[nfbmi-talk] jobs for the blind chicago
    David Robinson 
    drob1946 at gmail.com
       
    Wed Nov  5 15:11:31 UTC 2014
    
    
  
Joe,
   This reporter thinks that these men suffer from a loss of vision when the 
real suffering comes from the barriers to employment that our society places 
before us.   I am glad thes folks found employment, but I wonder what level 
of employment and pay they may achieve if  people like this reporter didn't 
have such a poor attitude about the loss of sight.
Dave
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "joe harcz Comcast via nfbmi-talk" <nfbmi-talk at nfbnet.org>
To: <nfbmi-talk at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Wednesday, November 05, 2014 9:54 AM
Subject: [nfbmi-talk] jobs for the blind chicago
Life Has Been Way Better': Tollway Call Center Gives Leg Up to Disabled
stephanie-lulay-1413575953.jpg/thumbnail
By
Stephanie Lulay
on November 5, 2014 5:28am
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@slulay2
 Alex Westphal, who suffers from a vision impairment, is now employed at an 
Illinois Tollway Call Center at the UIC campus.
Alex Westphal, who suffers from a vision impairment, is now employed at an 
Illinois Tollway Call Center at the UIC campus.
View Full Caption
DNAinfo/Stephanie Lulay
UNIVERSITY VILLAGE — For years, keeping a roof over his head was "very 
stressful," Alex Westphal said.
The 22-year-old moved out of his parents' home at 18 and spent the next four 
years bouncing from job to job, always earning minimum wage. What made the
work most difficult, and made it difficult to land a job in the first place, 
was his vision impairment.
But Westphal's luck changed this year.
In October 2013, the
Illinois Tollway
opened a new 22,000-square-foot call center in the basement of a University 
of Illinois at Chicago building. The Tollway crafted a deal for The Chicago
Lighthouse, a Medical District non-profit that helps provide jobs for the 
blind and visually impaired, to manage call center operations for five 
years.
Since opening, a push to hire more disabled workers and veterans at the call 
center was a goal, and today, disabled persons and veterans comprise more 
than
half of the center's workers, up from fewer than 5 percent when the center 
opened.
Westphal is one of those 165 disabled or veteran workers. His vision 
impairment makes it extremely difficult to focus on an image.
"You should see me try to catch a ball," he joked.
As a call center representative, Westphal earns $10.50 per hour, he said. 
Before the job, the Oak Forest man never earned more than minimum wage.
"Ever since my new job, life has been way better than before," he said. 
"Way, way better."
The new call center has specialized features for disabled workers, including 
larger computer monitors to assist visually impaired staff. Staff at the 
center
handle more than 10,000 Tollway customer concerns daily by telephone, email 
and mail. There are nearly 3.6 million active I-PASS accounts in Illinois,
according to Tollway figures.
The call center now occupies space in
UIC's Student Center East
that formerly housed a swimming pool and rec center. The university replaced 
the outdated rec center with a modern Student Recreation Facility across 
Halsted
Street in 2006. The Tollway previously leased space in west suburban Lisle.
 William Bryant is a Marine veteran and legally blind. The 49-year-old 
Roseland resident now works at the Ilinois Tollway Call Center at UIC.
William Bryant is a Marine veteran and legally blind. The 49-year-old 
Roseland resident now works at the Ilinois Tollway Call Center at UIC.
View Full Caption
DNAinfo/Stephanie Lulay
The call center job has also helped 49-year-old William Bryant, a Marine 
veteran who is legally blind and suffers from retinitis pigmentosa, a 
degenerative
disease.
The Roseland resident was unemployed for about a year before he was hired, 
he said.
"This gives me something to do and keeps me busy," he said. "It gives me a 
purpose."
Bryant said the job comes with dealing with "a lot of irate callers."
"But I feel like you can always talk the person down. I always try to work 
with them," he said. "I'll make them laugh or joke to break the ice."
Most callers don't know that Bryant is blind, he said.
"[The job] puts us all on the same level so to speak," he said. "I can 
basically do anything anyone else can do. I promise you that I sweep a floor 
better
than the average person — it takes me a little bit longer, but it's just 
that much more thorough [of a job]."
The
Chicago Lighthouse
Executive Director Janet Szlyk said that the one-year anniversary of the 
facility marked a milestone, but their work will continue.
"We're thrilled that by working with the Tollway we have helped hundreds of 
skilled individuals, including veterans and persons with disabilities, find
reliable, good-paying jobs," she said.
The Chicago Lighthouse will manage the call center for five years under a 
$61.5 million contract with the Tollway. The non-profit was awarded the 
management
contract when the Tollway committed to bidding the work through Illinois' 
State Use Program, which is designed to provide longterm employment 
opportunities
for people working in non-profit community rehab facilities.
The Tollway agreed to a 10-year, $3.7 million lease with UIC.
Earlier this year, the Tollway was named 2014 Agency of the Year by the 
Interagency Committee on Employees with Disabilities.
For more neighborhood news, listen to DNAinfo Radio here:
Source:
http://www.dnainfo.com/chicago/20141105/university-village/life-has-been-way-better-tollway-call-center-gives-leg-up-disabled
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