced to separate from
their Personal Care Attendants due to the rule that only individuals using
wheelchairs may board at the front of the bus.
o Some Mobility drivers and operators refused to take passengers to their
jobs because they believed that employment was not deemed an essential
activity.
o Public transportation was not available for those needing to vote at
some in-person same-day voting locations.
NFBMD worked with the Maryland Department of Disabilities to educate
Department of Transportation staff and programs that employment is an
essential activity, and in fact, following our advocacy, Governor Hogan
specifically referenced such in his press briefings. NFBMD shared specific
incidents of transportation-related discrimination with the entities
responsible for enforcement, and this has resulted in some education and
outreach. NFBMD worked with Disability Rights Maryland to ensure that
public transportation was made available for the April 28, District 7
special election and the June 2, state-wide primary election.
NFBMD worked with the Maryland Department of Disabilities to ensure COVID-19
testing facilities were accessible to Marylands blind. For example, we
advocated to ensure drive-up COVID-19 testing facilities have a mechanism
for walk-up patients since the blind are not able to drive due to disability
and public transportation is not advisable for those experiencing symptoms
or for those suspected of having COVID-19. These include having secure
locations for conducting the testing, places to wait if there are lines that
adhere to social distancing requirements and that does not spread the virus
to others, and making sure the process is accessible, including any
documents and releases that must be completed. NFBMD suggested, and the
state agreed, to have alternatives to drive-up testing facilities, including
walk-up testing facilities and mobile units that go out to neighborhoods
where testing is needed.
The Maryland unemployment application and certification system through
BEACON was not accessible to individuals with disabilities who use assistive
technology. NFBMD worked with the Maryland Department of Labor, DOIT, and
MDOD to have the platform assessed by MDODs accessibility staff so the
developer can have a list of needed changes. Some have been implemented,
but there are others that still need to be resolved. NFBMD works directly
with individuals to link them with members of the DOL staff who can assist
them in filing their applications and/or recertifying on a weekly basis
using alternative methods other than the website. This is necessary since
the phone system is so overloaded that individuals cannot get a live person
most of the time and the only reason the blind cannot use the electronic
system is the lack of accessibility. This lack of accessibility is in
violation of federal and Maryland state laws, and thus we urge DOL to make
their system 100 percent accessible right away.
Many of our members are on fixed incomes through social support programs
like SSI, SSDI, and DDA. Their incomes are below the threshold for being
required to file income taxes, and thus the IRS was not aware they were
eligible for an Economic Impact Payment. We worked with many members,
particularly those who do not have access to computers, to file the
paperwork with the IRS needed to obtain their EIP.
Given that the world has adopted a culture of having less physical contact,
kiosks are being used more frequentlyand likely will grow in popularity.
For example, doctors offices now often requiring patients to check in using
a kiosk rather than with a live person. Often, these kiosks are not
accessible to the blind and low vision populations. NFBMD has worked with
some doctors offices to educate them on what it means for a kiosk to be
inaccessible and what an offices obligations are to provide an accessible
alternative. NFBMD also worked with the Maryland Department of
Transportation, Motor Vehicle Administration, concerning a Request for
Proposal (RFP) for internet kiosks, which initially did not require
accessibility. As a result of NFBMDs advocacy, MDOT amended and revised
the RFP to ensure the appropriate legal requirements for accessibility were
included.
Many communities are now meeting virtually rather than in-person. However,
for the blind to fully engage, the platform has to be accessible. NFBMD has
worked with a variety of entities to share proven practices for
accessibility for virtual meetings and events, including sharing what
platforms work best, how to convey visual information non-visually, how to
streamline logging into such systems, and how to make it easier for
individuals without smart devices to participate.
NFBMD partnered with other disability organizations, including Disability
Rights Maryland, on the following, which required direct advocacy with the
governor and state and federal entities. These include ensuring:
o support workers for persons with disabilities are essential employees;
o PPE and testing be provided to programs and facilities;
o federal resources more clearly target the crisis in our communities;
o health care be provided without discrimination, provide needed
accommodations, and that any crisis care standards avoid bias or protocols
that disadvantage people with disabilities;
o businesses accommodate people with disabilities;
o hospital visitor policies include accommodations for persons with
disabilities;
o accessible polling places be available for persons who cannot vote with
privacy or independently by mail;
o distance learning plans be created for students with disabilities;
o accelerated parole due to COVID-19 in Maryland should include
individuals with disabilities and not just those age 60 and over; and
o many more issues.
The areas referenced in this article are just some of the efforts NFBMD has
undertaken to protect the rights of blind Marylanders in recent months.
NFBMD will continue to work to protect the rights of the blind in Maryland
to access information and services during COVID-19.
The Rachel Olivero Accessibility Innovation Award
By Ronza Othman
[Editors Note: Rachel Olivero was a vital member of the National Federation
of the Blind of Maryland in numerous ways. Rachel managed the affiliates
web and technology needs and was responsible for our digital and electronic
systems. Rachel Olivero passed away unexpectedly in February 2019. Below
is a tangible way NFBMD has decided to honor Rachels legacy. NFBMD
President Ronza Othman gave the following presentation at the 2019 Annual
Convention of the National Federation of the Blind of Maryland Banquet on
November 9, 2020.]
Once in a generation, we meet someone who changes the landscape of how we do
what we do. These innovators are critical because they help to brush away
the extraneous so we can operate programs efficiently. They become imbedded
in the fabric of our organization, and we rely on them for a myriad of
things. These are the people for whom no job is too big, and no ask is
unreasonable. Theyre also the people for whom even the mundane and
monotonous work is a challenge because they come up with innovative ways to
do it better, faster, more easily.
Rachel Olivero was one such person. Rachel joined the Maryland affiliate in
2007 after having grown up in the Wisconsin affiliate and then moving to the
Indiana affiliate. She moved to Maryland when she joined the Access
Technology Team at the National Center. Though she left for Nebraska for a
few years, she continued to support Maryland even during that time. She
returned home to us in 2015.
Sadly, we lost Rachel very unexpectedly this past February to complications
from pneumonia. She was 36.
Her legacy lives on in Maryland though, and she will indelibly be part of
our story. She built our website and led the effort to modernize it. She
built our connections database, which has more than 8,000 unique contacts,
and she led the effort to keep it operational. In fact, I think she was the
only person who truly understood it. She built our convention registration
platform. She built our crab feast, spring concert, and any other online
registration system we have.
She often went along with Sharon, Melissa, and me to IEPs, so she can tell
the school districts what the best technology is for the particular
students needs. She worked with employers and members to figure out what
software worked with what other software, so that our members could work
independently.
And if there wasnt a solution out there for a particular challenge, she
built one.
Rachels life mission was to advance technology accessibility. She poured
her heart and soul into doing this, and she was very successful.
Rachel was particularly notable for her huge backpack. You could count on
her to have a number of radios (she was an emergency preparedness guru and a
ham radio operator). She loved pie like it was her job. And if you ever
needed anything fixed, tightened, loosened, cut, or broken, Rachel would
whip out her handy multi-tool and take care of it for you.
In honor of Rachels legacy to us, I am pleased to announce that the
National Federation of the Blind of Maryland has established the Rachel
Olivero Accessibility Innovation Award. We will give out this award only
when we feel someone has demonstrated the virtues that are reflective of
Rachels.
This year is one such year.
The recipient of the inaugural Rachel Olivero Accessibility Innovation Award
is someone who dedicated their career to ensuring accessibility in
technology. This person advocates in a variety of settings to make sure
policy-makers understand the need for accessibility, and works to teach
future generations the technical skills to imbed accessibility in technology
platforms.
This individual has:
- Published at least eight books, including "Ensuring Digital
Accessibility Through Process and Policy," which he co-authored with Dan
Goldstein and Anne Taylor
- Authored more than 130 articles
- Serves on the Board of the Friends of the Maryland Library, to
ensure technology innovation in our library services
- Received the 2010 Jacob Ballotan Award
- Has two patents for his work on accessibility and security
- Was the Shutzer Fellow at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced
Study at Harvard University to investigate the relationship between
human-computer interaction for people with disabilities and US Disability
Rights
- Is a professor at the University of Maryland, with a PhD from
UMBC.
The recipient of the 2019 Rachel Olivero Accessibility and Innovation Award
is Johnathan Lazar.
Ill read the inscription on the plaque:
Rachel Olivero Accessibility Innovation Award
Presented to
Dr. Jonathan Lazar
For your dedication to equal access to information, for your creativity in
spreading knowledge about accessibility to future web developers, and for
your leadership in eliminating accessibility barriers.
You enhance the present; you build the future.
November 9, 2019
And because we also wanted to give the recipient of this award a token of
appreciation that aligned with Rachels most cherished and useful tools,
along with this plaque, we present to Jonathan, a multi-tool.
Dr. Jonathan Lazar Wins the Inaugural Rachel Olivero Accessibility
Innovation Award
By Hayleigh Moore University of Maryland
November 15, 2019
[Editors Note: The below article was published on the University of
Maryland website. It features Jonathan Lazar, the inaugural recipient of
the NFBMD Rachel Olivero Accessibility Innovation Award.]
Dr. Jonathan Lazar, professor in the College of Information Studies (UMD
iSchool) at the University of Maryland, is the recipient of the inaugural
Rachel Olivero Accessibility Innovation Award, presented by the National
Federation of the Blind (NFB) of Maryland during its annual state convention
on November 9th. Lazar was honored with this award for his contributions in
ICT accessibility research, practice, education, and policy, and for his
leadership in moving accessibility innovations from research to practice.
The award was named in honor of the late Rachel Olivero who served many
roles over the years at the NFB's headquarters in Baltimore, Maryland, most
recently as Director of Organizational Technology. For years, she was
instrumental in developing access technology innovations and worked closely
with Drupal to modernize NFBs website. The NFB is the oldest and largest
nationwide organization of blind Americans, providing programs, services,
and resources to defend the rights of blind Americans, and is prominent in
the disability rights and civil rights world. Its mission is to ensure that
Blind people have the right to independence, as well as equal opportunities
to access information, education, and employment.
Lazar has a long history of working on ensuring that digital technologies
and content are accessible for people with disabilities. Prior to his
arrival at the UMD iSchool, Lazar taught at Towson University for 19 years
as a professor of computer and information sciences, served as director of
the Information Systems program, and founded the Universal Usability
Laboratory. While at Towson University, he authored or edited 12 books and
published over 140 refereed articles. He is probably best known for his
books Research Methods in Human-Computer Interaction, Ensuring Digital
Accessibility Through Process and Policy, and Disability, Human Rights,
and Information Technology. But, he has also had a major impact on policy
and law. He served as an expert consultant in the landmark NFB v. Target
case in 2007 and 2008, was the accessibility advisor to the US Federal
Recovery Accountability and Transparency Board in 2009 and 2010, and
multiple Federal regulations (such as Nondiscrimination on the Basis of
Disability in Air Travel: Accessibility of Web Sites and Automated Kiosks at
U.S. Airports) cite his research. His dedication to the rights of people
with disabilities is so deep that he even took a leave of absence from his
professorship in 2017-2018 to go back and be a graduate student again,
earning an LLM degree from the University of Pennsylvania Law School, where
his studies focused on disability rights law.
At the UMD iSchool, Lazar has made significant contributions to the
colleges research and teaching through his wealth of expertise in ICT
accessibility and legal frameworks, assistive technologies, and
human-computer interaction. He is the Associate Director of UMDs Trace
Center, the nations oldest research center on technology and disability. He
is also an active faculty member in the Human-Computer Interaction Lab. He
is passionate about providing his students with hands-on learning
experiences with organizations involved in accessibility, including
organizing trips for the students to Gallaudet University, the Maryland
Library for the Blind and Physically Handicapped, and the Library of
Congress National Library Service for the Blind and Print Disabled, among
other places. Even before he came to the University of Maryland, he was
well-known for his accessibility work in the University System of Maryland
(USM), having been named a recipient of the 2017 USM Board of Regents Award
for Excellence in Research and the 2011 USM Board of Regents Award for
Excellence in Public Service.
"We established the Rachel Olivero Accessibility Innovation Award to
memorialize Rachel Oliveros legacy of ensuring equal access to information
through creative, innovative, and accessible technology and other means,"
said Ronza Othman, President of the National Federation of the Blind of
Maryland. "Jonathan Lazar embodies the characteristics that made Rachel such
a vital and successful advocate and expert. Jonathan is the perfect person
to receive this award in its inaugural year."
Lazar is a passionate champion for accessibility innovation and is honored
to be the first ever recipient of the NFB Rachel Olivero Accessibility
Innovation Award. The UMD iSchool is proud to have Lazar as a faculty member
and grateful to be associated with the legacy of Rachel Olivero.
Protecting Voting Rights During the Coronavirus Emergency: A Victory for the
Blind and Voters with Disabilities
By Ronza Othman
[Editors Note: The 2020 COVID-19 global pandemic altered how people access
essential services and perform critical tasks. Voting is one such area that
has changed as a result of the pandemic. Unfortunately, the needs of voters
with disabilities are not always considered when those responsible for
implementing voting mechanisms adapt due to external factors; voting is a
fundamental right, and NFBMD has continued to fight for equal access to
voting.]
Protecting the rights of blind voters is always challenging. It became even
more challenging because of the coronavirus outbreak. On March 17, when
Governor Hogan renewed his proclamation of the State of Emergency in
Maryland, he also postponed the presidential primary election that was to
take place on April 28 and moved it to June 2. The proclamation also stated,
No later than April 3, 2020, the State Board of Elections (SBE) shall, in
consultation with the Maryland Department of Health, prepare and submit to
the Governor a Comprehensive Plan for the conduct of the Primary Election.
He further ordered that the election to fill the vacancy in the Seventh
Congressional District be held on April 28 as planned but that it should be
conducted by using a voting by mail system.
SBE made a unanimous decision in late March against offering any in-person
voting for the special general election or the rescheduled June 2
presidential primary out of concern for public health and the health of poll
workers.
This decision against any in-person voting, while using a vote by mail
system, denies the right to privacy and a secret ballot for blind voters. We
joined with other disability groups to protest this action. On April 13, SBE
reversed itself and allowed limited in-person voting for the April 28
election. Later, the board also allowed some in-person voting for the June 2
state-wide presidential primary election. Since vote by mail is likely to
continue in the future, an important precedent was established in the April
28 and June 2 elections. This precedent clearly guarantees that there must
always be some in person voting to protect the right to privacy and a secret
ballot for voters who are blind and those with disabilities. Below is the
first of two letters that NFBMD wrote to SBE outlining the arguments for
in-person voting.
April 1, 2020
VIA ELECTRONIC MAIL
Maryland Board of Elections
c/o Linda Lamone
151 West Street, Suite 200
Annapolis, MD 21401
info.sbe at maryland.gov
linda.lamone at maryland.gov
Re: Ensuring Voting Rights of Blind and Print Disabled Voters
Dear Chairman Cogan, Vice Chairman Hogan, and Members of the Board:
I write to you as President of the National Federation of the Blind of
Maryland on behalf of my organization and its approximately 2,000 members
regarding the plans the Board of Elections (Board) is forming at the
request of the Governor for the April 28, 2020 special general election for
the 7th Congressional District and the June 2, 2020 primary presidential and
municipal elections. As the foremost organization led by and advocating for
the rights of blind and other print disabled Marylanders, we have profound
concerns regarding the plans that the Board approved on March 25, 2020 for
the April 28 election and those called to be drafted for the June 2
election. Our respectful request is that the Board reconsider those plans
before it reports a comprehensive plan to the Governor on or by April 3,
2020.
Our principal concern is the Boards decision not to have any in-person
voting in the two aforementioned elections -- the decision having been
affirmed by a vote of the Board for the April election, and tentatively the
sense of the Board for the June election, which we understand is to be voted
on at the Boards April 2, 2020 meeting.
Having at least one location in each county for in-person voting using the
accessible ExpressVote ballot marking device (BMD) is essential for blind
and other print disabled voters to be able to independently and privately
exercise their right to vote. This is because there are a substantial
number of such voters who cannot access a printed ballot, which includes the
ballot that results from the online ballot marking tool which is not
submitted electronically, but rather must be printed, signed, and mailed by
the voter. Some of our members do not possess the equipment, such as a
computer and printer, or technological sophistication to mark a ballot in
that manner but are capable of voting via the BMD. The barrier to voting in
this manner is exacerbated by the closure of public facilities such as
libraries, where some blind voters without the necessary equipment had
printed their ballots in past elections. Further, it is a mistaken notion
expressed by a member of the Board during the March 25 meeting that
individuals with disabilities presumably live with a nondisabled person who
can assist them with completing and mailing a ballot obtained via the online
ballot marking tool. Many National Federation of the Blind of Maryland
members, including myself, and others with print disabilities live
independently in households without sighted family or friends and are
capable of voting independently via the BMDs. We want to maintain and are
entitled to maintain that independence.
The above noted considerations are many of the reasons that the law requires
at least some in-person voting as express mandates under the Help America
Vote Act (HAVA), the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), or Section
504 of the Rehabilitation Act. These antidiscrimination laws are among
those cited by your counsel during the March 25 meeting as principles that
suggest individuals with disabilities must have an opportunity to vote in
person, even in the present circumstances. Our view is that these laws do
not merely suggest, but instead require, such an opportunity.
HAVA mandates that [t]he voting system shall--be accessible for individuals
with disabilities, including nonvisual accessibility for the blind and
visually impaired, in a manner that provides the same opportunity for access
and participation (including privacy and independence) as for other voters
52 U.S.C. § 21081(a)(3)(A) (emphasis added). Likewise, Title II of the ADA,
and the Rehabilitation Act which is at least co-extensive with the ADA,
requires that no qualified individual with a disability shall, by reason of
such disability, be excluded from participation in or be denied the benefits
of the services, programs, or activities of a public entity [i.e., voting],
or be subjected to discrimination by any such entity. 42 U.S.C. § 12132.
In providing aids, benefits, or services, public entities such as the Board
may not [a]fford a qualified individual with a disability an opportunity to
participate in or benefit from the aid, benefit, or service that is not
equal to that afforded others, nor may public entities provide qualified
individuals with disabilities an aid, benefit, or service that is not as
effective in affording equal opportunity to gain the same result or benefit
as provided to others. 28 C.F.R. § 35.130(b)(1)(ii)-(iii). Furthermore,
public entities shall furnish appropriate auxiliary aids and services where
necessary to afford individuals with disabilities
an equal opportunity to
participate in, and enjoy the benefits of, a service, program, or activity
of a public entity. Id. § 35.160(b)(1). Public entities must also take
appropriate steps to ensure that communications with
members of the public
with disabilities are as effective as communications with others. Id. §
35.160(a)(1). To be effective, the auxiliary aids and services must be
provided in
such a way as to protect the privacy and independence of the
individual with a disability. Id. § 35.160(b)(2).
The lesson of these statutes is straightforward: blind and print disabled
voters in Maryland must be afforded the same opportunity to vote
independently and privately as their nondisabled peers. For the reasons
discussed above, prohibiting in-person voting for voters with disabilities
violates that right. And, in the case of the April 28 special election,
Maryland law separately and expressly states that [e]ach local board shall
establish at least one voting center for the use of any eligible voter who
chooses to cast a ballot in person in a special election in accordance with
this section. Md. Code, Election Law § 9-503(a). The Election Law
provision permitting alternate voting systems in a state of emergency does
not clearly abrogate the in-person requirement, much less override the
federal anti-discrimination laws discussed above that preempt and invalidate
any contrary state action.
And so, as a disability rights organization, we join the voices of the many
voting rights organizations that are communicating these same concerns, as
well as the President of the Maryland Senate and the Speaker of the House of
Delegates who pointed out yesterday in a letter to the Governor that even if
in-person voting is not carried out broadly, it must be available to voters
with disabilities.
We are cognizant of the public health concerns discussed in the Boards
March 25 meeting, which focused on possible COVID-19 transmission at voting
centers or a possible lack of poll workers. However, the previously
discussed laws make it is essential that public services, programs, and
activities especially affecting the constitutional right to vote not be
curtailed based on assumptions or speculation of risks that are not based on
reliable data. The Boards staff presented a proposal for in-person voting,
which was formulated in consultation with the Maryland Department of Health.
The Board rejected that proposal largely on the basis of the comments about
COVID-19 by Webster Ye, the Director of the Departments Office of
Governmental Affairs, which were repudiated by the Governor the next day.
Emily Opilo & Meredith Cohn, Models show coronavirus infection peaking
probably around Fourth of July, Maryland health agency official says, Balt.
Sun. (The health department disputed that, Hogan said. That guy who
works for the health department I think just made up his own personal
opinion to some group and it got quoted in the paper. Hes not in any of our
discussions or our meetings
Its something he never expressed to anyone
else.) (emphasis added), available at:
<http://www.baltimoresun.com/coronavirus/bs-md-coronavirus-peak-july-4-infec
tion-health-20200326-6heideqntvh7jgwg4c743ybcvq-story.html>
http://www.baltimoresun.com/coronavirus/bs-md-coronavirus-peak-july-4-infect
ion-health-20200326-6heideqntvh7jgwg4c743ybcvq-story.html.
The Board discussed the possibility of a lack of personal protective
equipment (PPE) for poll workers as a risk factor. Health authorities
continue to advise that use of PPE, such as face masks, is necessary only
when the wearer is sick himself or herself, or is caring for someone who is
sick; it is not advised that members of the general public should use PPE.
Jacqueline Howard, WHO stands by recommendation to not wear masks if you are
not sick or not caring for someone who is sick, CNN, available at:
<https://www.cnn.com/2020/03/30/world/coronavirus-who-masks-recommendation-t
rnd/index.html>
https://www.cnn.com/2020/03/30/world/coronavirus-who-masks-recommendation-tr
nd/index.html. Thus, poll workers in these very limited in-person voting
locations do not appear to need PPE. But in the event that PPE use is
desired, it is not clear that supplies will not be available and precluding
in-person voting on that basis is inappropriate.
The presence of a state of emergency is not an exception to the protections
of the ADA and Rehabilitation Act. Indeed, courts have found violations of
those laws when public entities fail to provide for the needs of individuals
with disabilities during emergency conditions. E.g., California Found. for
Indep. Living Centers v. Cty. of Sacramento, 142 F. Supp. 3d 1035, 1062-63
(E.D. Cal. 2015) (holding that certain aspects of a countys airport
evacuation plan violated the ADA by failing to account for the needs of
people with mobility disabilities); Brooklyn Ctr. for Indep. of Disabled v.
Bloomberg, 980 F. Supp. 2d 588, 643-44 (S.D.N.Y. 2013) (finding that the
city violated the ADA by failing to account for accessibility to people with
disabilities in its evacuation plans and rejecting the citys argument that
ad hoc accommodations were sufficient).
In view of all of this, we believe that there is an appropriate balance to
be struck that preserves the rights of blind and print disabled voters while
employing feasible and non-burdensome precautions. As such, we request that
the Board make a limited number of voting centers available for in-person
voting at both the April 28 and June 2 elections (which may most easily be
done at local boards of election offices), using BMDs that can be easily
deployed out of current inventory as the exclusive means of voting at such
centers. Because we anticipate that others who did not receive their ballot
(which the Boards counsel estimated ranges from 1-4% of the electorate)
will also need to vote in person, the exclusive use of BMDs will have the
necessary effect of preventing the segregation of blind and print disabled
votes as well as preventing the breach of privacy that results from
channeling only disabled voters to BMDs.
We agree with the Board staff and its counsel that there is a safe way to
carry out in-person voting, working within guidelines issued by the Center
for Disease Control and Prevention and the U.S. Election Assistance
Commission. With the in-person voting limited to one voting center per
county, common sense measures like those employed at grocery stores and
other essential facilities can be carefully and consistently applied. We
also believe that by focusing on the small number of voting centers, the
need for poll workers is greatly reduced and adequate numbers of them can be
fielded from the existing group of volunteers, those that have been offered
by other groups such as the League of Women Voters, and/or recruitment of
younger volunteers from colleges and lines of work that are currently
closed. The Board should also consider allowing a limited number of public
facilities such as public libraries, colleges, and workplaces to be opened
for the purpose of allowing voters with disabilities to print ballots
completed via the online ballot marking tool.
We also want to be clear regarding the proper canvassing of
votes submitted via the online ballot marking tool. Our understanding is
that in prior elections, ballots completed via the tool and submitted by
voters with disabilities were deemed valid even if the voters signature was
not a precise match to the signature on file with the Board. This was the
case because some individuals with disabilities are not able to produce an
identical signature due to medical conditions that cause hand tremors or
prevent a visual reference for prior signatures. Any reversal of that policy
to require an identical signature verification would disenfranchise many of
these individuals and would have a disparate impact on individuals with
disabilities.
We hope that you consider these common sense approaches to choose a course
that enables all Marylanders to have an equal right to vote and not one that
prevents it in violation of the law and basic fairness.
Sincerely,
Ronza Othman
[CCs omitted]
Chapter Spotlight: Greater Carroll County
By Christopher Nusbaum
[Editors Note: The Maryland affiliate has a rich and varied history that is
not widely known. As we move forward with our membership initiative, we will
continue highlighting a particular chapter or division in each edition of
this publication. After all, members are the lifeblood of our organization,
and chapters help build the foundation for membership. Since the spring 2019
issue, we have been spotlighting a Maryland chapter in each issue to share
how that chapter originated, what makes it unique, and other interesting
information about it. The next chapter to be highlighted in this series is
the Greater Carroll County Chapter.]
Every active Federationist knows that one of the hallmarks of our movement
is its tenacity. We are an organization that never waivers on our
principles, never strays from our mission, and never gives up, regardless of
the obstacles placed in our paths. Give us an unresponsive government, and
we flood Annapolis or Washington with calls, emails and visits until the
blind get what we need. Give us an agency establishment whose programs
limit the capacity of blind people, and we counter by starting our own
training programs and imbuing them with our positive philosophy. Give us a
group of students at a seminar who are convinced that grilling over an open
charcoal grill is completely out of the realm of possibility for blind
people, and President Riccobono fires up the grill and shows them how its
done. Give us an area where organizing a chapter seems inconceivable, and
we somehow find enough committed blind people to get a strong chapter off
the ground. Such is the strength of the National Federation of the Blind
(NFB).
If I needed a reminder of this tenacity, I got it in 2014 when Sharon Maneki
gave me one of those assignments for which she is so well-known. In an
email to her sometime in that year, I noted that I wished we could have a
chapter in Carroll County, but I didnt think there would be enough blind
people in the area to do anything worthwhile. There were very few of us in
the area, and the blind people I knew were either already in another
organization or not interested in joining any organization of blind people,
let alone organizing one. Sharon came back with a response one might expect
to see from her: Well, lets start one! Im sure we can find the people.
Before I could protest, I was introduced to Dr. Cathy Orzolek-Kronner, a
newly-blind college professor who was talented, energetic and looking for
something to get involved in. It turns out that Ronza Othman (then
membership chair) and Melissa Riccobono (then affiliate president) had been
talking about starting a chapter in Carroll County as far back as 2010, a
year before I joined the organization. They had already recruited Cathy, so
there was no need for me to do any further prodding. So, with our dynamic
duo in place and with the support of Sharon and Ronza, we got to work.
>From the start, it was clear that organizing a chapter takes patience,
energy, courage, andmost of alla lot of hard work. After we planned our
organizing event and figured out how we would engage those who attended, the
hardest part was suddenly upon us: getting people to come. Ronza checked
all the records of our state affiliate and national organization, and sent
her findings to Cathy and me. I will never forget the size of that
spreadsheet. There were 68 columns in all, each one containing the name of
and contact information for someone who had some kind of contact with the
federation at some point in time. In almost every case, neither Cathy nor I
had ever heard of the person we were supposed to call.
I have always been a generally outgoing person who is comfortable talking
with anyone on the phone. Fortunately, Cathy shares that quality. However
never before had either of us made cold calls to complete strangers to ask
them to do something. Never before had we sat at our desks and called every
number on a list as if we were telemarketers; we usually hung up on people
who did that. But it was the homework Ronza gave us, and it was necessary
for the cause, so we knew it must be done. As we expected, we received a
variety of responses. Some were enthusiastic, some were uncertain, some
were disinterested, and some sent us to voicemail and never called us back.
A few memorable people were outright hostile; one told me he wanted nothing
to do with me or my group before angrily hanging up on me, while another
told us that he would call the cops if anyone from our organization ever
called and asked for his wife again. Despite those notable rebuffs, we
ended up with a few people who committed to coming to our event, along with
many people who were considering the idea.
On May 2, 2015, we gathered in a room on the campus of McDaniel College
where many of Cathys classes were held. We expected 10 people would come
if we were lucky, but we surprisingly ended up with 17 people in attendance.
Finally, we could see that all our organizing efforts bore tangible fruit.
Those on our phone list who committed to coming were in attendance, as well
as many who were at first undecided. One couple even came up from
Reisterstown after seeing an article about our meeting in the Carroll County
Times, which wasnt published until the day of the event. Particularly
gratifying was the presence of a large contingent from Carroll Lutheran
Village (CVL), a retirement community in Westminster. These were seniors
who were losing vision and were interested in seeing the aids and appliances
we demonstrated, both high-tech and low-tech. Even so, as we discussed with
the attendees our intention to start a chapter of the National Federation of
the Blind in Carroll County, the cynical part of me doubted that we would
see the seniors again. To my delight, all of them returned in June, as did
most of the people who attended our May organizing event. At that June
meeting, a constitution was adopted, elections were held, and the Greater
Carroll County Chapter of the National Federation of the Blind of Maryland
was born.
The five years that followed have seen remarkable growth, both in our
membership and in our influence on the community we serve. We championed
the improvement of public transportation in the county, and two of our
members were appointed to the Transportation Advisory Council, where they
continue to bring the concerns of blind people to the county government. We
held various community events, which brought the philosophy of the
federation to a public whose exposure to blind people is quite limited, if
they have had any exposure at all. Recently, we held a technology workshop
where blind and sighted people alike could learn about the tools blind
people use to live, work and play. In response to the ever-growing
popularity of Zoom as a virtual meeting platform, we recently conducted an
introduction to Zoom for our members, and subsequently did the same for all
Maryland Federationists. We made our mark on CLV, where we now meet,
demonstrating to the residents and staff that blind people are a competent,
confident cross-section of society who enjoy life and want to be active in
our community. Ever since we began meeting at CLV, we made a post-meeting
tradition of having lunch together at the bistro adjacent to our meeting
room. The staff there marveled at us when we first came, but grew to expect
and welcome us. They are no longer caught by surprise at this boisterous
group of blind people who disrupt the quiet of the early Saturday afternoon.
Most importantly, ours is a chapter that constantly changes lives through
the alternative techniques and positive attitudes we learned from our
membership in the NFB. Since our inception, we tend to bring in more and
more members who are newly-blind and looking for resources. Almost
universally, these new members find much more than they were looking for. I
will never forget the conversation I had at one of our picnics with a member
who had only been with us for a few months. She told me she had joined us
at a time when she was in the depths of depression, fearing that her life
was virtually over because she was blind. She expected she would find in us
a group of people who would understand her plight and would commiserate with
her. We did indeed understand her plight, but we made it clear to her that
her life was not hopeless. She told me she found a new lease on life
because of her participation in our chapter, and she would always be
grateful to us for lifting her out of the depression that previously
consumed her. Less than a year later, she passed away, and we deeply miss
her. However, we can take solace in the knowledge she left us as a
Federationist through and through. In our relatively brief existence, we
have lost several other members, many of whom were in that original group of
seniors and one of whom died on the very day our charter was presented to
us. We carry on our work in their memory, knowing we have done our part to
add some joy to their lives.
As I close this spotlight on our chapter, I conclude that the story of the
Greater Carroll County Chapter is a classic NFB story. It started as a dream
hoped for by a few, though not expected to turn into reality. Then, with the
backing of determined NFB leaders, the dreamers slowly came to believe their
dream could be realized. Then, the dream did become reality, and all doubts
were put aside. Now this chapter, which I once called the little chapter
that could, is five years old and stronger than ever. This strength comes
not only from good leadership, though we have that in abundance, guided by
current President Brian Keseling. It comes not only from an active
membership, though our membership has always been small but mighty. It comes
from the love, hope and determination of the NFB, which transforms dreams
into reality.
Segregated Voting: When Will It End?
By Sharon Maneki
[Editors note: Sharon Maneki serves as NFBMDs director of legislation and
advocacy. She led our fight to desegregate voting in Maryland based on
disability. Below is an update on our efforts.]
When will segregated voting end in Maryland? The National Federation of the
Blind of Maryland (NFBMD) intends to make sure that it does end. As
Spectator readers know, the National Federation of the Blind (NFB), the
NFBMD, and plaintiffs Marie Cobb, Ruth Sager, and Joel Zimba sued the
Maryland State Board of Elections in August, because its policies promote
segregated voting for persons with disabilities. On February 10, 2020, the
judge ruled in our favor with regard to the boards motion to dismiss the
lawsuit. This means we can continue with the litigation, which is slowly
making its way through federal court. We are not putting our eggs in one
basket, so we continue to urge the governor and the legislature to take
action. This article summarizes our activity on the legislative front.
In the 2019 session of the Maryland General Assembly, Senator Clarence Lam
and Delegate Nick Mosby introduced legislation on our behalf that would have
ended segregated voting in Maryland. The Senate Education, Health and
Environmental Affairs, and the House Ways and Means committees sent these
bills for further study during the interim. The following article
summarizes the study from the House Ways and Means Committee.
<https://www.marylandmatters.org/2019/11/06/on-ballot-privacy-issues-house-l
awmakers-look-to-2022-for-big-change/> On Ballot Privacy Issues, House
Lawmakers Look to 2022 for Big Change
By: Danielle E. Gaines
(taken from the November 6, 2020 edition of Maryland Matters found at
https://www.marylandmatters.org/)
Del. Nick J. Mosby (D-Baltimore City) plans to introduce legislation next
session to guide the state's future election technology to ensure equal
access for Marylanders with disabilities.
Maryland lawmakers expressed dismay and optimism Tuesday about efforts to
guarantee secret ballot access for disabled voters in the state.
While policies for the 2020 electionwhich are the subject of a lawsuit by
blind votersare already set, the states current elections equipment
contract expires in 2021 and could allow for a big change.
Its too late right now to do much of any changes for 2020 because the
elections are right around the corner, but Im looking forward to seeing
what my colleagues come up with for next session to help resolve this issue
long-term, said Del. Alonzo T. Washington (D-Prince Georges).
Washington chairs the Election Law Subcommittee of the House Ways & Means
Committee, which referred the issue of equal access to secret ballots to a
summer study last legislative session.
The issue of ballot segregation and secrecy has been an issue in Maryland
since 2016, when the state implemented a paper ballot voting system.
While the vast majority of voters hand-mark 8 ½ by 11-inch ballots, voters
who are blind or have motor disabilities can use an ExpressVote ballot
marking device, which provides headphones, magnification, touchscreens and
other features to independently cast ballots. The machines do not record
votes directly but mark a paper ballot that is a different size 4 ½ by 14
inches and list only the candidates the voter selected, making those votes
cast by Marylanders with disabilities immediately identifiable, advocates
say.
In 2013, the attorney generals office said the state board would have to
adopt one of three policies to avoid creating a segregated ballot for voters
with disabilities:
* require all voters to use a ballot marking device;
* require identical ballots for voters who cast ballots with a
marking device; or
* ensure that enough voters without disabilities use ballot marking
devices to anonymize those ballots cast by voters with disabilities.
The board chose the third option with varying amounts of success.
In the 2018 general election, ballot-marking devices were used for less than
0.1 percent of ballots cast in Harford County, but for about 7 percent of
all ballots cast in Prince Georges County.
At 22 precincts in Maryland, only one ballot was cast using a marking
device; at 66 precincts, zero ballots were cast using a device.
The State Board of Elections
<https://www.marylandmatters.org/2019/06/28/preserving-the-private-vote-stat
e-adopts-new-policy-on-accessible-ballots/> voted in June on policy changes
intended to increase use of the machines. In 2020, precincts will be
encouraged to have at least five voters use a ballot marking device and
election judges training on how to operate the machines will be more
robust. Election judges will also use neutral language without mentioning
disability or accessibility as they have in the past that could lead to
more voters opting for the devices: You have two ways to mark your ballot:
either by hand or with an electronic device. Which do you prefer?
But advocates doubt that the policies will resolve the issue. The National
Federation of the Blind
<https://www.marylandmatters.org/2019/08/02/national-federation-of-the-blind
-sues-state-board-of-elections-over-ballot-privacy/> filed a lawsuit in
August seeking a court order to require the use of ballot-marking devices to
all voters by default unless they specifically request to mark a paper
ballot.
In court filings, the state has argued that the new policies will address
past issues and that voters with disabilities have not been denied
meaningful access to voting in person by secret ballot and that requiring
all voters use marking devices is an unreasonable change.
Maryland currently has a lease for about 3,500 ballot marking devices from
ES&S but would need about 18,000 to implement universal use. The cost was
estimated last year at about $12 million, with the state and counties
splitting the cost.
The Election Law Subcommittee on Tuesday zeroed in on the states current
contract with ES&S, which expires in 2021. While ES&S is the countrys
largest voting technology manufacturer, two other companiesHart Intercivic
and Dominion Votingoffer ballot marking devices that produce ballots
indistinguishable from paper ballots. Both of those devices also eschew use
of a barcode to record a voters ballot, something which the ES&S system
does. The U.S. House of Representatives passed a bill in June that would
prohibit the use of barcodes on ballots and some states have banned the use
of barcodes because of security concerns.
While Del. Jessica Feldmark (D-Howard) asked legislative analysts about the
cost to shift to a new voting system,
<https://www.propublica.org/article/the-market-for-voting-machines-is-broken
-this-company-has-thrived-in-it> costs in the election technology industry
are notoriously vague.
I asked them what their costs were, and they didnt tell me, Stanford
Ward, a Department of Legislative Services analyst, told the subcommittee.
Ward said he was going to try to get more information about comparative
costs of voting systems through national organizations.
Feldmark said the committee should work toward an overhauled voting system
in 2022 as a goal, while still expressing concern that new policies for 2020
may not be adequate enough.
Its both understandable and disappointing. I dont think we should be
looking for democracy deferred, she said.
Del. Nick J. Mosby (D-Baltimore City), who introduced legislation last
session that would have required all voters in the state to use the
ballot-marking devices, said he is working on a new bill for 2020 that would
aim to set minimum requirements for voting technology in the states next
procurement.
Voting is a fundamental privilege as an American. Its critically
important that all voices matter, whether its disability, race, religion or
gender, are heard, he said after Tuesdays briefing. As a state, we should
hold that in the highest regard.
In the 2020 session, Senator Clarence Lam and Delegate Nick Mosby once again
introduced legislation that would make the BMD the default voting method for
all. People would still be able to request a paper ballot if they wished.
Many thanks to Senator Lam who sponsored SB757 and the following senators
who cosponsored SB757: Senators Carter, Feldman, Jennings, King, Lee,
Rosapepe and R. Young. Many thanks to Delegate Nick Mosby who sponsored
HB1314, and the following delegates who cosponsored HB1314: Delegates
Acevero, Anderson, Attar, D. Barnes, Boyce, Bridges, Carr, Chang,
Charkoudian, Charles, Conaway, Crutchfield, Ebersole, Feldmark, W. Fisher,
Gilcrest, Haynes, Hettleman, Hill, Hornberger, Ivey, Kaiser, Kelly, Korman,
J. Lewis, R. Lewis, Lierman, Lopez, Love, Moon, Palakovich Carr, Proctor,
Qi, Queen, Rosenberg, Smith, Solomon, Stewart, Turner, Walker, Washington,
R. Watson and Wells. Unfortunately, the committees took no action, so these
bills failed.
In addition to working on these voting bills, we also testified at the State
Board of Election budget hearings. Here is our testimony before the Senate
Budget and Taxation committee on February 25, 2020.
Since the 2016 elections, disabled voters lost their right to a secret
ballot because of the policies of the State Board of Elections (SBE). While
it is true SBE made some changes to its policies for the 2020 election we
already have evidence these policies still are ineffective. The NFBMD
wishes to raise the following questions about the budget of the SBE.
For the 2020 election, SBE changed the number of voters it would encourage
to use the Ballot Marking Device (BMD) from two voters to five voters. They
also developed different language to inform voters of their options in
casting their votes. We have evidence that these new policies were
ineffective in the special election conducted on Feb. 4. Voters were not
informed the BMD was available for their use. Since BMDs were not ready and
poll workers did not know how to fix them, some blind voters had to wait
several hours before they could cast their votes. This special election
only involved three jurisdictions, Baltimore City and Baltimore and Howard
counties, and only those parts of the jurisdictions that were in the 7th
Congressional District. If election officials could not follow the new
policies in a small special election, how are they going to do it in the
presidential election where there is heavy voter turnout? Discrimination
against disabled voters will continue in the 2020 election.
Some of the leases on the current BMD machines expired in March 2019 and the
leases on the remaining BMDs will expire in March 2021. Since these leases
are expiring, SBE has the perfect opportunity to eliminate the problem of
having two ballots that differ in size and content. Does the budget contain
money for leasing or purchasing BMDs for future elections?
Why does the state of Maryland continue to pay for a voting system that
discriminates against disabled voters by creating two voting systems? The
Supreme Court decided 65 years ago that separate is not equal. It is time
for Maryland to abide by this principle. If the ballots of any other
protected class of citizen were identifiable, the general assembly would
surely insist SBE revise its policies. Blind and disabled voters deserve
the right to equality in voting and a secret ballot too.
When will segregated voting end in Maryland? Clearly, blind people will
face segregated voting in the 2020 elections. Segregated voting may end by
the 2022 elections, if the governor and general assembly take action, or the
court rules in our favor and the state does not appeal. One thing we know
for certain, the NFB will not rest until segregated voting ends in Maryland.
Senior Spotlight: Wendy Ruth
By Judy Rasmussen
[Editors note: Wendy Ruth received the Anna Cable Award at the 2019 NFB of
Maryland State Convention. This award is given to a person who lost their
vision later in life and demonstrates Anna Cables zest for life, including
learning Braille. Wendys enthusiasm for life shines through everything she
does.]
Reading is such a fundamental part of our daily lives. We often take for
granted we can read what we want when we want to read it. Reading print is
obviously the common way to gain knowledge, locate a destination, or prepare
a recipe. Many federation articles have been written emphasizing the
importance of reading, and reading Braille in particular. Learning to read
with your fingers rather than your eyes can feel overwhelming and something
that is impossible to do, especially if you lose vision as an adult.
Individuals who have had the determination to succeed at learning to read in
a totally different way deserve special recognition. In addition, what one
person is able to do inspires others to keep going when discouragement sets
in.
For more than 20 years, the National Federation of the Blind of Maryland
(NFBMD) has given the Anna Cable Award to an individual who learned to read
and write Braille as an adult. Many of you may know Anna Cable was told
that in her 60s, she was too old to learn Braille. For a woman who fought
for the right of women to vote, worked as a secretary for the federal
government in the 1940s, and had been an advocate for education, this was
nonsense. I dont know who taught Anna to read and write Braille, or how
she found the NFBMD. I remember meeting her at my first chapter meeting
after moving to Maryland from Illinois. I could tell she was a spunky lady
and that she believed in blind people living productive and meaningful
lives. Anna lived during three centuries. It was a joy and privilege to
attend her 100th birthday party at the assisted living facility where she
was living. The federation will continue to honor people who have met the
challenge and are enjoying reading again, not just to remember Anna, but to
encourage and strengthen everyone who desires to learn and overcomes the
stigma and stereotypes surrounding blindness, and in particular, blind
people who are over a certain age.
The 2019 recipient of the Anna Cable Award, Wendy Ruth, is a deserving
individual. A Hagerstown resident, she is an example of the reason the
award continues to be given. Wendy stated that as a child and young adult,
she was an avid reader. She said that in fourth grade, she noticed she was
having some problems with her eyes. She began wearing glasses but many
people wore glasses, so that wasnt a big deal.
At the age of 22, she noticed her vision had gotten worse. Doctors thought
she might have a brain tumor, so many tests were done to determine what was
causing her vision loss. There was no brain tumor, but she was diagnosed
with retinitis pigmentosa. She was determined to get her driver's license
though. After all, it was a rite of passage, and she thought that if her
vision became worse, she wanted to enjoy driving as long as she could.
Looking back now, she said she probably should not have been given a
drivers license. She has not driven for 30 years.
Wendy attended school to become a paralegal secretary, but never worked in
that field. She worked as a cashier at a gas station and did all the
paperwork for her husbands carpet cleaning business.
Wendy said that as her vision became worse, she was feeling not only the
loss of her vision, but the inability to enjoy one of the pleasures most
important to her in lifereading the printed word.
Finding help is one of the most difficult things after vision loss occurs.
People are sure they are the only ones experiencing vision loss. Many
people ask their eye doctors, who unfortunately are not always knowledgeable
as to where resources are located. In Wendys case, her eye doctor told her
to contact the Division of Rehabilitation Services, who then put her in
touch with Blind Industries and Services of Maryland. She has been enrolled
in their Seniors Achieving Independent Living program for the past two
years.
Wendy began learning Braille and realized that while she could no longer see
the printed word, she could have the pleasure of reading words and sentences
herself. She said she began practicing reading from six to eight hours a
day. She lives alone, so labeling cans and other things she could no longer
read became essential. She is reading several books at the same time. She
said she still has trouble with some symbols, like punctuation marks, but
she is not going to give up.
Wendy is a member of the NFBMD at Large Chapter, and is interested in
learning new ideas and ways to do things. She hopes to return to work in
the near future. Knowing Wendy, she will succeed. We will all rejoice when
she finds employment, and we will continue encouraging others to take the
next steps toward increased independence after vision loss.
A Magical Meet the Blind Month Event
By Sharon Maneki
[Editors note: October is Meet the Blind Month. Below is an article about
a particularly magical Meet the Blind Month event sponsored by the Maryland
Parents of Blind Children and the Central Maryland Chapter of the NFBMD.]
Teresa Graham serves as first vice president of the Maryland Parents of
Blind Children (MDPOBC) Division. Teresa and her children also are longtime
Federationists. In 2019, Teresa and her business partner, Stephanie, opened
a business called the Flower Barn in Ellicott City. In 2016 and 2018, there
were serious floods in Ellicott City which caused many of the businesses and
restaurants to be closed for long periods of time. Teresa and her family
thought up an activity that would both draw the public into Ellicott City to
help the businesses on Main Street and to meet the blind.
The Wizarding Weekend on Magical Main Street was an outstanding success in
both goals. Members of MDPOBC, Greater Baltimore chapter, Central Maryland
chapter, and Maryland Association of Blind Students (MDABS) worked on
activities from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m., on both Saturday and Sunday. The public
came out in droves, more than 10,000 individuals, to get Harry Potter
memorabilia, eat magical food and drink butter beer and pumpkin juice, and
make crafts and potions. Participants received Braille and print versions
of activities. It was great to see so many families interacting with blind
people who ran many of the activities. Blind and sighted alike reminisced
about their favorite Harry Potter books. The following articles are
transcripts of TV coverage that the event received. This Meet the Blind
Month was outstanding and one that we will remember for many years.
Harry Potter 'Wizarding Weekend' in Old Ellicott City to raise money for
good cause. (taken from WBALTV 11 article)
WBAL-TV 11, October 3, 2019, Jennifer Fraciotti, News Anchor
ELLICOTT CITY, Md.
Calling all Harry Potter fans! Grab your broomsticks and head to Old
Ellicott City this weekend, where you can have some wizarding fun, support
local businesses and raise money for a good cause. Main Street is turning
magical for Wizarding Weekend. More than two dozen businesses are joining
in the fun Oct. 5-6 from 10 a.m. until close.
Fans can get chocolate frogs at Sweet Cascades. Gamers Corps is offering 9
3/4% off Harry Potter products. Main Street already resembles Diagon
Alley, so when the opportunity arose to turn it into Diagon Alley, we
definitely jumped on it, said Ashley McManus, co-owner of Gamers Corps.
We have wands and robes and all of the stuff to turn yourself into Harry
Potter or be part of whichever house that you love, McManus said.
The Harry Potter theme is the brainchild of Flower Barn co-owners Theresa
Graham and Stephanie Wells. Grahams 13-year-old daughter, Naudia, is blind
and said the J.K. Rowling series opened up her world.
Braille is a big deal, so when she was engaged so much in Harry Potter and
was reading all these books, I was like, Yes, we're doing it, you know?
She loves Harry Potter, Graham said.
Proceeds from some of the magical activities will benefit the National
Federation of the Blind.
It's fantastic because it just shows that blindness is not the
characteristic that defines you, said Sharon Maneki, with the National
Federation of the Blind.
It has brought so much attention to Old Ellicott City. I think it's going
to be great, Graham said.
Harry Potter Fans! Ellicott City Is Hosting A Wizarding Weekend Oct. 5-6
September 30, 2019 at 1:36 pm (From WJZ, Channel 13 Broadcast)
ELLICOTT CITY, Md. (WJZ)
If youre a fan of the Harry Potter book or movies series, then you may want
to head to Ellicott City this weekend.
Thats when the town will host its Wizarding Weekend on Magical Main
(Street). Starting at 10 a.m. on Oct. 5, several stores and restaurants
along Ellicott Citys Main Street will transform into its own Diagon Alley,
hosting wizarding activities, discounts and special Harry Potter themed
menus.
Wizarding attire is highly encouragedso grab your wands, brooms and robes.
A costume contest will be held on Oct. 5 with judging at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m.
A $5 donation to the National Federation of the Blind is required to enter
the contest.
Bands will also perform at the Flower Barn from noon to 4 p.m. on Saturday
and a DJ will keep the party going through the evening.
A scavenger hunt will also be hosted by several stores, taking you through
the streets of Ellicott City. At each store, you have to locate a wizarding
item and will receive a postcard while supplies lastto create a 10-page
Magical Main book. A $5 donation is also required for the scavenger hunt.
Stop by Sweet Suds to pick up your golden snitch bath bomb with proceeds
benefitting the National Federation of the Blind and enter our raffle to win
your very own set of wands!
Southwest Connection giving away a Wizard Charm Bracelet with a min. $15
purchase & a Special Hedwig Charm with a $25 purchase. Limit one per person
so everyone can get one. Limited bracelets available each day.
Here are some featured food items:
* Moorenkos Ice Cream will have Polyjuice Potion sorbet, Buttered
Popcorn with Jelly Flops, Fire Dragon Chocolate, Levioso Gummi Bear and Mrs.
Weasleys English Toffee ice cream.
* Parkridge Creamery will offer Butterbeer floats.
* Southwest Connection will have butterbeer fudge and pumpkin pie
fudge available. Theyll also have a Harry Potter-themed charm bracelet for
sale.
* Sweet Cascades Chocolatier will have Golden Snitches, Canary
Cremes, Chocolate Frogs, Bertie Bots, Sipping Chocolate and Butter Beer.
Adults 21 & over can have fun too! Phoenix Emporium is offering 20% off all
Oktoberfest and Pumpkin beers. Judges Bench will have specialty drinks and a
costume contest.
Most stores will have events Saturday and Sunday.
There will also be ghost hunts, a photo booth and a House Cup competition.
For a full list of participating stores and restaurants,
<https://visitoldellicottcity.com/event-pro/wizarding-weekend/?fbclid=IwAR2z
YlJeG95vwBHm2lJV6bOIEd43SL8RptAtyXxmaNiLhwr3YJbUEtYkOpY> click here.
Profile of an NFBMD Leader: Shawn Jacobson
By Melissa Riccobono
[Editors note: Most of us know the names of our affiliates leaders, and we
associate them with the projects and events they have led. However, we
dont always know how they came to be leaders in our organization. We are
continuing a series that profiles our affiliates leaders so our members can
get to know them better on a personal level. Our next leader profile
features Shawn Jacobson, Treasurer of the National Federation of the Blind
of Maryland and Treasurer of the Sligo Creek Chapter.]
In order to have a strong organization of any type, you first need a
motivating, personable, intelligent, and dedicated leader. In the National
Federation of the Blind of Maryland (NFBMD,) of course, our president, Ronza
Othman, checks all of these boxes! The other thing which is absolutely
vital is a trustworthy, detail oriented, organized, and mathematically
competent person to serve as treasurer. In the NFBMD, we are very lucky to
have Shawn Jacobson serve in this role.
Shawn has been involved in the National Federation of the Blind (NFB) since
the mid 70s, when he joined our organization as a student at the Iowa
School for the Blind. He became more active in the Iowa affiliate while
attending college at Iowa State University. In 1984, Shawn moved to
Washington, DC to accept a job. He was active in the DC affiliate until the
early 90s, when he joined and became a vital part of the NFBMD.
It is no surprise Shawn serves as treasurer for the NFBMD, the Sligo Creek
Chapter, and the NFB Writers Division. He is a mathematical statistician,
working for HUDD. Shawn shared he is transferring into a supervisory role,
which he plans to hold until June of 2021, when both he and his wife plan to
retire. After their retirement they plan to take a six-week road trip out
west, and eventually move back to Iowa.
Shawn and his wife, Cheryl, have two grown children. They adopted their
daughter from China, and their son from Russia. Shawn is very active in his
church, and loves to read and write in his spare time. Shawn had stories
published in Magnets and Ladders, Slate and Style, Future Reflections,
Breath and Shadow, and the Braille Monitor. He is always excited to share
his stories with others, and does all he can to promote the annual writing
contests sponsored by the NFB Writers Division with youth and adults alike.
Shawn is a steady leader who is always willing to do what needs to be done.
We have been very lucky to have him as our treasurer, and will certainly
miss him a great deal when he moves away. I hope all of you will try to get
to know Shawn better while he is still here in Maryland.
Why I Write
By Shawn Jacobson
[Editors note: Shawn Jacobson is a great example of someone who does not
let blindness hold him back and who lives the life he wants. Shawn has
worked for the federal government as a statistician for 36 years. He also
is a long-time Federationist. For many years, he has served as treasurer
for the NFBMD and for the Sligo Creek Chapter. He also serves as treasurer
for the Writers Division. The following article was taken from Winter 2019
edition of Slate and Style, a publication of the NFB Writers Division. At
the end of the article, you will find links to other articles written by
Shawn for your reading pleasure.]
The first Holy book I read, the first book to pour the molten spirit of
wonder into my soul, was The Witches of Karres. I received the book in the
mail one otherwise boring late summer day in 1971. I drank deeply of the
spoken words as a thirsty man might gulp down water. I read the book four
times in four days reading late into the night in my bedroom. I played
record after record until everyone else in the house went to sleep and
beyond.
I share this with you because this was a pivotal time in my reading life, a
station in my journey to becoming a writer. However, it was far from my
first experience with books. My first experience with the written word was
going to the Marshalltown public library, a magnificent building of high
ceilings and sweeping staircases, with my grandmother. She would pick out
books, 10 at a time, and read them to me over the next week. I would look
at the pictures as she read, and I would always be surprised and
disappointed when we were finished.
My first experience with a library having blindness-friendly books was a
trip to the Iowa Commission for the Blind in Des Moines. There, I saw
talking books, rack upon rack of them. Each rack towered over my head.
Stairs led up and down to other floors full of bookshelves. These were the
days when talking books were on large records that played at normal
phonograph speed, and the cases containing the books were huge, black, and
buckled together with black straps.
Eventually, as I read, I gravitated to science fiction. Its wonder and its
sense of adventure were a refuge for me once I reached the Iowa School for
the Blind. I had been an only child and was over-protected, or spoiled,
depending on your point of view. Suddenly, I was thrown in with a bunch of
other boys: some older, many more experienced, and none inclined to see me
as the center of the universe. I remember throwing a lot of tantrums and
getting the reputation as a crybaby, a bad thing in the pre-therapy age I
grew up in. As a result, I learned to treasure my own company and any means
of escape from my life I could find. Stories of rockets and other worlds
served as an escape from a world I wanted no part of.
I did read other books. In those days, there was not enough science fiction
being recorded to fill my reading time. One book I remember was Run to
Daylight. I had a schoolmate who was a raved Packer fan, and a bunch of us
students would pile into his room after school to hear the book on his
talking-book machine. These reading sessions inspired some ill-advised
football matches in the play area behind the boys dormitory. These games
came to an abrupt halt when one of my schoolmates got injured.
And there were other books. I read Catcher in the Rye for all the dirty
words before I read it for three different English classes. I read some
westerns because the west fascinated me. I read a lot of nonfiction works
in order to satisfy my curiosity about the world. And, of course, I read
Follow My Leader, though I found the blind protagonist's life quite
different from mine. But then, I would always return to stories of great
expanses of space, my favorite experience with Braille was reading Have
Spacesuit Will Travel.
Eventually, I left the Vinton School and started on a whole new set of
adventures. I remember reading Will, G. Gordan Liddys bizarre
autobiography. I remember reading Atlas Shrugged and finding that it
resonated with my feelings of deep alienation. My bad attitude towards the
old Braille school led me to explore Libertarian writings and other
political philosophy that encouraged individualism.
College also featured adventures in religion. I toyed with Wicca until I
found that the wicked experience had little to do with the wonder Id seen
in the books of my childhood. I also entertained Mormon missionaries and
explored their beliefs, though I had not attained the level of maturity
needed to make a commitment. Eventually, I gravitated to a Lutheran church
that was across the parking lot from the graduate dormitory at Iowa State
University.
After graduation, I moved from the college life to the work world. My
reading decreased as I faced the challenges of work, family, and a new part
of the country to call home. Yet, in due time, I returned to books.
One night I read Ingathering, the complete people stories of Zenna Henderson
and I felt the presence of a higher power calling me through the words. The
spirit called to my inner self in its own divine language. To translate
this into English would be no more possible than it would be possible to
translate the works of Shakespeare into COBOL, or some other language for
machines. Yet this I can say, atheism, and paganism, were no longer options
for my life.
And I felt compelled to write. I write because the spirit of wonder calls
to be passed along, to be shared. I do believe that whatever higher power
rules such things commissions some to put this spirit into words, to pass it
along to whoever is meant to read, and to be touched by such words.
And so, what is it that I enjoy writing? I most enjoy writing stories in
which vastly different creatures, humans and others, try to reach out to
each other, to communicate and share. I think I like such stories because I
have always felt myself to be something of an alien in my own world.
Furthermore, I feel that such stories fit the calling which led me to write
in the first place. After all, if we are to love the higher power, we must
be willing to love beings very different from ourselves.
I also like to write stories in which wonder and strangeness break into our
world. So, I write science fiction stories set in bowling allies, where I
spend much of my childhood. I also wrote a story in which the alien reaches
out to us in a bingo hall. I look forward to writing a story in which the
wondrous reaches out to a protagonist working on a latch-hook rug; my wife
got me into the hobby when we adopted our daughter from China. To me, tales
of wonder set in the commonplace of our lives have a special meaning.
And I like to write about travel. My grandparents, and later my wife,
blessed me with the opportunity to travel all over the United States and
abroad. And so, especially in my poetic writings, I try to pass this
blessing along to whoever wants whatever joy in wandering that I can
provide. So, at this opportunity to take stock of my life with books, I ask
myself what I hold dear. I still remember with fondness The Witches of
Karres, though I've not read the book in 35 years. I also cherish Zenna
Hendersons people as brothers and sisters from another planet; they call me
to anticipate the wonders that are to come. And I also read outside of the
realm of science fiction; you will see me reading books about sports,
politics, and the old west from time to time.
As I continue my writing journey, I look forward to plumbing the expanses of
wonder in what I read and in what I write. I hope I can pass this along to
anyone wanting to start their own journey into the future.
Other Stories and Poems by Shawn Jacobson:
>From Magnets and Ladders, a semi-annual publication, featuring work from
disabled writers:
Spring/Summer 2019: <https://www.magnetsandladders.org/wp/?p=201>
https://www.magnetsandladders.org/wp/?p=201 Poems include: Tumbleweed (won
first place), The Furloughed King, and Okie
Fall/Winter 2019: <https://www.magnetsandladders.org/wp/?p=207>
https://www.magnetsandladders.org/wp/?p=207 Poems include: The Mountain I
Cant Climb (won second place), Angel Light, and Fragile
Fall/ Winter 2017-2018: <https://www.magnetsandladders.org/wp/?p=181>
https://www.magnetsandladders.org/wp/?p=181 Includes fiction story titled
Cosmic Bowling and a poem called Cane of Cchulhu
Spring/Summer 2017: <https://www.magnetsandladders.org/wp/?p=173>
https://www.magnetsandladders.org/wp/?p=173 Includes a poem called Peak
View, a poem called Wendover Interlude, and a fiction story called
Tomorrows Blossoms
Fall/Winter 2016: <https://www.magnetsandladders.org/wp/?p=170>
https://www.magnetsandladders.org/wp/?p=170 Includes a fiction story called
Shoedingers Shaggy Dog
Spring/Summer 2016: <https://www.magnetsandladders.org/wp/?p=164>
https://www.magnetsandladders.org/wp/?p=164 Includes a poem called Spring
Freedom
Fall/Winter 2015-2016: <https://www.magnetsandladders.org/wp/?p=159>
https://www.magnetsandladders.org/wp/?p=159 Includes a poem called Scenic
Iowa
Spring/Summer 2015: <https://www.magnetsandladders.org/wp/?p=154>
https://www.magnetsandladders.org/wp/?p=154 Includes a fiction story called
The Legend of Sam the Sighted and a nonfiction story called Searching for
Wonders
Spring/Summer 2014: <https://www.magnetsandladders.org/wp/?p=139>
https://www.magnetsandladders.org/wp/?p=139 Includes a fiction story called
The Road to Mars, a poem called Hard Shell Haiku, and another poem
called The Dark Side
Fall/Winter 2013-2014: <https://www.magnetsandladders.org/wp/?p=126>
https://www.magnetsandladders.org/wp/?p=126 Includes poem called
Reflections, a fiction story called Theyre out for Blood, and another
fiction story called Blue Christmas
Fall/Winter 2012-2013: <https://www.magnetsandladders.org/wp/?p=93>
https://www.magnetsandladders.org/wp/?p=93 Includes a poem called But Not
Today
Spring/Summer 2012: <https://www.magnetsandladders.org/wp/?p=71>
https://www.magnetsandladders.org/wp/?p=71 Includes The Kraken at Sunset
>From Bewildering Stories, a monthly science fiction magazine:
March 2020:
<http://www.bewilderingstories.com/issue846/space_tapestry.html>
http://www.bewilderingstories.com/issue846/space_tapestry.html Includes
story called Space Tapestry
May 2020: <http://www.bewilderingstories.com/issue857/index.html>
http://www.bewilderingstories.com/issue857/index.html Includes poem called
Redshirt
Published in 2017:
<http://www.bewilderingstoriSes.com/issue726/memory_lanes1.html>
http://www.bewilderingstoriSes.com/issue726/memory_lanes1.html Includes On
Memory Lane
Students Speak Up for Accessible Instructional Material in Higher Education
By Amy Bishop
[Editors note: Each year, we join Federationists from throughout the
country to advocate with Congress in Washington, DC. We were looking for
co-sponsors for the accessible instructional materials in higher education
act. This legislation will remove barriers to equality in the classroom by
creating a set of guidelines that clearly define accessible instructional
materials. The National Association of Blind Students collected stories
from students throughout the country to be distributed to each member of
Congress. Individual stories made our case for the legislation more
effective. Of course, Maryland students had stories to add to this
collection. Here is what Amy Bishop, a student at Anne Arundel Community
College, who came to the US from China in 2013, had to say.]
I started taking English as a second language sequence classes at my local
community college. When I was about to start the advanced level, the
curriculum started to change to a more online basis. The department would
not let me take the newer version because it was not accessible to me. They
wanted me to stay with the old curriculum. They told me that they would ask
a teacher to teach a special section of that class, so I could get through
it. I spent a lot of time getting advocates to help me make the college let
me take the newer class. It was very frustrating for me, because instead of
me focusing on my education, I needed to spend a lot of my time finding
people to teach the school. The school did not even have an accessible
placement test for me. I did take the English placement test, but it was
very challenging due to technology issues. I could not even take it by
myself because of the technology problems.
I did not take the math placement test because it was not accessible at all.
My disability service counselor had to use my high school GPA to place me
into my math class. Because of the online parts of the math class, I had to
spend time testing the accessibility of the materials and work with the
college and publisher to correct accessibility issues.
While other students get a break between semesters, I will spend my time
trying to assist the college in making sure I can take my math class next
semester. AIM High, H.R.5312 -S.3015, would really benefit me because I
could just focus on my studies instead of spending so much time and energy
advocating for equal access.
Student Spotlight: Briana Broadwater
[Editors note: Briana (Bri) Broadwater is new to the National Federation of
the Blind of Maryland. She is a 2020 National Federation of the Blind
National Scholarship finalist. Bri graduated from C. Milton Wright High
School in Harford County in May. She will be attending Rowan College in New
Jersey, where she intends to study psychology. Bri is a varsity cheerleader
and founder of her high schools Creative Writing Club. Below is Bris
scholarship application essay, which will introduce Bri in her own words.]
I throw people. Wondering what that means, arent you? It means that I do
not let my visual impairment dictate what I can do. Being blind is a part
of me, but it is not my whole story. It is not a reason to limit myself.
Quite the contrary, it gives me a reason to show others that the limitations
one sets are self-imposed. Almost anything can be possible if you are
willing to work hard enough to see it through.
As a child, I was never one to shy away from a challenge. Because my
biological parents are chronic substance abusers, I faced challenges
constantly. From a young age I learned to work with the skills I had, so
that my siblings and I could survive. My accomplishments, such as reading
print and riding a bike, surprised many. As a result, those same people
forgot that there were tasks I did struggle with as a visually impaired
child. I pushed forward, and I adapted. I figured out ways to complete
tasks that most find routinewalking to the store, reading directions,
matching clothes, etc.with the resources I was given.
In school, I excel as both a tactile and visual learner. I have been
privileged to have a Braille technician/transcriber available to me as I
attended the schools that housed my countys vision program; however, this
did not mean that materials have regularly been accessible to me. Most
teachers and staff are not properly trained in dealing with a student who
requires any sort of accommodations, so most tend to neglect those students
needs. Alternately, there have been teachers who express a vast curiosity
in me and seek to learn more. They want to know what works for me and what
does not. I have been asked many such questions by teachers, so that they
may not only modify their teaching for me, but also for future students. My
school also has a Sensory Fair where I work alongside professionals in
vision and hearing, showing students and teachers what it is like to have
disabilities like mine. I have also been asked by my former Psychology
teacher to give separate presentations to further educate classes.
Outside core academics, I am involved with many extracurricular activities
such as the C. Miltones (school acapella group) and Advanced Choir. I have
received many opportunities such as singing at a radio station and for the
superintendent of schools. I founded a Creative Writing Club to inspire
creativity and peer partnership at my school. Throughout my freshmen and
sophomore years, I starred in the fall musicals produced by the Stage Wright
Theater Company. I am still heavily involved in the drama program.
Returning to what hooked you inI throw people. During my junior year, my
best friend suggested that I try something far outside my comfort zone. She
asked me to cheer with her. When I attended tryouts, I was convinced that
the coaches would not allow me to participate. Cheer is a dangerous and
complex sport that requires precision. I was proven wrong when I made the
JV team. It wasnt easy, and there were so many times when I questioned why
I was doing it. Nevertheless, I pushed myself harder and worked on
everything I could, and I love it. Cheering has reconciled within me the
idea that my world is what I make it. I am proud to be one of the first
blind cheerleaders to compete.
My whole life I have been a role model and mentor for special needs students
in my community. I was told that my example would reassure these students
that we are all so much more capable than society expects. Owning that
responsibility has taught me that not only am I doing what I love, I am
influencing others to be their best selves and embrace who they are. I am
not a single story. I am many stories that reveal a girl who is more than
she was ever expected to become.
There Are Blind People Out There Who Want to Play
[Editors note: In the National Federation of the Blind (NFB), we constantly
look for new opportunities to help each other live the lives we want. NFB
leaders convinced the Mattel Games Corporation, not only to produce Uno
cards in both print and Braille, but also to sell these cards in public
stores such as Target. Sighted children who may become employers in the
future, learn about the capabilities of blind children as they play a game
together. Sighted members of the public also learn blind people know how to
have fun too. In the following article taken from the October 22, 2019
edition of the Carroll County Times, Federationists Derrick and Meredith Day
give their view on this new opportunity.]
There are blind people out there that want to play:
Carroll County students tested new Braille Uno game
By Akira Kyles
Two visually impaired siblings and Westminster students took the opportunity
to test Mattels latest Uno Braille cards in hopes of adding more fun to
other visually impaired homes. Derrick, 13, and Meredith Day, 11, heard
about beta testing for Mattel at a convention for the National Federation of
the Blind in Las Vegas over the summer and decided they would be interested
in giving the product a try.
We basically said what we liked, what we didnt like, and what we would
basically change for the production, said Derrick. Technically, if youre
talking about manufacturing terms, that was a prototype, they hadnt really
started manufacturing them yet. So, they wanted us to give them almost like
critiquing their design. Meredith and Derrick attend West Middle School,
where they receive an education through the Carroll County Public Schools
visually impaired program.
The Uno Braille cards were released earlier this month and are sold
exclusively at Target.
UNO Braille packaging features Braillea tactile writing system used by
people who are visually impairedon the front and back for clear
identification, and directs players to <http://www.unobraille.com>
UNOBraille.com, where they can find play instructions featuring Braille
readable files for download. Players can also access voice-enabled
instructions through Amazon Alexa and Google Home, according to a Mattel
news release. With the launch of UNO Braille, were making a real impact
on a community that has been underserved by providing a game that both blind
and sighted people can play together, said Ray Adler, Global Head of Games
at Mattel via the news release. We are proud to have UNO Braille
on-shelves and to be making UNO more accessible and inclusive to even more
families. Both Meredith and Derrick said they enjoyed beta testing the
cards to contribute some fun to the blind community. When you think about
a lot of games, and especially toys in general, theres not many toys for a
blind person, said Derrick. I heard this on an interview that they did
with Anil Lewis, who is a member of the NFB, he said a trip to the toy
store for a blind person is not very exciting, because you go and youre
like heres a box and heres another box and heres a third box. Theres
actually something to look forward to because you actually can buy something
that you could use and that you could apply to yourself. Derrick and
Meredith are pleased that the cards are all-inclusive, so both those who are
visually impaired and those that arent can play together.
Spectator Specs
Deaths:
Rod Boudreaux passed away on February 18, 2020. Rod was blind at heart and
a member of the Greater Carroll County Chapter. As a member of the
Volunteer Medical Engineers, he was very inventive and devised many
solutions to help members with difficult tasks. One of his most popular
inventions was an audible soccer ball. We will miss Rods kindness,
creativity, spirit, and willingness to solve problems so that blind people
could continue to live the lives we want.
Births:
On March 14, 2020, Olivia Chamberlain and Jake Davis welcomed their
daughter, Raissa Grace, who arrived at 2:45 a.m. She was 19.5 inches long
and 5 pounds 14 ounces. Olivia is a member of the At-Large Chapter and the
Blind Parents Group. Congratulations to the happy little family!
On March 18, 2020, Ein Ace Carpenter was born at 9:40 a.m., to Melissa and
Aaron Carpenter. He was 7 pounds 1 ounce and 20 inches long. Big brother,
Luke, and very protective big sister, Ren, are enjoying their new baby
brother. Melissa and Aaron are members of the Maryland Parents of Blind
Children Division and members of the Greater Baltimore Chapter. Melissa
also serves as a member of the Board of Directors for the Maryland Parents
of Blind Children Division. Congratulations to all the Carpenters!
On May 26, 2020, David and Faith Waybright became parents for the first
time. Elizabeth Rose arrived at 9:50 a.m. She weighed 7 pounds 6 ounces
and she was 20.5 inches long. Faith and David cant wait to introduce
Elizabeth to the Greater Baltimore chapter and the rest of the NFBMD.
Graduations:
Congratulations and best wishes to the following high school graduates: Nia
Phipps, who graduated from St. Pauls School for Girls in Baltimore;
Brandon Pickrel, who graduated from Northern Garrett High School in
Accident, MD; Jimmy Zimmer, who graduated from Parkside High School in
Salisbury, MD; and Qualik Ford, Casandra Shorter, and Tyler Hoppe, who all
graduated from the Maryland School for the Blind.
The following students have completed 8th grade and are moving on to high
school: Mercy Rao, Derrick Day, Naudia Graham, Alexis McPhail, and Austin
Riccobono. We look forward to reading about the future accomplishments of
these students!
Achievements:
Congratulations to Shawn Jacobson, treasurer of the NFBMD, who also manages
to find time to pursue a writing career. Shawn won first place in the NFB
National Writers Division 2020 contest in the fiction category for his
story entitled, Storm Magic. See Why I Write, an article by Shawn,
earlier in this issue.
Joe and Eleanor Schisler, members of the Central Maryland chapter,
celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary on June 13, 2020. May you have
many years of health and happiness together.
Congratulations to Nathan Clark who began his employment on March 9, 2020 at
a software company in New Jersey called ADDTEQ. Nathan is enjoying his
position as a Quality Assurance Analyst and looking forward to all the
opportunities brought from a paycheck.
In Maryland, every student must perform 75 hours of service learning
(community service) to graduate from high school. They can start this
requirement in middle school. Congratulations to Derrick Day who received
the Distinguished Service Award. Derrick completed 85 service learning
hours by the end of 8th grade. He not only completed the requirement, but
exceeded it. Way to go, Derrick!
Braille Readers are Leaders Winners:
Maryland had five participants in the NFB Braille Readers are Leaders
contest for 2019-2020. Aisha Safi won 1st place overall in the competition
and first place in the grade 4-5 category. She read 7,798 pages. Zanyiah
Bell won 3rd place in the same category. In the grade 6-8 category, Mercy
Rao won second place and Isaiah Rao won third place in the same category.
Paul Wales, grade 9, won the Breaking Limits award.
Braille readers are definitely leaders! We look forward to the continued
progress of these students and we are very proud of their achievements.
Ronza Othman, President
National Federation of the Blind of Maryland
443-426-4110
The National Federation of the Blind of Maryland knows that blindness is not
the characteristic that defines you or your future. Every day we raise the
expectations of blind people, because low expectations create obstacles
between blind people and our dreams. You can live the life you want;
blindness is not what holds you back.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://nfbnet.org/pipermail/nfb-maryland_nfbnet.org/attachments/20200704/13af8bc0/attachment.html>
More information about the NFB-Maryland
mailing list