[NFBNJ] NFB: Braille Monitor, October 2017

Brian Mackey bmackey88 at gmail.com
Sun Oct 8 16:51:06 UTC 2017


>From the desk of NFBNJ President Joe Ruffalo.

Received from Brian Burrow, NFB.

 

 

                               BRAILLE MONITOR

Vol. 60, No. 9   October 2017

                             Gary Wunder, Editor

 

 

      Distributed by email, in inkprint, in Braille, and on USB flash

drive, by the

      NATIONAL FEDERATION OF THE BLIND

 

      Mark Riccobono, President

 

      telephone: (410) 659-9314

      email address: nfb at nfb.org <mailto:nfb at nfb.org> 

      website address: http://www.nfb.org

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       Like us on Facebook: Facebook.com/nationalfederationoftheblind

                      Follow us on Twitter: @NFB_Voice

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Letters to the President, address changes, subscription requests, and

orders for NFB literature should be sent to the national office. Articles

for the Monitor and letters to the editor may also be sent to the national

office or may be emailed to gwunder at nfb.org <mailto:gwunder at nfb.org> .

 

 

Monitor subscriptions cost the Federation  about  forty  dollars  per  year.

Members  are  invited,  and  nonmembers  are   requested,   to   cover   the

subscription cost. Donations should be made payable to  National  Federation

of the Blind and sent to:

 

      National Federation of the Blind

      200 East Wells Street at Jernigan Place

      Baltimore, Maryland 21230-4998

 

    THE NATIONAL FEDERATION OF THE BLIND 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. THE NATIONAL FEDERATION OF THE BLIND

IS NOT AN ORGANIZATION SPEAKING FOR THE BLIND-IT IS THE BLIND SPEAKING FOR

                                 OURSELVES.

ISSN 0006-8829

) 2017 by the National Federation of the Blind

      Each issue is recorded on a thumb drive (also called a memory stick

or USB flash drive). You can read this audio edition using a computer or a

National Library Service digital player. The NLS machine has two slots-the

familiar book-cartridge slot just above the retractable carrying handle and

a second slot located on the right side near the headphone jack. This

smaller slot is used to play thumb drives. Remove the protective rubber pad

covering this slot and insert the thumb drive. It will insert only in one

position. If you encounter resistance, flip the drive over and try again.

(Note: If the cartridge slot is not empty when you insert the thumb drive,

the digital player will ignore the thumb drive.) Once the thumb drive is

inserted, the player buttons will function as usual for reading digital

materials. If you remove the thumb drive to use the player for cartridges,

when you insert it again, reading should resume at the point you stopped.

      You can transfer the recording of each issue from the thumb drive to

your computer or preserve it on the thumb drive. However, because thumb

drives can be used hundreds of times, we would appreciate their return in

order to stretch our funding. Please use the return envelope enclosed with

the drive when you return the device.

 

 

Vol. 60, No. 9                                                       October

2017

 

      Contents

 

Illustration: Tackling the Challenges-Sometimes it Gets Physical

 

Bringing Hope to Victims of Two Natural Disasters

 

The Sound of Success

by John Pari

 

A Worldwide Revolution: The Marrakesh Treaty, the Accessible Books

Consortium, and Global Literacy for the Blind

by Scott LaBarre

 

Engineering Tools for Tactile Fluency: A Partnership with the Organized

Blind Movement

by Josh Coffee

 

Celebrating a Half Century with the Oldest Division in the National

Federation of the Blind

by Kathryn Webster

 

Building the Twenty-First Century American Workforce: Disability Does Not

Define Your Employment

by R. Alexander Acosta

 

Tom Ley Dies, and the World Loses a Dear Soul, a Family Member, an

Advocate, and a Friend

by Gary Wunder

 

When Automobiles are Obsolete

by Marc Maurer

 

John Halverson Ends an Illustrious Career

by Deven McGraw

 

The American Foundation for the Blind: New Directions for the Future

by Kirk Adams

 

The Orbit Reader 20: The Most Inexpensive Braille Display

by Curtis Chong

 

Independence Market Corner

by Ellen Ringlein

 

Origins of the NFB Pledge

by Anna Kresmer

 

>From the Mail Basket

by Gary Wunder

 

There's a List for That!

by David Andrews

 

Cross of Blindness

by Jacobus tenBroek

 

Settlement That May Benefit Some Monitor Readers

 

Recipes

 

Monitor Miniatures

 

[PHOTO CAPTION: Instructors explain how to use aerial silks while a

Federationist sits in the loop of silk.

[PHOTO CAPTION: A young Federationist hangs upside down using aerial silks

while an instructor coaches her.

[PHOTO CAPTION: Two Federationists laugh from where they landed running

through the obstacle course.

[PHOTO CAPTION: Federationist fearlessly drops onto the slide in the

inflatable obstacle course.

             Tackling the Challenges-Sometimes it Gets Physical

 

      Life presents many challenges, but far too often blind people are

steered away from those involving physical activity. The results are what

one would expect: poorer health, obesity, and the ailments that go along

with it. Not surprisingly one of the messages we want our convention

program for children to send is that physical activity is not just normal

but expected. Being cautious is one thing, but overcautiousness from well-

intentioned sighted people can feed the doubts of the blind person,

increasing both and inhibiting the blind person for life.

      Monday afternoon at the convention, Federationists had an opportunity

to push some of their own limits. Along with sword fighting and rhythmic

drumming that were offered last year, the parents division set up aerial

silks so that Federationists could experience for themselves the freedom of

suspension. The short rig allowed for a few small basic maneuvers, such as

hanging upside down, while instructors coached participants through them.

      Federationists also had the opportunity to challenge themselves on an

inflatable obstacle course. Climbing, sliding, and running on the soft

surface of the course was challenging, but Federationists tumbled through

it, often laughing, while showing that they could conquer the cushioned

barriers here with as much courage, energy, and success as the more

intangible barriers they encounter when working to live the lives they

want.

 

              Bringing Hope to Victims of Two Natural Disasters

 

      As we submit this issue for proofing, our country is beginning its

recovery from two devastating storms: hurricanes Harvey and Irma. Please

follow what we are doing to help. You may do this through watching what we

post on social media, monitoring our NFB listservs, listening to our

podcasts and the presidential release, and calling to talk with your

chapter or affiliate president about ways in which you can get involved.

Digging into our own pockets demonstrates that our commitment to one

another goes far beyond words. Please help!

                                 ----------

[PHOTO CAPTION: John Pari]

                            The Sound of Success

                                by John Pari

 

      From the Editor: No man has worked harder to make electric and other

quiet cars loud enough that they can be heard by blind people who travel

the streets of our nation than John Pari. His work in building key

alliances, writing persuasive documents, making repeated telephone calls,

getting himself invited to make difficult presentations, and continuing to

send the message that the lives of blind people are valuable and deserve to

be protected is unparalleled. Here is what he has to say in this ongoing

saga to make the streets safer for all pedestrians:

 

      After four delays by the Department of Transportation, the Pedestrian

Safety Enhancement Act final regulation went into effect on Tuesday,

September 5, 2017. The National Federation of the Blind has been working on

this issue for fourteen years. We first worked for eight years to define

the problem, develop key partnerships, write the legislation, and work to

get the legislation passed. But our work was not over. The National

Federation of the Blind then worked for six more years participating in

studies, advocating with individual car companies, responding to proposed

regulations, and doing our own research. In the end, our relentless

attention to detail, our consistent messaging, and our unwavering passion

made the difference.

      There are two articles from previous issues of the Braille Monitor

which detail, at great length, the history of this legislation. The first

is an article from the June 2011 issue of the Monitor titled "Belling the

Cat: The Long Road to the Passage of the Pedestrian Safety Enhancement Act"

by Deborah Kent Stein which details the bill from its inspiration and

inception to its passage. It can be found online at

https://nfb.org/images/nfb/publications/bm/bm11/bm1106/bm110602.htm. The

second is an article I wrote which was published in the April 2017 issue

titled "Progress on the Pedestrian Safety Enhancement Act: The Regulations,

the Law, and What They Will Mean for the Blind." This second article

details everything that happened after the law was passed, including the

long and arduous fight to get the final regulation published, and can be

found online at

https://nfb.org/images/nfb/publications/bm/bm17/bm1704/bm170403.htm.

      The key points of this regulation ensure that America's streets will

be safer for all pedestrians, and in particular blind pedestrians. The

final regulation prohibits a pause switch, manufacturer supplied selectable

sounds, and any tampering with the device, solidifying its classification

as a safety feature. Generally, the vehicle must emit a sound of at least

44 decibels when stationary or traveling in a forward speed of less than 10

kph. For vehicles with an automatic transmission, this includes all times

when the vehicle is not in motion and the shifter is not in the "Park"

position. For manual transmission vehicles, this includes any time the

parking brake is not engaged. When traveling at a speed of greater than or

equal to 10 kph, but less than 20 kph the vehicle must emit a sound of at

least 51 decibels. When traveling at a speed of greater than or equal to 20

kph, but less than 30 kph the vehicle must emit a sound of at least 57

decibels. When traveling at a speed of 30 kph the vehicle must emit a sound

of at least 62 decibels. At rates of speed higher than 30 kph, tire-road

noise and wind resistance are considered sufficient, and the additional

alert sound is no longer required. A sound of at least 48 decibels is

required when the vehicle is moving in reverse. The regulation requires all

four-wheeled hybrid-electric passenger vehicles under ten thousand pounds

produced on or after September 1, 2019, to be compliant. Fifty percent of

all hybrid-electric vehicles produced on or after September 1, 2018, must

meet the above requirements.

      Our advocacy on this issue is a perfect example of our commitment to

help blind Americans live the lives they want. Fourteen years ago we

realized that silent vehicles threatened our independence and our ability

to safely walk on the streets of America. We refused to accept this

possibility and set in motion the mechanism that would lead to the passage

of this landmark law. Now the sounds of our success will ring freely from

sea to sea.

                                 ----------

[PHOTO CAPTION: Scott LaBarre]

     A Worldwide Revolution: The Marrakesh Treaty, the Accessible Books

                Consortium, and Global Literacy for the Blind

                              by Scott LaBarre

 

      From the Editor: We are blessed to have some very talented people who

have joined in this organization to improve opportunities, not only for

themselves but for other people who are blind. Scott LaBarre is one such

person. His talent has certainly been recognized by the National Federation

of the Blind inasmuch as it has elected him repeatedly as the president of

the National Federation of the Blind of Colorado. He also serves as the

president of the National Association of Blind Lawyers and as the chairman

of our Preauthorized Check Program. But he also distinguishes himself in

the profession of law, operating his own legal practice and standing at the

forefront of civil rights legislation for the blind.

      One of his assignments for the Federation is to work for the passage

of the Marrakesh Treaty. Here is what he said to the 2017 National

Convention on the progress we have made and the work that remains to be

done:

 

      Thank you, Mr. President. I've just got to say that in Colorado we

are so proud of Maureen Nietfeld [who spoke immediately before him]. She

truly lives our philosophy. Let's hear it again for Maureen Nietfeld.

[cheers].

      In 1966 the United Nations General Assembly adopted the international

covenant on civil and political rights. Article 19 paragraph 2 of that

instrument holds that freedom of expression includes the right to

information. Specifically it states that everyone shall have the right to

the freedom of expression. This right shall include the freedom to seek,

receive, and impart information and ideas of all kinds regardless of

frontiers. A critical component in exercising this right is the right to

read and otherwise manipulate the written word. For the blind, this right

has been difficult to achieve, and its full realization and permanency are

not yet secured. In addition to the traditional barriers limiting our right

to read, namely the barriers of our inability physically to read the

visually-printed word and the barrier of inaccessible information

technology, there is another significant barrier to our full enjoyment of

the right to access information, and it is copyright law.

      Without an exception or limitation, international law makes it

abundantly clear that reproducing a copyrighted work-any kind of copy,

whether in Braille or some other format-violates the exclusive right that

the copyright holder possesses to control distribution of the work. The

only way around this exclusive right has been to ask permission of the

right holder to copy the work in an accessible format. That permission

either is denied or has taken a long, long time. That is why the National

Federation of the Blind joined the Association of American Publishers in

1996 and urged and ultimately convinced Congress to amend the United States

Copyright Act to include an exception permitting reproduction of published

works into accessible formats such as Braille, audio, and accessible

electronic texts, the so-called Chaffee Amendment. The man most responsible

for the Chaffee Amendment is in this room; let's hear it for James Gashel.

[cheers, applause]

      Our domestic exception, however, did not address the great dearth of

accessible works throughout the world. It has been estimated that well over

95 percent of the world's works have not been available in accessible

formats. Think about that for a moment. Unfortunately international

copyright has either outright banned the practice of exchanging accessible

works over international borders or has made it extremely difficult to do

so. This has been a phenomenon, a phenomenon later dubbed "the book famine

for the blind." That is why we engage with our partners in the World Blind

Union to put forward an international agreement that would amend

international copyright law proactively to permit exceptions and

limitations allowing reproduction of works into accessible formats and to

allow such accessible works to flow across international borders.

      Four years ago Dr. Fred Schroeder and I had the pleasure and deep

honor to stand before you and report on the miracle that had occurred in

Marrakesh, Morocco, on June 28, 2013. After several years of intense

negotiations and at times stiff opposition, an international treaty had

been born: a treaty holding out the promise to eradicate the book famine

for the blind and signaling a global priority on the right to access

information, the right to access knowledge and literacy for the world's

blind and print disabled.

      So, what is going on with respect to implementing the Marrakesh

Treaty to Facilitate Access to Published Works for Persons Who are Blind,

Visually-Impaired, or Otherwise Print-Disabled? As we join together in this

convention, the treaty has become an official, binding, legal instrument

for all the countries that have ratified or acceded to it. The treaty fully

entered into force when our neighbors to the north-Canada-delivered its

accession to the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) on June

30, 2016, becoming the twentieth so-called contracting party to the treaty.

Since Canada, nine other nations have joined the Marrakesh Treaty

community. The full list of countries, in chronological order of

ratification or accession, is: India, El Salvador, The United Arab

Emirates, Uruguay, Mali, Paraguay, Singapore, Argentina, Mexico, Mongolia,

The Republic of Korea, Australia, Brazil, Peru, The Democratic People's

Republic of Korea, Israel, Chile, Ecuador, Guatemala, Canada, St. Vincent

and the Grenadines, Tunisia, Botswana, Sri Lanka, Liberia, Panama,

Honduras, Kyrgyzstan, and Kenya.

      Now, you are all pretty sharp, and I'm sure that all of you have

noticed that not present in that list of twenty-nine countries is the

United States of America. How can this be? The United States has led the

way in producing accessible titles, both at the governmental level with our

National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped, and at

the private level with organizations like Bookshare. We have one of the

most robust exceptions to our copyright law permitting the creation of

accessible formats. This Federation exercised its leadership and convinced

the Obama administration to support a treaty, and the United States

Government turned out to be a strong advocate for what later became the

Marrakesh Treaty. The United States has, in fact, signed the treaty as of

October 2, 2013, indicating its intent to ratify. And, as you know, our

Constitution requires that our president send the treaty to the Senate for

ratification, which requires a two-thirds vote, and President Obama did in

fact submit the Marrakesh Treaty to the Senate in February of 2016. No

Senator has voiced opposition to ratifying the Marrakesh Treaty, and in

fact the vast majority has expressed support. Why, then, do we not find

ourselves among the nations who have boarded the Marrakesh Express?

      It comes down to this: after President Obama forwarded the treaty to

the Senate, along with proposed implementing legislation, key copyright

stakeholders such as the publishers and the library community expressed

reservations or insisted on amendments. For a time it felt like dij` vu all

over again. Because we started relitigating the same issues: the very same

issues that we had talked about ad nauseum in Marrakesh and in Geneva, the

same issues to which we had found solutions, and the US key stakeholders

had agreed to such solutions.

      Regardless, I am now happy to report: due to the leadership of the

National Federation of the Blind, we have once again brought the key

stakeholders back to the table. And we have once again re-resolved the same

issues that threatened to scuttle Marrakesh in 2013. With the full support

of the American Council of the Blind, the American Foundation for the

Blind, the American Library Association, the Association of American

Publishers, the Association of College and Research Libraries, Benetech

(who operates Bookshare), the Association of Research Libraries, the

National Federation of the Blind, and the National Music Publishers

Association we have now submitted legislative language to the appropriate

Senate committees. These Senate committees are conducting their due

diligence, and it is our real hope and expectation that by the end of the

year the United States will ratify the Marrakesh Treaty. [applause]

      It will do so because of us-because of the National Federation of the

Blind. But we must all encourage and urge the Congress to stop waiting

around, to not be late to the station, and to get on the Marrakesh Express!

      On the global front, we are very active in the effort to increase the

ratifications and implementation of Marrakesh. We are participating with

the World Blind Union to accomplish this goal. I have the honor of serving

as co-chair of the WBU's ratification campaign committee. And we are

training blind advocates from all over the world on how best to get

Marrakesh ratified in their countries. We have created a thorough and

scholarly implementation guide that advocates and legislators can use to

best implement Marrakesh. I also have the privilege of serving as WBU's

representative on the board of the Accessible Books Consortium. ABC, which

is an entity created by WIPO, serves the purpose of implementing Marrakesh

on a practical level. It is a public-private alliance representing the key

stakeholders in this area. Now there are many entities that serve on ABC's

board, but just to give you a flavor: The International Publisher's

Association, the International Federation of Libraries and Institutions,

and the International Federation of Reproduction Rights Organizations all

serve on ABC. And I want to thank the worldwide community of copyright

stakeholders for their commitment to ending the book famine.

      I also want to thank WIPO for taking the leadership and making

Marrakesh implementation a priority. WIPO administers and monitors several

dozens of international agreements and treaties, yet it has made Marrakesh

a priority. [applause]

      ABC has three main objectives: number one is to operate the ABC

Global Book Service. This is a platform where authorized entities can list

and share their accessible titles and get them into the hands of blind and

print-disabled individuals around the world. Thus far we have acquired over

400,000 accessible titles in ABC's database. 130,000 blind people from

around the world have downloaded and are using these titles. As countries

ratify and accede to Marrakesh, these numbers will dramatically increase

because it will no longer be required to achieve the permission of the

copyright holder to exchange these titles, so literally hundreds of

thousands of works can start flowing across international borders.

      ABC's second major objective is capacity-building. ABC has been

working in six different countries to increase the amount of accessible

works, and these are countries that did not have authorized entities

creating works. So far over 4,000 titles have been created in accessible

format-mostly in the arena of education. And in many of these cases, this

is the first time that the blind of those countries have ever had access to

accessible works in their native language.

      The third major objective of ABC is to promote inclusive publishing.

This is an effort to provide techniques and guidance on how to make books

and have them born accessible. ABC has several projects in this area,

including the publishing of a guide for self-publishing authors on how to

make accessible books, as well as a starter kit for accessible publishing.

ABC promotes the international excellence award, recognizing leadership and

commitment to accessible publishing. And ABC has created a charter of

accessible publishing, to which several large publishers and publisher

associations have signed, indicating their commitment to create works that

are indeed born accessible. [applause]

      As you can see, there is a great deal going on in the world

surrounding the adoption and implementation of the Marrakesh Treaty. When

we take a moment to analyze what is really going on, it is quite simple:

these activities represent a global revolution. For the first time in human

history, access to information, the right to knowledge and literacy for the

blind and otherwise print-disabled is indeed a worldwide priority. The

origin of this revolution comes from right here, right here in the National

Federation of the Blind. [applause]. It is our founder Dr. Jacobus tenBroek

who eloquently said we have a right to live in the world. And indeed, we

do. Part of that right, and in fact fundamental to it, is the right to

access information on terms of equality. We must insist upon full

participation in the world's information marketplace, through which we will

transform our dreams into reality and live the lives we want. The days of

restricting the blind to little or no information are gone. We have touched

the flame of freedom, and it has ignited our hearts, minds, and souls. True

freedom is no longer just a dream; it lies well within our grasps. My

brothers, my sisters, let's now march forward to the future, shatter the

information barrier, and make our dreams come true! [applause, cheers]

                                 ----------

[PHOTO CAPTION: Josh Coffee]

   Engineering Tools for Tactile Fluency: A Partnership with the Organized

                               Blind Movement

                               by Josh Coffee

 

>From the Editor: Drawing is one of the first things children old enough to

be trusted with a pencil and paper do. Then they take those drawings to be

admired. As they get older, what they draw is gently critiqued: "The dog

needs a longer tail." "The camel is missing his hump." This feedback, along

with what is gathered through observing other drawings, makes learning

through pictures second nature, but until now this has not been so for the

blind.

      Josh Coffee is the president of E.A.S.Y. LLC. In his presentation he

explains how his company and the National Federation of the Blind are

making drawing and looking at pictures part of the life experience for

young people. Here is what he says:

 

      Hello, Federationists. Mark invited us here today to tell you guys our

story, because I think that there are a lot of important takeaways from our

story and from the work we've learned that we should be working in

partnership with the National Federation of the Blind. Our story began, as

Mark was alluding to, by a chance conversation between my colleague and

fellow cofounder Dr. Mike Rosen at the University of Vermont and Dr. Al

Maneki, a proud member of the Maryland division of the National Federation

of the Blind. They got into a long conversation about what challenges blind

students faced at the time, specifically in the pursuit of STEM education

and opportunities in STEM career paths. What they kept coming back to was

an inability to gain full access to graphical content in the STEM fields,

and that was a severely limiting aspect of the pursuit of education in

these areas.

      Dr. Rosen suggested that Dr. Maneki bring a crazy idea to the National

Federation of the Blind, which was that they sponsor a senior experience in

engineering design course at the University of Vermont. Dr. Rosen, in

partnership with our third cofounder Dr. Mike Coleman, would mentor teams

of students at the University of Vermont in mechanical and electrical

engineering to think about how we can innovate new technologies to bring

access to digital graphical content to the blind community.

      Al Maneki happened to be going to a bar-b-que at Dr. Marc Maurer's

house the next day. So, in a matter of forty-eight hours, Mike Rosen got a

call back, and it said, "Yes, we'll do it." I think a week later we had a

check for $20,000 from the National Federation of the Blind to begin this

pursuit of innovation.

      Fast-forward three years: I was a student on the third consecutive

student team at the University of Vermont. We brought to convention a

prototype for the first embosser of tactile graphics on an interactive

tactile drawing medium. This was the first embosser that involved

read/write graphics, not just read-only graphics. The inspiration for that

was the mentorship of the National Federation of the Blind leadership

throughout the course of our academic project. We were taken aback at our

first convention because these tools for tactile drawing, the idea that you

can draw and feel what you're drawing, that has been around for about fifty

years. But as we showed off our hot new scanner and embosser for tactile

graphics, we quickly realized that about seven out of ten people who came

by our booth had never tried tactile drawing. They were discouraged from it

in school because their sighted teachers or even their parents, out of

harmless ignorance, just didn't realize that blind people could draw and

communicate graphically if they were given that opportunity at a young age.

If they had the capacity to draw tactilely when their sighted peers had

crayons, they could pursue graphical fluency, they could succeed in STEM

fields, they could use that capacity to become architects and engineers and

doctors. But the fundamental problem was that very few people were being

exposed to it as a learning tool and as a communication method.

      One year after starting our company, after graduating from academia,

and after partnering with the National Federation of the Blind to

incorporate and obtain seed funding and pursue this as a corporate

endeavor, we realized that we had to totally change our business model and

that we didn't need to release the next hot scanner/embosser for tactile

graphics, but that we needed to partner with the National Federation of the

Blind in advocating for tactile graphics fluency. We needed to create the

most affordable and user-friendly version of a tactile drawing tool to date

so that five-year-olds and six-year-olds could affordably begin scribbling

next to their sighted peers [applause].

      So the next year we came back to convention with a prototype for the

inTACT Sketchpad. We released this product at 60 percent of the cost of the

next closest competitor so that parents and teachers could afford it. We

viewed this as a necessity because we knew that, not only for our brand to

succeed, but in order for us to continue to innovate and to work toward the

release of our high-tech digital products, we needed to get a user base of

people who could show others in this community that if you had the right

tools and the right experience, and if kids had the opportunity to have fun

with drawing, that they could develop the capacity to compete graphically.

And that's what we've done.

      We released the inTACT Sketchpad four years ago. Now at conventions,

it's very rare that we meet someone who hasn't tried tactile drawing

before. We are seeing people four years later who bought inTACT Sketchpads

as a young child, and now they're using it in their math class going into

middle school [applause]. This has given us the opportunity to learn from

the Federation and to also curve our pursuit of new technologies.

      We have obtained over $1.2 million in funding from the National

Institutes of Health to further develop the technology we first

demonstrated at this convention six years ago. We are in the process of

executing a phase two STTR grant in partnership with the National

Federation of the Blind, the Texas School for the Blind, the Perkins School

for the Blind, Pearson Publishing, and the American Institutes for Research-

all of whom are interested in integrating this interactive graphics

curriculum into their programming. We are building partnerships through our

connection with the National Federation of the Blind, partnerships we never

could have made if we didn't listen to this great organization and its

members, and if we weren't willing to learn from the perspectives of the

people in this room and the people we have met over the last six years.

      During the scope of this grant what we have done over the last year

is we have introduced the first interactive tactile graphics worksheets

into curricula at the Texas School for the Blind and the Perkins School for

the Blind. These are the first embossed STEM exercises that are made

accessible to blind and low-vision students, the equivalent to exercises

that sighted students have been doing for years and years with ink and

pencil [applause]. We have tested over one hundred exercises with over

twenty-five TVIs through these programs, and we have found that these

students not only are learning from them, but they are having fun while

doing it. We are hoping to continue to expand this beta testing program

throughout the next year at these institutions as well as partnering with

publishers and online learning management system administrators to make

sure that their digital graphical content is made accessible and that blind

students are able to interact with digital content through their websites

so that they have equal opportunity to pursue the same degrees and the same

opportunities that their sighted peers have through drawing [applause].

      As I wrap up I want to offer thanks to everyone in this room and to

the community as a whole. We would not be here were it not for the faith of

the National Federation of the Blind in our program. My colleagues-Mike

Rosen, Mike Coleman, and I-are always humbled and appreciative of the

outpouring of support and love we get from this community every time we

come here. You have impassioned us; you have invigorated our passion for

design as engineers, and it is unbelievably humbling and exciting to come

here every year and report on our progress. On that note, we want to make

some commitments to you. After six years of working on this project, we are

totally invested in the pursuit of equality in STEM education for blind and

low-vision students. We want to commit to you that we will continue to

innovate to pursue that goal. We will continue to listen to the people of

this community. We will continue to take your advice and commentary and try

to use that to build products that enable opportunity in the pursuit of

education. We will continue to work with parents and teachers and blind

students and publishers and advocates to show that drawing is not a visual

skill; it is a spacial skill, and if we give people the tools and

opportunities they need, they can accomplish it.

      So in closing, thank you, specifically to the leadership of the

National Federation of the Blind for believing in us, to Dr. Marc Maurer

who, at a casual picnic with Al Maneki, made the decision to believe in us

as a university and as a research program, and to Mark Riccobono for

continuing to be a champion of our cause and continuing to be a mentor to

us every time we have the chance to meet with him. I thank you guys for

your time, and that's it [applause].

                                 ----------

[PHOTO CAPTION: Kathryn Webster]

     Celebrating a Half Century with the Oldest Division in the National

                           Federation of the Blind

                             by Kathryn Webster

 

>From the Editor: The National Association of Blind Students is a division

of the National Federation of the Blind, and 2017 marks its fiftieth

anniversary. To commemorate this momentous event, President Kathryn Webster

addressed the convention on opening day, and here is what she said:

 

 

      Fifty years ago, during the National Federation of the Blind 1967

National Convention, a small group of students in a hotel room in Los

Angeles, California, built the longest standing of all the NFB's divisions,

the National Association of Blind Students. The leader of that small group

of students joins us today, the founder of NABS, Mr. Jim Gashel. Since then

NABS has been one of the largest and most active divisions of the National

Federation of the Blind. Let's recall the initial purpose behind the

founding of the national student division. NABS was created to help recruit

students into the larger organization, and also to help give students who

might not otherwise have the opportunity the chance to experience

leadership positions within our organization. Within the first two decades

of NABS, I think our student division did a stellar job of recruiting

talented national student division presidents, three of whom stand amongst

our audience today. Thank you to Jim Gashel, Dr. Marc Maurer, and Scott

LaBarre for your continued work and for paving the path for me and so many

NABS presidents.

      In the early years of the student division we undertook three

essential initiatives: first, we sought to help blind students deal with

the problems caused by paternalistic disabled student service offices.

Second, the division published a student handbook which functioned as both

a resource guide and a how-to manual for blind students at all educational

levels. And finally, some members of NABS traveled up to Canada and helped

them develop an organization of Canadian blind students. A few years later

the division dove into a fourth issue, that being the test administration

and validation policies of those entities administering gateway tests, such

as the SAT and the LSAT.

      Fifty years ago those common principle activities are, in many ways,

representative of the focus of NABS. Today we are still fighting with

higher education institutions for equal access to coursework, but we are

more in number and stronger in resilience. Today, we are still providing

endless resources to traditional and non-traditional students, recently

blinded students, and individuals interested in returning to school via our

network of members and leaders, student blogs, and monthly bulletins.

Today, we are still spreading our NFB philosophy far and wide by attending

thirty-two state conventions and student seminars over the past year, as

well as building our student chapters alongside our affiliates each and

every day. Today the SAT and the LSAT, along with several other

standardized tests, are accessible to us as blind students. But today there

are still barriers that stand between blind people and society's

expectations of us. We are continuing to raise the bar as equal members of

society. It is a momentous time for the National Association of Blind

Students during this golden anniversary year.

      John Lord Acton cautioned, "A word of advice to people thinking about

writing history-don't!" Fellow Federationists, let's ponder our history,

let's reflect on our history; but instead of writing it, let's create our

own history and build the National Federation of the Blind!

                                 ----------

[PHOTO CAPTION: R. Alexander Acosta]

  Building the Twenty-First Century American Workforce: Disability Does Not

                           Define Your Employment

                           by R. Alexander Acosta

 

President Riccobono: This next presentation is one that is very special;

it's not every day that you get a cabinet secretary, and we appreciate the

leadership coming to this convention to talk with us about topics important

to us.... We know that employment is one of the key factors in our full

participation in society. We know that even when we get the skills, we work

hard, and we show up for a job, sometimes discrimination prevents us from

actively participating. We shared a number of stories of employment

discrimination yesterday during the Presidential Report. I'm particularly

enthusiastic about our next speaker because I think it presents an

opportunity for us in this organization to offer our expertise and

authentic experience as blind people to the United States Department of

Labor. Our next speaker has served in three presidentially appointed senate-

confirmed positions. In 2002, he was appointed to serve as a member of the

National Labor Relations Board where he participated in or authored more

than 125 opinions. In 2003, he was appointed assistant attorney general for

the civil rights division of the United States Department of Justice, and

from 2005 to 2009 he served as the US attorney for the Southern District of

Florida. Please give a warm Federation welcome to the United States

secretary of labor, the Honorable Alexander Acosta.

 

      President Riccobono, thank you for the introduction and your

leadership. Dr. Schroeder, I didn't have the opportunity to listen to all

of your remarks, but your message at the end about the freedom from low

expectations I think is a wonderful, wonderful message, and I thank you for

delivering it. That is such an important message.

      I have to say that it is a pleasure to be back in my home state of

Florida. I grew up in Miami, and it's wonderful to be back here.

      It's wonderful to be back here with the Federation. I had the

privilege of speaking to the Federation when I served in the Department of

Justice, and I really appreciated that. So when President Riccobono sent me

a request to join you today, I said that I absolutely need to be here, so

thank you for the invitation.

     The leadership and the members of this Federation understand the

importance of hard work. Work provides more than merely income. Work is a

source of pride. It gives men and women the ability to provide for their

families and to make our local communities better places. This

administration understands this and is making work a priority. Every

American, regardless of disability, should have access to a good job. Here

in this room are individuals who bring amazing talent to the workplace.

      As I said, I had the great honor of serving as assistant attorney

general for civil rights working with the disability community and

employers to create a work environment that was open to all. Smart

employers know that workplace accessibility is not something that is done

simply to comply with the law; workplace accessibility provides a business

advantage. It provides access to talent that makes businesses stronger and

more competitive.

      So today I want to share some good news. The American economy is

growing, creating new job opportunities at an incredible pace. Just this

week the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that job openings have reached

nearly 5.7 million, a record level. American job creators are eager to

hire. More than ever, American job creators can utilize resources and

technology to bring workers of all abilities into the workplace. These job

openings occur in all professions: more than one million job openings in

healthcare; more than one million job openings in professional and business

services; more than 750,000 job openings in accommodations and food

services; nearly 350,000 job openings in manufacturing. Every region of the

country has more than a million job openings, and here in the South there

are nearly two million job openings.

     Leaving these unfilled jobs open is costly to the American economy.

The 2014 study by the Centre for Economics and Business Research found that

the economic cost of unfilled jobs was nearly $160 billion. That was when

there were only four million job openings. Today there are nearly six

million. That means that American companies may be missing out on nearly

$250 billion because they have unfilled jobs. So the message to those

companies is that this is the time for businesses to realize the untapped

potential of the more than 700,000 Americans with disabilities who are

seeking jobs right now: today, here, and across the nation [applause].

      The people in this room know that Americans with disabilities bring a

valuable perspective and an incredible work ethic to their jobs. When I was

at the Department of Justice, I hired a talented attorney by the name of

Ollie. It just so happens that he was blind. Ollie performed at the highest

level. He worked to enforce both the Americans with Disabilities Act and to

help businesses comply with the law through the ADA business connection. By

enforcing the Help America Vote Act, he also worked to ensure that

Americans with disabilities had full access to the ballot. For Ollie his

job at the Department of Justice was more than just a job. It enabled him

to adopt triplet boys for whom he is both a father and a role model. One

job-many lives impacted. That's the American story of success, and that is

what can happen when jobs are open to all [applause].

      I am happy to report that a few weeks ago Ollie's sons graduated from

high school. They are Eagle Scouts; all three have promising careers ahead

of them [applause]. We are committed to helping Americans like Ollie's boys

pursue their career of choice, and I should say Ollie's boys are blind as

well, and so we are committed to helping them pursue their career of choice

by making workplaces more accessible and workforce education more inclusive

to those with disabilities.

      I want to say a little bit about what we're doing at the Department

of Labor. Across the Department of Labor and especially at the Office of

Disability Employment Policy, we work to integrate people with disabilities

fully into the labor force. We work to empower these great Americans with

the resources necessary to succeed. If there's one thing that you remember

from my remarks today, I hope it is this: we are committed to giving all

Americans-all Americans the opportunity to gain the skills needed to fill

the jobs of the twenty-first century [applause].

      I would like to provide you with an update on some of our latest

initiatives that help employers make their workplaces accessible and

welcoming. The first step to getting a job is the application process. For

most Americans that means using the internet to find job openings and

apply. A 2015 survey from the Partnership on Employment and Accessibility

Technology showed that 46 percent of jobseekers with disabilities found it

difficult or impossible to apply for a job online. Forty-six percent!

That's not acceptable. That's why the Department of Labor funds a free tool

"TalentWorks" to help employers optimize their online application process

for all jobseekers. It is available, it is free to employers, and it should

be used. Now more than ever, companies can't afford to miss out on great

applicants and great talent merely because their websites are not

accessible [applause].

      The department's efforts for employees with disabilities continue

once they're on the job. TechCheck is an interactive benchmarking tool that

helps companies and organizations evaluate their existing technology. Many

employers are learning that technology they already own can be used to

improve accessibility in the workplace. You know the iPhone is just ten

years old, but in those ten years it's revolutionized vast sectors of the

economy and helped blind Americans become so much more connected. In the

last ten years technology across-the-board has revolutionized the

workplace. It's not just iPhones, but it's SIRI, it's screen readers, and

all of these help blind Americans be more and be better connected. So, I

would say this: imagine what the world will be like ten years from now when

future technologies are leveraged so that more individuals can work in

their career of choice. Today many employers either contribute to or

provide a smart phone that can read emails and webpages. Free or low-cost

apps can do even more to help blind workers be part of a team, and it's

important that employers leverage this type of technology.

      The department's job accommodation network helps employers open their

workplaces to individuals with disabilities. A network survey found that 59

percent of accommodations cost an employer very little money, but

considering the loss of productivity caused by leaving a job open,

investment in a disability simply makes business sense. This has been

confirmed again and again. A DePaul University study found particular

benefits to hiring individuals with disabilities. The study concluded that

workers stay on the job longer and had fewer unscheduled absences. The

bottom line is this: the American economy and the American people both

benefit when employers hire individuals with disabilities of all kinds

[applause].

      Another way the Department of Labor is expanding opportunities for

blind workers is through the workforce recruitment program. This is a

program that connects federal employers with college students and recent

graduates who have disabilities. Over the years thousands of Americans with

disabilities have benefited from this program. We have now opened this

program to the private sector so individual companies can have access to

this pool of talent as well.

      Let me say that blindness can strike at any time in one's life. I

once heard it referred to as the case in which individuals are temporarily

sighted as opposed to individuals may be blind. It's true, right? So

blindness can strike at any time in one's life. Although the government can

provide a helping hand, the value of keeping Americans in their job or

returning them to work is immeasurable. In his budget the president

proposed a demonstration program to test a promising stay at work and

return to work strategy. This idea builds on a successful program that

started in Washington state. I've seen the great results of this program.

The model uses early intervention centers, physical training, employment

training, and service coordination to enable recently disabled workers to

stay in their current employment. Should Congress agree to the funding,

grants for these demonstration projects will be available in 2018. This is

one example of successful state-level innovation that can be replicated

across the nation.

      Finally I want to return to my earlier discussion of open jobs in our

economy and talk about one of the department's most successful substantial

initiatives: the expansion of the apprenticeship model. In the months since

I was sworn in as secretary, business leaders, governors, mayors, and

others have told me that there is a gap between the skills workers have and

the skills needed to fill these 5.7 million open jobs. By closing the

skills gap we can boost the number of Americans in family sustaining

positions. Now let me be clear: the American workforce is and has always

been the best in the world. Americans are hard-working, Americans are

dedicated, Americans deserve an education system that focuses on the skills

required by the modern workplace. To overcome this skills gap, we need what

I call demand-driven education. Apprenticeships are an example of demand-

driven education because they directly connect students with employers.

They combine paid work with an education; they represent a promising way to

focus the education system on the skills that workers demand; they allow

workers to earn while they learn.

      Now there are a number of advantages to apprenticeships. The first is

high wages. The average starting salary for every graduate of an

apprenticeship program is $60,000. That's higher than the average starting

salary for a four-year-degree graduate. What I'd like to do is I'd like to

tell you a story about an individual who participated in an internship

program-an apprenticeship program-because I want to focus a little bit on

the value that apprenticeship programs can bring to individuals. Her name

is Joanne, and she worked for years as a firefighter. She loved the job,

but after losing sight in one eye and having her sight reduced in the

other, she was put on desk duty, and eventually she became a caregiver. She

missed her physically demanding job. She did not want to be on desk duty.

Then she learned about a construction apprenticeship program. Now some

would say that she lost the sight in one eye, had reduced sight in the

other, so she shouldn't be in an apprenticeship program in a construction

field. But she wanted to be, and she should have access to that program.

      So she went on to finish a full three-year apprenticeship. Today she

is an instructor in general construction. Her apprenticeship gave her the

skills she needed not only to stay in the workforce but, as importantly, to

find a job that she loved. That is so important. [applause] We hope to hear

stories like Joanne's repeated over and over again. Apprenticeships open up

opportunities for workers of all abilities. They empower workers to be

great employees as well.

      This is a great time for job seekers-job seekers like all of you and

so many other individuals who have disabilities-who are blind, who are

vision impaired-job creators are ready to hire. Technology is making the

workplace more accessible than ever. Demand-driven education, when

implemented, will provide a great pathway to the skills needed for great

jobs. The administration wants to connect job creators and jobseekers to

the benefit of all Americans. This means an opportunity to increase the

number of disabled individuals who work; this means an opportunity to

increase the number of blind individuals who work; this means that more

Americans, whether or not disabled, can enjoy the independence, the pride,

and the community that accompanies a job.

      So I thank you for your invitation. It's great to be here. Thank you

very much. [applause]

                                 ----------

[PHOTO CAPTION: Tom Ley]

       Tom Ley Dies, and the Earth Loses a Dear Soul, a Family Member,

                          an Advocate, and a Friend

                               by Gary Wunder

 

      On August 30, 2017, Tom Ley died after a year-long battle with

cancer. A type I diabetic since his youth, Tom fought many a medical

battle, always sustained by his faith in Jesus, the love of his family, and

his irrepressible spirit. Just days before his death Tom took to the

keyboard to write these moving words: "18,525: Being a math guy, I

calculated this morning that I've lived 18,525 days as of today. That's

quite a lot. The time we have each day of our lives is truly 'life.' Is

there any more precious commodity we have than the time God gives us each

day and hour? You cannot buy more of it; you cannot recycle it; you cannot

borrow time from a friend; it is all completely yours to do with what you

will." What does Tom say we should do with our time? "Love one another."

Three short, powerful, all important words, but can any of us come up with

any that are more important?

      Tom's fascination with numbers is no surprise to those who know his

history as a math major and later a grade school teacher of the subject.

Neither is his advice to spend one's time in love a surprise to those who

knew his heart and its boundless capacity to love his creator, his savior,

his family, and the causes he held dear.

      Tom went blind in his senior year of high school. His family was

devastated: where was his future that would include a college education, a

job, and a family. But Tom did not trip; he paused, evaluated his

situation, went for blindness training, and started college in January

rather than in August. As his siblings remarked during his service, Tom was

always hopeful, and though he was the little brother, very often they

looked to him for strength, wisdom, and hope. He lived what he loved in

song, one poignant line from a favorite being, "The world will watch in

wonder, love will make them understand."

      This good man's work in the National Federation of the Blind found

him serving for a time as the national president of the Diabetes Action

Network. He also served as the president of the Maryland affiliate's

monthly call for diabetics and as a bridge between industry and advocates

as he communicated the need for equipment blind people can use

independently. He served as the longtime president of the board for the

Louisiana Center for the Blind, the place where he got the blindness

training that allowed him to so quickly return to school.

      After teaching, Tom took a job at UPS, not only thriving in his

career as evidenced by his promotions but, more importantly, influencing

those with whom he worked, bringing energy, optimism, and the out-of-the-

box thinking for which he was known. The relationship between UPS and the

NFB has flourished in no small part due to Tom's work, example, and his

ability to motivate others to love what he loves.

      Tom's life and example continues in the lives of those who survive

him, the closest being his immediate family: Eileen, Maria, and JonCarlos.

All three of them are our family as well, and we will continue to celebrate

the exceptional human being who compressed eighty years of life into the

fifty years he was given.

                                 ----------

[PHOTO CAPTION: Marc Maurer]

                        When Automobiles are Obsolete

                               by Marc Maurer

 

>From the Editor: I remember talking with Immediate Past President Maurer

about favorite authors, and not surprisingly the name Isaac Asimov came up.

Dr. Maurer said that the thing he liked most about Asimov was that whatever

Asimov said Dr. Maurer found interesting. This speaks to a real talent in

writing, and I find myself thinking that I feel much the same way when I

read something that our former president writes. In this spirit I pass

along to you this article, which I received shortly after the national

convention:

 

      Reflecting upon the banquet address, Innovation, Blindness, and the

Emerging Pattern of Thought, delivered by President Mark Riccobono at the

2017 Convention of the National Federation of the Blind, I reach certain

conclusions. Some of these are that we must become linguists, that we must

learn to be confident and content with rapid societal and technological

change, and that in the imaginable future automobiles will become obsolete

except for sporting events and hobbyist activities. Our President pointed

out that technology is changing at a more rapid rate than it has in the

past. He reiterated a thought from Raymond Kurzweil which tells us that the

quantity of intelligence will be expanded within the next few decades a

billion-fold. From the context I conclude that he did not mean that a

billion human beings would be born who could think. Instead, he meant that

a single intelligence would be a billion times as powerful as the intellect

of a very bright human being. This is a startling concept. When we do this,

what will remain important within our lives?

      The scientific method and the interpretation of law have at least one

thing in common. Both of these approaches value predictability. When one

thing happens, another must follow. When the predictability ceases-or when

the speed of changes occurs so rapidly that it appears to cease, we enter

the realm of chaos. What does this have to do with intellect? The capacity

for human thought has been changing for at least the past ten thousand

years. However, the rate of development of new ideas has been reasonably

slow, and assimilation of new concepts has been practical, though some of

them have caused serious upheaval. One of the more noteworthy new thoughts

that has challenged humanity is the idea that equality between human beings

is a necessity both in law and in society. We have been fighting about this

for centuries, and the battle continues to rage today. However, what will

happen to the argument when the ability to think has been expanded a

billion times? Certain things seem to me to be inevitable, but the great

unknown is more intriguing still.

      Whenever we as human beings have invented something new, we have had

to invent the language to explain it. A recent example is the computer.

Until we had made them, we did not know how to talk about them. Put it

another way, until we had invented the language to talk about them, it was

hard for us to invent them. A new concept of thought or a revolutionary

piece of hardware demands from us that we think of new ways to speak about

the idea or the system. I am told that a human being may communicate

moderately fluently with others in a language after learning about five

thousand words. The last time I checked, the English language was said to

contain four hundred eighty-four thousand words. However, English cannot

express all thought. Sometimes alternative methods of communication are

required to express a concept for which English does not have a readily

available set of words. I am also told that a student who enters medical

school will learn about 50 percent more in language alone by the time of

graduation. The additional words are required to express the thoughts of

the medical profession. If we expand our intelligence, we will inevitably

think of new ideas, new products, new systems of approach for managing the

matters we encounter. All of these will require the facility to add to our

vocabularies.

      President Riccobono suggested in the banquet speech that in the

future we will not only be restoring our senses but enhancing them. Can a

receptor be built that will hear as well as the human ear and transmit the

information to the brain as effectively as the nerve system human beings

now have? Today, the answer is no. However, the systems we currently

possess are much better than those of fifty years ago. If intellect expands

by a billion, the likelihood is that we will find a way for sense

recognition and transmission to expand a great deal also. We will be able

to hear what human beings can, but we will hear other things as well. How

does a dog hear what you transmit? I do not know, but I think we will find

out. Can a dog hear your bones creak? Can the dog hear the sound of your

blood running through your veins? Is it possible for some intelligence to

hear the creation of a thought in your brain? How does the sound of one

thought vary from another? Intelligence expanded a billion-fold will want

to know.

      If we create sensory receptors in human beings with these kinds of

capacities, why cannot we create them outside of human beings? Today we

hear sounds that are within a short range of where we are. However, if we

change the distance factor, the range will be expanded. The receptor can be

on the Eiffel Tower in Paris at the same time that the human being

receiving the input is in Baltimore. The only requirement is a connection.

Expanded intelligence will learn how this is done.

      Transportation is a vital part of everyday life. We travel to meet

people, to enjoy new places, to participate in events, to get (or give)

items of importance to us. When our sensory impressions can come from any

part of the world, much of the reason for travel will be gone. The getting

(or giving) of valuable items will remain for a time an important part of

the transportation system, but this will also be addressed eventually in

digital terms. With an enormous expansion of intellect, the transmission of

things by digital means will become practical. We will still travel, but we

will do it in a digital way. The automobile which now consumes so much time

and energy will cease to matter except as an interesting historical

artifact.

      What possibly intrigues me more than any of these ideas is wondering

what will happen to the law and to the structure of society. This is more

challenging for me than imagining what will occur with physical space. We

have built societies on the ability to fight, on hereditary titles, on

possession of wealth, and on the ability to think. When we radically change

one of these factors, what will happen to the others?

      As I have thought about the automobile, I feel certain that for a

brief time intense arguments will take place about the value of putting

autonomous vehicles on the road. Dropping the current requirement that each

vehicle must be controlled by a human being will be regarded as dangerous

to the point of foolishness. A few years after this debate another will

occur demanding that only autonomous vehicles be permitted on the road.

This phase of the argument will assert that hand-driven cars are so much

more dangerous than the autonomous ones that they can no longer be allowed

to be driven except in private spaces such as racetracks. Today we do not

trust the machines, but we will come to rely upon them. A small group will

insist that too great a reliance on a machine will be dangerous to the

future of humanity. However the convenience that we get from automobiles

that drive themselves will be great enough that these people will be

ignored.

      These things will occur before the alteration of the pattern of

society that diminishes the need for the automobile. When we can transmit

thoughts, sense-impressions, and products digitally, we will no longer need

to move enormous machines and masses of material from one place to another

in the old way.

      These are thoughts that came out of the 2017 banquet speech for me.

The vision-centered approach to life is sufficiently limiting that it

cannot be tolerated by a truly intelligent society. We must move from this

to an intelligence-centered approach with the added elements of personality

and fairness. I would have used the word justice, but I have no idea what

the long-term effect of massive acceleration in intelligence will be on the

legal system. Such thoughts will demand invention of terms to encompass

concepts we don't yet know. Perhaps we will use the grand old term the

humanity-centered approach. But this thought leads to yet others which I

will forgo for the moment. When all of our senses have been enhanced, are

we still human? When we have the capacity to touch something a thousand or

a million miles away, are we human? As I say, this speculation must be left

for later. I am hoping and planning to be a part of the intellect community

that helps us make the choices that are implied in the changes that are

fast approaching.

                                 ----------

[PHOTO CAPTION: John receives an award and praise at his retirement party.]

 

[PHOTO CAPTION: John shakes hands with Secretary Tom Price.]

                  John Halverson Ends an Illustrious Career

                               by Deven McGraw

 

>From the Editor: Many Braille Monitor readers know John Halverson because

of his distinguished career in the organization. He has been an affiliate

president in two states, a longtime member of the national scholarship

committee, a member of the Rocky Mountain Center for the Blind Board of

Directors, a former president of the public employees division, and an

advisor to the Federation at the highest levels because of his economic

background, his organizational good sense, and his institutional knowledge

of the NFB. Of course, we are not the only group to appreciate John's

talents, and this letter to staff announcing his retirement amply

demonstrates the respect he commands, no matter the circle in which he

travels. Here is what his former boss, Deven McGraw, who serves as the

deputy director for health information privacy in the Office for Civil

Rights in the Department of Health and Human Services says about John:

 

      It is with mixed emotions that I share the news of John Halverson's

retirement after thirty-eight (!) years in the federal government. We are

so very happy for John and excited for his next chapter! At the same time,

we will miss John tremendously here at the Office for Civil Rights (OCR);

he is a bastion of institutional knowledge and a cornerstone of the HIP

team.

      John has had a fascinating education and career. John graduated from

Sequoia High School in Redwood City, California, in 1967. He attended the

University of California Irvine and graduated with a bachelor's degree in

economics in 1971. He was a member of the Student Senate in the tumultuous

times of the Vietnam War during his junior and senior years. He was honored

as co-winner of the outstanding graduating senior award. He was admitted to

the University of Michigan PhD program in economics and completed his PhD

in 1978 with an emphasis in public finance. His dissertation involved a

comparison of the differences in net life-cycle earnings across medical

specialties and other sciences. For several years, while a graduate student

at the University of Michigan, he taught the introduction to economics

class to undergraduates.

      In 1977 John began teaching at the State University of New York

Geneseo where he successfully taught a series of undergraduate economics

courses. He created and taught health economics when it was a relatively

new discipline. Soon after, John began working at the Department of Health

Education and Welfare in January 1979. He was hired as a social science

analyst because of his knowledge of civil rights, health economics, and

statistics. When the department of Health and Human Services was formed in

the spring of 1980, he was assigned to the new department.

      In 1986 staff in headquarters were given the opportunity to become

managers in some of OCR's regional offices. John relocated to Region VII in

Kansas City as the division director. He managed the region's case load,

conducted technical assistance, and worked with governmental and advocacy

officials from throughout what he called the "MINK" Region; Missouri, Iowa,

Nebraska and Kansas.

      In 1991 he was appointed acting Regional Manager and made permanent

in the spring of 1992. He continued to manage the case load, conduct

outreach activities, and planned a comprehensive civil rights enforcement

program. As part of the Kansas City Federal Executive Board, he led the

formation of an organization representing federal employees with

disabilities in the Kansas City area. For several years he headed the

Kansas City area Civil Rights Coordinating Committee. This organization

consisted of leaders of federal regional civil rights offices. It

experimented with conducting joint compliance reviews, analyzed whether the

same complainants filed civil rights complaints across different

departments, and held regional civil rights advocacy conferences. One of

his most interesting activities involved the opportunity to take the two-

week Organizational Leadership for Executives training at the Department of

the Army Command and General School at Fort Leavenworth.

      After ten years he decided it was time for a change. In 2001 John

returned to headquarters to become involved in Health Information Privacy

(HIP). He also immediately began to participate in the development of

Departmental Section 508 policy. He drafted HIP correspondence for the OCR

Director for the Secretary's signature, assisted with arranging privacy

speaking activities, and provided expertise to OCR and the department on

internet and other access issues. More recently he has worked with regions

to provide assistance to investigators in developing investigative

strategies and insuring that closure letters concisely meet OCR standards.

Specifically, for the past three years he worked with a series of new

investigators and managers to ensure the Southeast Region was able to

reduce its massive case load. Finally, for the last five years he

represented OCR on the department's Privacy Incident Response Team (PIRT)

which has the responsibility to evaluate privacy breaches of personally

identifiable information and PHI in the Department.

      He has been a member of the National Federation of the Blind for many

years, serving as president of its Michigan affiliate in the mid-70s and

its District of Columbia organization in the 1980s. He is currently

president of the Potomac Chapter in Arlington, Virginia. John is married to

his wife Sandy. His stepson, Brent, and family live in Independence,

Missouri.

 

      This was the letter notifying his department of John's retirement,

but there is more. It turns out that John went to school with Secretary Tom

Price:

 

 

THE SECRETARY OF HEALTH & HUMAN SERVICES

Washington, D.C. 20201

 

August 30, 2017

 

John Halverson, Ph.D.

Senior Management and Program Analyst

Office for Civil Rights

Health Information Privacy Division

Department of Health and Human Services

Washington, DC 20201

 

Dear Dr. Halverson:

 

On behalf of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), I am

pleased to congratulate you on your retirement and to thank you for your

more than 38 years of dedicated service to HHS and to the public.

 

Since joining the HHS Office for Civil Rights (OCR) in January 1979, you

have made significant contributions in all aspects of OCR's work. Your 24

years of service in OCR's Headquarters and 14 years in leadership positions

in OCR's Region VII office in Kansas City reflect your versatility and

willingness to lend your talents where needed most in OCR's expanding

mission over four decades in both civil rights and health information

privacy. Thank you for being a team player, for giving your all to the job,

and for your unselfish devotion to ensuring that others at OCR succeed as

well. Your professionalism and your work ethic are admirable and served as

an inspiration throughout your distinguished tenure at HHS.

 

On a personal note, when I met you shortly after I arrived at HHS, I was

delighted to find that we were in graduate school together while I was a

medical student and you were pursuing a doctoral degree at the University

of Michigan in the 1970's. Since then, you have truly made your mark and

left a lasting legacy at OCR and HHS, and I wish you all the best during

your retirement years.

 

Sincerely,

 

Thomas E. Price, M.D.

 

                                 ----------

Leave a Legacy

      For more than seventy-five years the National Federation of the Blind

has worked to transform the dreams of hundreds of thousands of blind people

into reality, and with your support we will continue to do so for decades

to come. We sincerely hope you will plan to be a part of our enduring

movement by adding the National Federation of the Blind as a partial

beneficiary in your will. A gift to the National Federation of the Blind in

your will is more than just a charitable, tax-deductible donation. It is a

way to join in the work to help blind people live the lives they want that

leaves a lasting imprint on the lives of thousands of blind children and

adults.

 

With your help, the NFB will continue to:

    . Give blind children the gift of literacy through Braille;

    . Promote the independent travel of the blind by providing free, long

      white canes to blind people in need;

    . Develop dynamic educational projects and programs that show blind

      youth that science and math are within their reach;

    . Deliver hundreds of accessible newspapers and magazines to provide

      blind people the essential information necessary to be actively

      involved in their communities;

    . Offer aids and appliances that help seniors losing vision maintain

      their independence; and

    . Fund scholarship programs so that blind people can achieve their

      dreams.

 

Plan to Leave a Legacy

      Creating a will gives you the final say in what happens to your

possessions and is the only way to be sure that your remaining assets are

distributed according to your passions and beliefs. Many people fear

creating a will or believe it's not necessary until they are much older.

Others think that it's expensive and confusing. However, it is one of the

most important things you will do, and with new online legal programs it is

easier and cheaper than ever before. If you do decide to create or revise

your will, consider the National Federation of the Blind as a partial

beneficiary. Visit www.nfb.org/planned-giving or call (410) 659-9314,

extension 2422, for more information. Together with love, hope,

determination, and your support, we will continue to transform dreams into

reality.

 

Invest in Opportunity

      The National Federation of the Blind knows that blindness is not the

characteristic that defines you or your future. You can live the life you

want; blindness is not what holds you back. A donation to the National

Federation of the Blind allows you to invest in a movement that removes the

fear from blindness. Your investment is your vote of confidence in the

value and capacity of blind people and reflects the high expectations we

have for all blind Americans, combating the low expectations that create

obstacles between blind people and our dreams.

 

In 2016 the NFB:

    . Distributed over seven thousand canes to blind people across the

      United States, empowering them to travel safely and independently

      throughout their communities.

    . Hosted forty-five NFB BELL Academy programs, which served more than

      three hundred and twenty-five blind students throughout the United

      States.

    . Provided over one hundred twenty thousand dollars in scholarships to

      blind students, making a post-secondary education affordable and

      attainable.

    . Delivered audio newspaper and magazine services to 115,491

      subscribers, providing free access to over four hundred local,

      national, and international publications.

    . In the third year of the program, over three hundred fifty Braille-

      writing slates and styluses were given free of charge to blind users.

 

      Just imagine what we'll do next year, and, with your help, what can

be accomplished for years to come. Below are just a few of the many

diverse, tax-deductible ways you can lend your support to the National

Federation of the Blind.

 

 

 

Vehicle Donation Program

      The NFB now accepts donated vehicles, including cars, trucks, boats,

motorcycles, or recreational vehicles. Just call (855) 659-9314 toll-free,

and a representative can make arrangements to pick up your donation-it

doesn't have to be working. We can also answer any questions you have.

 

 

 

General Donation

      General donations help support the ongoing programs of the NFB and

the work to help blind people live the lives they want. Donate online with

a credit card or through the mail with check or money order. Visit

www.nfb.org/make-gift for more information.

 

 

 

Bequests

      Even if you can't afford a gift right now, including the National

Federation of the Blind in your will enables you to contribute by

expressing your commitment to the organization and promises support for

future generations of blind people across the country. Visit

www.nfb.org/planned-giving or call (410) 659-9314, extension 2422, for more

information.

 

 

 

Pre-Authorized Contribution

      Through the Pre-Authorized Contribution (PAC) program, supporters

sustain the efforts of the National Federation of the Blind by making

recurring monthly donations by direct withdraw of funds from a checking

account or a charge to a credit card. To enroll, visit www.nfb.org/make-

gift, complete the Pre-Authorized Contribution form, and return it to the

address listed on the form.

                                 ----------

[PHOTO CAPTION: Kirk Adams]

    The American Foundation for the Blind: New Directions for the Future

                                by Kirk Adams

 

>From the Editor: There was a time when the National Federation of the Blind

and the American Foundation for the Blind were actively at war. The

foundation regarded itself as the expert on all things blindness related.

What blind people themselves might say was inconsequential; after all, any

real speaking done for the blind would be done by professionals, and those

professionals turned to the foundation to give and get information about

how they would deal with their clients. The NFB took a different view. It

was that the blind, having the most to win or lose in the struggle and

being competent to set the direction of the programs serving us, should be

the most significant force in this work; no longer were we going to sit

idly by and let others speak for us.

      Tensions began to lessen in the middle of the 1980s, and although the

road has not been straight or without bumps, relations have gotten better

as the recognition that blind people are best suited to speak to the needs

of blind people is more widely embraced by the field.

      As President Riccobono remarked: "To start off the afternoon, we have

a presentation which features an organization which has not been on our

agenda in at least a decade. The American Foundation for the Blind has

sometimes been at odds with the National Federation of the Blind, but there

is a new direction for the American Foundation for the Blind, and here to

talk with us about it is a gentleman who used to direct the Seattle

Lighthouse for the Blind where he demonstrated an openness and true

willingness to work with the organized blind movement, and he's bringing

that perspective to the work of the AFB. So here to talk to us about the

future at the American Foundation for the Blind is its president, Kirk

Adams:"

 

      Good afternoon, everyone. I'm un-telescoping my cane-if that's a word-

it's my cane of choice, the NFB carbon fiber telescoping cane. [cheers]

It's really great to be here. The acceptance speeches by your new board

members-that was worth the price of admission-tremendous. It's just always

a pleasure to witness strong leadership in action.

      Again, my name is Kirk Adams. I'm the sixth president and CEO of the

American Foundation for the Blind. I want to thank President Riccobono for

reaching out to me and inviting me to speak with you. I'm here to tell you

a little bit about AFB, and really also to highlight our strong desire to

work more closely with the Federation to create the world of no limits for

people who are blind.

      You know over the years AFB and NFB have worked together on many

important initiatives. In the early 2000s we worked together to establish

the right for all blind K-12 students to receive their accessible textbooks

on the first day of school. We worked on advocating for access to

instructional materials in higher ed. You know that together we fought to

hold the makers of e-readers accountable for their responsibilities under

the Twenty-First Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act. So, we

want a lot more of that in our future. As Scott [LaBarre] mentioned earlier

today, we're also part of the coalition really driving toward US

ratification of the Marrakesh Treaty, so we need to make that happen.

[applause] We're grateful for the Federation's leadership in protecting the

civil rights of blind people, and we know that a successful Federation is

just vitally important for blind people in the country, so at AFB we do

look forward to working with you more closely in the future, thank you.

[applause]

      For those of you who don't know much about AFB, I invite you to visit

our website afb.org. I invite you to send me a Facebook friend request (I'm

a little bit of a Facebook addict, so I'm there a lot.) We're a private

nonprofit; we're not a membership organization like the Federation. We were

created in 1921 by the two professional associations that existed then in

the blindness field. There was an American Association of Workers for the

Blind, and there was an American Association of Teachers of the Blind. They

met every other year, so, in their meetings in 1919 and 1920, both

organizations voted to put forward leadership and resources to create a

new, central nonprofit agency which was meant to identify, understand, and

address the most important issues affecting the lives of people who are

blind. Today, ninety-five years later, like all of you here in this room,

we are working hard to create the world of no limits for people who are

blind that everyone who is associated with NFB and AFB knows is possible.

Maureen [Nietfeld] this morning made it just so very clear that, like all

people, blind people have unlimited potential to achieve, to create, to

live the lives we want.

      Prior to coming to AFB, as President Riccobono mentioned, I was the

CEO of the Lighthouse for the Blind in Seattle. I worked very closely with

members of NFB of Washington, and I attended lots of state conventions. I

look forward to getting to know the Federationists in my new home state of

Virginia [cheers]-three weeks in, and I've also had the privilege of

attending a number of national conventions. Dr. Maurer gave me an

opportunity to address the general session in Atlanta when I was at the

Lighthouse, and I've attended conventions in Dallas, Detroit, and here in

Orlando, too. I know firsthand the amazing work that you all do. The

Federationists in this room are living proof that there are no limits to

blind people's talent and ambition, our creativity, our courage, our

compassion; but the reality remains that limits are being placed on us in

the form of barriers to inclusion in nearly every aspect of life. So we all

know that blind people face barriers to equal employment opportunities, to

educational and health care services, to transportation systems, to

electronic information and resources. The book famine-95 percent of books

are not available to us yet. At AFB we are working hard to understand why

and how these limits are being imposed on blind people and what we can do

about it.

      I know every blind person in this room has had a limit placed upon

them at some point, and I've had my own experience. One very small example:

when I was a senior in high school, my first day I went to my math analysis

class and my physics class-I was carrying about forty pounds of Braille

books-all was well. I went to my chemistry class, and my teacher told me I

could not take chemistry. A blind person would not be able to conduct the

required experiments. I was sent out of the classroom; I was assigned to a

study hall; case closed. I was seventeen years old in a small rural town in

Washington state. Now, of course, I've met successful blind chemists and

chemistry professors. At the time that I was kicked out of chemistry class,

I didn't have any relationships with any blind people; I didn't have any

blind adult role models; I didn't have any self-advocacy skills to speak

of. But this week we are all here in community together, so that's a

community full of role models and expert self-advocates. [applause] And I

know that we are all taking advantage of the unbelievable opportunity here

in Orlando to learn from one another.

      Back to chemistry class: a limit was placed upon me by that teacher

and that school. I did not know how to deal with it, so I was not allowed

to live a life of no limits in that case.

      But for the good news: now we have unprecedented opportunities to

create that world of no limits. Advances in technology, the power of social

media to help us share knowledge and to organize-research and data analysis

tools that will really allow us to dig deep and look at old problems and

find new solutions-in this world which is changing each and every day, we

really need to be strong and decisive as blind people right now to make

sure that these changes contribute to the world of no limits for people who

are blind, rather than creating even more barriers. Of course we know

individual blind people can and do overcome all kinds of barriers,

sometimes in really remarkable ways, like running across America. At AFB we

really want to make overcoming barriers easier for all blind people.

      I had a really neat experience visiting the New York Institute for

Special Education in the Bronx asking kids what they want to be when they

grow up. And there was a little girl-totally blind little girl-about six

years old. When we asked her what she wanted to be when she grew up she

said, "I can be a helicopter pilot if I want to." [cheers] When she's in

high school, and she walks into her intro to aeronautical engineering class

with her white cane in her hand, I don't want some ignorant so-and-so

telling her she can't do it. [cheers, applause]

      To create a world of no limits for kids like her, AFB just went

through a year-long strategic planning process. We took a step back and

asked, "What can we do as an organization that will bring the greatest long-

term value to people who are blind in our country." We talked to lots of

people, leaders both inside and outside of the blindness field-including

President Riccobono and Anil Lewis. Thank you for participating in our

planning process [cheers]-and we got a really clear answer. We were told

that the AFB should really identify the most challenging barriers faced by

blind people and use research and data analysis to understand these

barriers, to create knowledge about these most challenging issues, and then

to share that knowledge to make positive changes in the lives of people who

are blind.

      So at AFB we are going back to our roots. We're identifying evidence-

based promising practices using research and data, pursuing goals that will

result in direct, measurable, positive results for people who are blind. We

look forward to working with partners like all of you to create solutions

in the areas of employment, education, and access to technology. We want to

promote understanding of the issues faced by blind people with the decision-

makers and influencers across our country. We're going to focus efforts on

those key decision-makers in corporate America, government, health care,

education, and the nonprofit sector. So we'll be reaching out and building

relationships across all of these sectors, and we'll be sharing our

research, our data, and our knowledge so that better decisions can be made

concerning the inclusion of people who are blind in all aspects of life.

      I know it's going to be hard to imagine how knowledge can break down

barriers, but in the long run we think it is the best way for AFB to

contribute. So just think about how we can level the playing field for

blind people if we had clear, evidence-based answers to some of our tough

questions: why are employers afraid to hire people who are blind? How do we

change that fear to enthusiasm? What will transportation systems look like

twenty-five years from now, and how can we make sure blind people have full

access? Which of the new technology solutions that are popping up literally

every day are going to be game changers and which are going to be a flash

in the pan? But the essence is really to do our best to understand the most

challenging issues facing blind people, to use research and data to

identify solutions, and to drive toward these solutions, working in

collaboration and partnership with people like you.

      So thank you Federation for everything you do. Thank you for

including AFB in this year's convention; I hope it's not another fifteen

years before you have us back, [laughter] and enjoy the rest of your time.

Thank you.

 

      President Riccobono asked Mr. Adams to stay onstage for a moment

after he finished speaking so that he could ask two questions. The

questions and Mr. Adam's responses follow:

 

 

 

      Mark Riccobono: Thank you Kirk. I really appreciate you being here.

As you know, this organization has staunchly been for the elimination of

the provision in law that allows employers to pay people with disabilities

less than the minimum wage. In the past the American Foundation for the

Blind has told us that they're not prepared to support such a provision.

AFB, I think, stands out really as an outlier amongst organizations. I'm

wondering if you have any plans to change AFB's position on this topic?

 

      Kirk Adams: Yeah, 14(c) is an antiquated law that needs to be

eliminated. [cheers] My concern is a repeal-and-replace without knowing, in

an evidence-based way, what the impacts will be on individuals living with

the most significant disabilities, in particular developmental

disabilities. I think if blindness is your only disabling condition, there

is no reason on God's green earth that you should be earning less than the

minimum wage. I am concerned about blind people, in particular, who also

live with significant developmental disabilities, in which that disability

is really the most impactful disability. I would really welcome an

opportunity to be in dialogue with NFB and understand more clearly how we

make sure to protect and hear the voices of the individuals who are engaged

in the community with use of this antiquated tool. Again, I welcome a

chance to talk more about it. I think AFB's position has been based on the

concern for blind individuals who are severely developmentally disabled.

 

      Mark Riccobono: I appreciate the answer, would point out that the law

doesn't distinguish classes, and I think this crowd would urge that we

figure out a way to eliminate-get on the path to elimination-and then we

can work out the other details. But I have another question: we've been

working now for over two years to get an accessible instructional materials

bill into Congress, and AFB has also not fully endorsed our perspective.

Earlier this week a higher ed bill came out that has language in it that

apparently AFB does endorse. Now, we would urge and ask that the American

Foundation for the Blind join with us in supporting accessible

instructional materials and a true pathway to getting schools to do

something about this, since so far they haven't taken it seriously. Can we

get your support with that?

 

      Kirk Adams: We have-again, I've been there for a year-but I see that

we have supported NFB language and bills in the past-past versions. The

most recent version added the safe harbor proviso, which we feel weakens

the previous bills and language. We would like a stronger bill. When we

look at the Higher Ed Improvement Act language that was dropped yesterday,

it looks like all the accessibility provisions are included in that bill,

and it does not include the safe harbor provision, so it's back to very

similar to the original language that NFB put forward in previous versions

which we did support, and we're supporting the version that dropped

yesterday.

 

      Mark Riccobono: Thank you, Kirk. I would point out that one problem

we have is that-where are the students in the room? [cheers] A whole bunch

of them-the one problem is that we have to ask ourselves what kind of bill

is going to get through Congress, and what are we going to do about those

students who are sitting out in those seats right now to make sure that the

technology is accessible in the next year, not in the next ten years?

[cheers] I think we need to be realistic about the prospects in front of us

in Congress, and so far I've noticed that no other organizations are

willing to put their shoulder to the wheel to help sue schools. So if we

could get some support telling Congress that something has to happen today,

that would be great. [applause] Thank you for being here today Kirk.

                                 ----------

[PHOTO CAPTION: Curtis Chong]

          The Orbit Reader 20: The Most Inexpensive Braille Display

                               by Curtis Chong

 

>From the Editor: Curtis is the retired president of the NFB in Computer

Science, having given up that title in the summer of 2016. He now serves as

the organization's treasurer. In addition he serves as the treasurer for

the NFB of New Mexico, taking on that job in January of 2014. For pay,

Curtis works as the manager of assistive technology at the New Mexico

Commission for the Blind, where he continues to push for nonvisual access

in education, recreation, and employment.

      Curtis is proud to say that he joined the National Federation of the

Blind in Hawaii in 1969 at the young and tender age of fifteen. His first

national convention was in 1971 in Houston, Texas, where he was happy to be

elected to serve as the secretary of the NFB Student Division. He later

worked on the staff of the Federation, serving as the director of

technology from 1997 until 2002. Here is his review of this new technology:

 

 

      While attending the 2017 convention of the National Federation of the

Blind in Orlando, Florida, I was among the lucky handful of individuals who

was able to buy (for $449) the Orbit Reader 20. For the first time I was

able to own a refreshable Braille display which cost under $500. Every

other piece of refreshable Braille technology that I have ever used was

paid for either by my employer or a rehabilitation agency and cost

thousands of dollars. You might say that I felt as if I had scored a

personal victory here.

      The opinions expressed in this article are mine and mine alone, and

the needs I have with respect to refreshable Braille technology may or may

not be reflective of the blind community as a whole. I have four specific

requirements for refreshable Braille. First, I want a device that I can use

to quickly write and edit long and detailed notes during a meeting and

(perhaps more important) allow me to read them back while talking or

presenting at that meeting. My second requirement for refreshable Braille

is that, from time to time, I want to be able to connect the device to my

computer so that I can proofread a document on the computer in greater

detail than I can using speech alone. My third requirement is to be able to

read in Braille agendas and other documents that I have copied from a

computer. Lastly, I want to be able to read Braille books that I have

downloaded from various sources of electronic Braille. I do not want or

need a Braille device to search the web, produce professional-looking

documents, edit an article, send and receive email, or read information on

my iPhone. In other words, I want my refreshable Braille technology to

supplement-not replace-my computer or iPhone.

 

What Is the Orbit Reader 20?

 

      The Orbit Reader 20 is a twenty-cell, eight-dot refreshable Braille

display which serves three major purposes:

 

   1. reading books in electronic Braille,

   2. taking and editing Braille notes, and

   3. serving as a refreshable Braille display (by connecting via Bluetooth

      or USB) for a computer, smart phone, or tablet running a screen

      reading program.

 

      In addition to the twenty-eight-dot Braille cells, the Orbit Reader

20 also has a Braille keyboard, a cursor pad, and rocker keys to move

through a document or book. The Orbit Reader 20 does not have the

traditional cursor routing buttons that many people have come to expect in

more expensive refreshable Braille devices. It reads from and stores

information on an SD (Secure Digital) card, which can be up to thirty-two

gigabytes in size. It supports USB and Bluetooth connections. The Braille

cells themselves produce dots that are locked in place, meaning that the

Braille feels as solid as a Braille sign-no more dots going down when you

push them.

      If you think of the Orbit Reader 20 as an electronic slate and

stylus, you will understand what I mean when I say that the Orbit Reader

provides no forward or backward Braille translation. Information stored in

contracted Braille is displayed in contracted Braille, and information

stored as plain, readable ASCII text will be displayed in what is called

Computer Braille, which is the code that drives Braille displays and

embossers. Any notes you write will be stored exactly as you wrote them.

      Slate and stylus users (a diminishing population, I know) are

familiar with the crazy Braille contractions and codes we use to jot down

information in a hurry. While these codes may make no sense to other

people, they certainly make sense to us. The really nice thing about the

Orbit Reader 20 is that if we use these codes to speed up our writing, we

can read them back. For me, this is an extremely valuable feature.

      If you want to copy a Word document to the Orbit Reader 20, you need

to run the document through a free "Send to Braille" program, which is a

shortcut that adds Braille to the Windows. Send To menu, which converts

files on your computer into the unformatted BRL (Braille Ready Format). You

can check out this free software using the link http://tech.aph.org/lt/.

 

On the Plus Side

 

      The Orbit Reader 20 is by far the least expensive twenty-cell Braille

display. Yes, it does lack certain functions, but in order to get those

functions, you have to spend a lot more. For purposes of comparison,

consider that the VarioUltra 20 (a twenty-cell display from Baum) costs

$2,395, and the Braille Edge, a forty-cell display from HIMS, costs $2,795.

The Orbit Reader 20 cost me $449.

      The Orbit Reader 20 fits easily into a briefcase. This means that

when I need it, I have it. Other displays I have tried were either too

large or too fragile to be safely stored in my cramped case, and I could

not afford the $2,395 that I would have had to spend to acquire the

VarioUltra 20. The Braille dots on the Orbit Reader 20 are locked in place

when raised. They do not give when pressed.

      Once mastered, the Orbit Reader 20 is very easy to use, and it takes

only a few seconds to turn it on from the power off state. During a long

note-taking session, you can suspend the unit to conserve battery.

      The Orbit Reader 20 is supported by all of the current screen reading

programs used by the blind: VoiceOver, NVDA, JAWS for Windows, and System

Access. Remember that once you connect the Orbit Reader 20 to your screen

reader, any functionality you experience is provided by the screen reader-

not the Orbit Reader 20.

 

On the Not So Positive Side

 

      As of this writing, the Orbit Reader 20 is not yet ready to be sold

to the general market. There simply aren't enough units to go around.

However, the supply issues are being addressed, to the point where

suppliers are now declaring that the Orbit Reader 20 is coming soon. And as

far as I know, the price appears to be set at $449.

      The Orbit Reader 20 does not refresh as quickly as more expensive

displays. Some people will regard this as a negative. Others, like me, will

not. Also, there is a certain amount of noise when the Braille cells are

refreshed, but I have not yet found this to be a problem when I use the

Orbit Reader 20 in meetings.

      The lack of cursor routing buttons has been criticized, but learning

how to move the cursor around on the twenty-cell display will mitigate this

problem. Once I learned how to do this, I found that the lack of routing

buttons was not significant. At least, I did not find their absence to

seriously impede my work.

      The Orbit Reader 20, being of a rather simplistic design, does not

teach itself. You can't simply press keys and hope to figure out how to

make it work. This was my experience. There is no help built-in, and there

is certainly no context-sensitive help available. You really do have to

give some attention to the manual. When you purchase the unit, a Braille

version of the manual is available to read off of the SD card, and the most

current version of the manual is available online at

http://www.orbitresearch.com/support/orbit-reader-20-support/orbit-reader-

20-user-guide-downloads/.

      Finally, a computer running Windows is required to update the Orbit

Reader 20 firmware. This could be a problem for people who want to update

their Orbit Reader 20 firmware but who don't have a Windows computer

available to them.

 

Conclusion

 

      It is unfortunate that the Orbit Reader 20 has been actively promoted

for a year-and-a-half with no reliable supply yet available for purchase.

Unless or until this major problem is solved, I fear that the initial

enthusiasm with which this technology was greeted will wear off, to the

point where people will simply spend more money to obtain other Braille

devices. I sincerely hope that this does not happen and that we will see

Orbit Reader 20's flying off the shelves.

      Is the Orbit Reader 20 going to be useful to every blind person who

needs or wants a less expensive refreshable Braille display? There is no

simple answer to this question. Refreshable Braille purists, familiar with

more expensive devices, will doubtless complain about the slow refresh

rate, the noise of the refreshing dots, and the lack of cursor routing

buttons. Others will decry the lack of forward or reverse Braille

translation, and some users who are not technology enthusiasts will not be

happy about having to read the user guide.

      As I understand it, a great deal of money has already been spent by a

number of organizations to bring a low-cost Braille display to the blind

community around the world. This is an exciting time for Braille users. Let

us move forward with the expectation that before the end of this year, we

will be able to purchase the Orbit Reader 20 because there will be enough

for those who want them.

 

Comments from Orbit Research

 

      The Orbit Reader 20 was designed in accordance with the

specifications developed by the Transforming Braille Group, a consortium of

the world's prominent organizations of the blind. The overarching objective

was to create a low cost, simple to use, and compact refreshable Braille

display that would be affordable for students in developing countries and

at the same time provide functionality and quality that are appealing to

users in developed countries.

      To achieve the goal of affordability, careful consideration was given

to the cost implications of various features; and tradeoffs were made on

features such as cursor routing buttons, refresh speed, and sound during

refresh. Extensive field testing was performed with users around the world,

which confirmed that these tradeoffs would not affect usability. In

addition to providing the key features of book-reading, note-taking, and

connectivity to screen readers, the Orbit Reader 20 brings unique signage-

quality Braille, which is especially helpful to beginning Braille readers.

      As with any groundbreaking technology, there were numerous technical

challenges in getting the manufacturing streamlined, which resulted in a

slower release to the market. We are pleased to note that we have worked

through these challenges and are now in the process of accelerating

production. We look forward to the Orbit Reader 20 and its breakthrough

technology bringing affordable electronic Braille to millions of blind

people around the world.

                                 ----------

                         Independence Market Corner

                              by Ellen Ringlein

 

      The National Federation of the Blind Independence Market is the

conduit through which our organization distributes our empowering

literature to our members, friends, and the general public. As a service we

also operate a blindness products store, which sells mostly low-tech items

designed to enhance the everyday independence of blind people.

      We would like to extend a big thank you to all who volunteered in the

Independence Market during our 2017 National Convention in July. We would

not be able to run the Independence Market at convention without the

assistance of our numerous volunteers. Because of their work our many

customers had the opportunity to examine all our demo products and purchase

the items that caught their interest.

      We are frequently asked about what is new in the Independence Market,

so here is a brief description of some of the items that were new at this

year's convention. We now carry 8-1/2 by 11-1/2 inch medium weight Braille

paper in both unpunched and three-hole punched versions. It is great to use

with a slate and stylus if you need to take rapid notes. We also sell a

thinner, flat, saddle-shaped stylus which easily tucks into a small pocket.

This stylus is a nice accessory to our business card slate and mini Braille

notepads. We now have added a smaller 5-1/2 by 8-1/2 inch dark line notepad

to our low vision product offerings. It is just the right size to keep on

the kitchen counter or the nightstand for some quick notes.

      The market has some new labeling stickers which may help those with

severe vision loss or those who have just lost their sight and cannot read

Braille yet. The stickers are individual letters and numbers. The three-

quarter-inch high black symbols can also be identified by touch, and the

corresponding Braille letter or number is below it. One sheet has 176

letters and numbers on it. When combining these stickers with our

Braillable food labels, which consist of little plastic cards with an

attachable elastic band, one can make practical, reusable print/Braille

labels for cans, packages, and other household items.

      The Independence Market is repeatedly asked if we carry a talking

caller ID. The model we used to sell was unfortunately discontinued quite

some time ago. However, we identified a talking phone with a nice, built-in

talking caller ID, the Serene CL-30 Cordless Phone. This phone is designed

with the needs of users who are experiencing vision and/or hearing loss in

mind. The high definition sound technology makes incoming calls sharp,

clear, and intelligible. The talking caller ID feature announces incoming

numbers twice in a clear voice for those users subscribed to the caller ID

service through their phone company. When enabled, each keypad button

audibly repeats the number pushed. The phone amplifies incoming calls up to

forty decibels, and the ringer is amplified up to ninety decibels. The

handset is hearing aid compatible. The phone features easy-to-see large and

brightly back-lit keys; eight one-touch speed dial buttons; one-touch call-

for-help button for hands-free emergency calls; audible and visual

indicators for voice mail and missed calls; high performance speakerphone;

bright visual ring flasher and super loud ringer on handset and base; and

more.

      We will introduce the remaining new products in a later issue of the

Braille Monitor. If you would like a detailed description of the new items,

you may request a Braille or print copy of the document which lists the

Independence Market products that were new at this year's national

convention. Please contact us by email or phone and be sure to specify the

format you would like.

      It's that time of year when many are starting to look for next year's

calendar. Since not everyone is using digital calendars yet, the

Independence Market still offers the following Braille and large print

calendars for 2018. Many continue to find the free, pocket-sized American

Action Fund Braille calendar very useful. Each calendar page includes the

days of the month and lists major holidays. It's a great way to get a

tactile overview of each month. We have carried our spiral-bound, large

print appointment calendar with inside pockets for many years. Each month

is displayed on two facing 8-1/2 by 11 inch pages and features two-inch

blocks for each day of the month. The months are tabbed and include a

section for monthly notes as well as a three-month calendar overview. More

recently we have started selling the Easy2See Large Print Planner, an

organizer designed with low vision professionals in mind. The spiral bound

planner with plastic-coated covers, measuring 8-1/2 by 11 inches, features

a page for each month as well as two-page weekly views from the end of

December of the previous year through the beginning of January of the

following year. Major holidays are listed on both the monthly and weekly

views. The weekly pages have individual unlined writing areas measuring 3-

1/4 by 8 inches, and the font on these pages is at least forty point. Dark

boarders on all the pages make it easier to see the writing area.

      For more information about the products and literature available from

the Independence Market or to request a catalog in Braille or in print

visit us online at https://nfb.org/independence-market. You may also

contact us using email at independencemarket at nfb.org or by phone at (410)

659-9314, extension 2216, Monday through Friday from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Eastern Time. Our staff will be glad to assist.

                                 ----------

[PHOTO CAPTION: Anna Kresmer]

                          Origins of the NFB Pledge

                               by Anna Kresmer

 

>From the Editor: Anna Kresmer is one of the most valuable resources we have

in the Jacobus tenBroek Library. She understands our history, embraces our

philosophy, and can answer almost any question asked of her. She can offer

her opinion and then back it up with one or more documents. After almost a

decade at her work, she was surprised when she had what appeared to be a

simple question that sent her back to the stacks to answer. Here is what

she says:

 

      After nine years working with the archives of the National Federation

of the Blind, it is not often these days that a reference question about

Federation history truly stumps me. But this is exactly what happened

recently. I received a request from a member in our Massachusetts affiliate

which asked how the pledge that Federationists recite at every chapter

meeting, state convention, and national convention was originally created.

Like the member, I could not find any reference to the adoption of the

pledge online in our literature or publications, including our recent

seventy-fifth anniversary history book. However, when I still could not

find reference to the pledge in both the Jacobus tenBroek Collection and

the NFB Institutional Records, I knew it was time to consult with a real

expert on the subject of NFB history. I speak, of course, of none other

than Dr. Marc Maurer. Needless to say, he put me on the right path

immediately.

      The pledge that we all know and use today came about during the 1974

NFB National Convention in Chicago. Dr. Kenneth Jernigan first spoke about

the idea of a formal pledge to show one's support for the organization

during his Presidential Report. In those days, the report was delivered in

a more off-the-cuff manner using only notes, but thankfully it was

transcribed and later printed in full in the September 1974 Braille

Monitor. Here is how Dr. Jernigan addressed the Convention:

 

            Ever since 1971, we've been on a sharply ascending curve

      organizationally-in power, in prestige, and, I think, in

      responsibility. We must exercise with care the very considerable power

      inherent in an organization as large and as broadly representative as

      we are. We must also, however, recognize that there are dangers any

      time a group makes as many waves as we have; we can expect to be

      subjects of vicious counter-attacks. Now, I think that it is in that

      context that we must view our situation. During the American

      Revolution, you know, the leaders said: "We pledge our lives, our

      fortunes, and our sacred honor." Well, in retrospect that sounds like

     rhetoric. But think about it; it wasn't just rhetoric. It meant what

      it said... If you take us as a group, blind people in this country, we

      have pledged our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor-because

      although they are not going to come out and kill us in the usual sense

      of that word, life is going to be a different kind of life, and for

      some blind persons, not really worth the living if this movement does

      not succeed. And furthermore, [applause] as to fortune, although some

      of us as individuals may do well financially, the blind as a class can

      expect very little except the same old custody and care, shelter and

      pity, and contempt which we have always received if we don't succeed

      in this movement. And as to our honors, already there are people who

      try to make us appear to be less than human by what they've said and

      done and how they felt... it is my duty not to hesitate, not to count

      the cost personally, it is my duty to lead where I ought to lead,

      stand out on the cutting edge and be willing to take the risk and not

      count what it may do to me as a person, even if it costs me my job, if

      it costs my reputation, costs whatever money I have- whatever it

      costs, it is for me to be prepared to give it. Otherwise I am not fit

      to lead the movement. But, it is up to you as members to do all you

      can to make that job successful. It is up to you as members of this

      movement to be willing to give as much as you can in the way of your

      time, your effort, your money, your dedication, and your commitment.

      If you are not willing to do that, you are not fit to be members of

      the movement. [Applause] In other words, those who believe that the

      primary purpose of this movement is a nice little game, or a social

      tete-a-tete, would do better to go elsewhere; they will find it more

      fun. But those of us who intend to see this thing through and to make

      lives better for blind people in this country and to improve our own

      status in the world will stay to the end and we will prevail.

 

 

      That year Dr. Jernigan also hosted a special presidential reception

during the convention with a receiving line that, according to the Braille

Monitor, "included not only President and Mrs. Kenneth Jernigan, but all

present, incoming, and outgoing officers and their respective spouses of

the whole board of directors; NFB staff members; and the top officers of

the Illinois Federation of the Blind." Each member who walked through that

receiving line received an official NFB membership card, which, when

signed, certified that that person was a member in good standing of the

National Federation of the Blind. On the back of these membership cards

were the words, printed for the first time, which every Federationist today

knows:

       I pledge to participate actively in the efforts of the National

Federation of the Blind to achieve equality, opportunity, and security for

the blind; to support the policies and programs of the Federation; and to

abide by its constitution.

                                 ----------

                            From the Mail Basket

                               by Gary Wunder

 

      We all know that being a chapter or an affiliate president means more

than presiding at meetings. Often it means setting the pace by showing

through example one's commitment to the cause and the ambition to get

things done. But what happens when activity in one area leads to the

appearance of inactivity in another and when those closest to us think we

aren't setting the right example? A discussion of this type came up

recently on our chapter president's list, and some of the concerns and

observations seemed appropriate to address here. Names and locations have

been changed so that the discussion is more about concepts than

individuals. Let's see what we can learn together:

 

Dear Colleagues,

 

      I am seeking advice. I feel like my chapter presidents and many of my

affiliate members are constantly seeing all the things that I do not do and

not seeing the things that I actually get done. My local chapter president

is upset with me because I missed the June and July chapter meetings.

During the July meeting I was up in Buffalo preparing for our BELL Academy

and attending the Northern Lakes chapter meeting, and during the June

meeting, I was attending a family event for blind children put on by

another foundation here in Kansas. I am being criticized for not supporting

or showing up when the truth is that what I am doing is giving my time

freely to the Federation. It just comes as a shock with this last wave of

criticisms-being told that I am micromanaging by telling the chapter

presidents to play the Presidential Release during their meetings. Our

student division is at a halt with all of the leaders resigning from that

division. I am just tired. How do you all keep on continuing on when you

feel like all the work that you do is not noticed or appreciated? How do

you not let the criticisms get to you? I love this organization and am

willing to serve when and where I am needed. However, sometimes it is just

draining to feel alone.

 

      Thank you for reading, and thank you for any advice that you might be

able to share.

 

Sincerely yours,

 

Autumn

 

      One response was offered by Anil Lewis, the executive director of the

NFB Jernigan Institute:

 

Dear Autumn:

      Ah yes. This brings back memories. The joy of being an affiliate

president.

      One of the ways that I attempted to address this issue is to prepare

a monthly memo to all chapter presidents (I would also copy the chapter

board members) to let them know what I was doing and to guide them with

suggestions on things they could be doing as well. The memo let everyone

know that I was busy doing things we can all take pride in and set an

expectation that they should not be criticizing but working as well. You

could strengthen this by also inviting the chapter presidents to submit

items for the memo as well. It would be more difficult for them to complain

that you are not doing anything if they are not equally as active. Of

course, this is an additional administrative burden for you, but the

benefit outweighs the extra work.

 

Anil

 

      Scott LaBarre, a veteran president in Colorado offered these

observations:

 

      Autumn, you have been getting some great advice. One thing that I

would add is that we follow a practice of inviting all chapter/division

presidents to every board meeting whether they participate on the phone or

in person. I appoint them to committees and keep them very engaged and

involved. Other than having an official vote, they really are acting like

board members. You should also not forget the social aspect for building

camaraderie. For example, just this past Saturday, we held an in-person

NFBCO Board Meeting which several chapter/division presidents attended.

Afterwards, we shared some drinks and snacks and hung out for a while. All

in all, it was a great afternoon.

 

Warmly,

 

Scott

 

      I took my turn at offering some advice as well:

 

Dear Autumn:

 

      One of the struggles of any Federation leader is to figure out how

much time to use in one's life for Federation work and how much time to

live out the goals of the Federation. If one of my goals is to be an

integrated member of my community, I can't spend all of my time at a

writing desk putting together a magazine. I can't spend all of my time

attending chapter and board meetings with the message that all of us should

be out in the community if my example does not show that I too am a part of

it. I can't hope to lead the Federation band without picking up an

instrument, but there can be no Federation band if I am the only instrument

playing.

      You have to do enough work in the Federation that you deserve the

elected position you have campaigned for, but you have to work at a pace

that will let you run a marathon and not leave our ranks because you

thought you were continually required to run a sprint. Let your heart be

your guide, but don't leave it exposed. It is a good heart; take care of it

for all of us. You too have the right to live the life you want, and I

thank you for showing us through example how that is done.

 

Gary

 

      A real pearl was offered by Immediate Past President Maurer who said:

 

Dear Autumn:

      You are not alone. I am a buddy of yours. Now, we don't talk very

often, but that doesn't mean I'm not a buddy of yours.

      Being criticized is a badge of honor when the right people are doing

it. Sometimes if your friends do it, this can be painful. However, when you

carry around the notion (as I do) that you know what you want to get of

this organization, things get a lot easier. I know that I want certain

things. I want the subminimum wage to go away. I want employment for the

blind to become practical at many different levels. I want technology to be

accessible and reasonably simple to use. I want educational opportunities

for the blind to exist at every level. I want blind people to be welcomed

into society as valuable members of the community. I can't get these things

without help. If I thought I could get them without help, I would do it.

However, I know I can't. Consequently, I get a bunch of friends about me

and we make plans together to change the nature of the world in which we

live. For example, I need friends like you. What does this mean? Don't give

up on me. I will not give up on you. Don't worry that I'm perfect because

I'm not. I make lots of mistakes. You can criticize them if you want to.

When you're done with the criticism, let's make a plan to change the world.

If you plan with me, I will listen a lot harder to your criticisms.

Affectionately,

Marc Maurer

                                 ----------

 

[PHOTO CAPTION: David Andrews]

                          There's a List for That!

                              by David Andrews

 

      This month we will continue our monthly column exploring Internet

Mailing Lists with Ohio-related offerings. The Buckeye State has a good set

of lists that offers its members a wide variety of announcements,

information, advice, and support.

      The main list for Ohioans is the Ohio Talk list. You can subscribe to

the list by going to

http://www.nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/ohio-talk_nfbnet.org or you can also

subscribe by sending an email to ohio-talk-request at nfbnet.org and put the

word "subscribe" on the subject line by itself. The list contains both

announcements and discussions of interest to members of the NFB of Ohio and

their friends.

      A number of local chapters have their own lists. Below are the list

name and a brief description of each. To subscribe, substitute the list

name in the command above for the ohio-talk phrase.

 

CapChapOhio-Capital Chapter list, (Columbus)

Cinci-NFB-Cincinnati Chapter list

NFBMV-NFB of Ohio, Greater Miami Valley Chapter list

 

      In addition, quite a few of the state divisions in Ohio have their

own lists. Below are the list name and a brief description of each. To

subscribe, substitute the list name in the command above for the ohio-talk

string originally cited.

 

A1C-Diabetes Action Network of Ohio

OABM-Talk-Ohio Association of Blind Merchants list

OABS-Ohio Association of Blind Students list

OADB-Ohio Association of the Deaf-Blind list

OAGDU-Ohio Association of Guide Dog Users list

Ohio-NAPUB-Ohio division, National Association to Promote the Use of

Braille

 

      Next month we will tell you about student lists. Stay tuned since

there are a bunch of them! As always, you can find all NFBNET.ORG-related

lists at http://www.nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/.

                                 ----------

[PHOTO CAPTION: Jacobus tenBroek speaking at the podium]

                             Cross of Blindness

   An address delivered by Professor Jacobus tenBroek, President, National

  Federation of the Blind, at the banquet of the annual convention, held in

                          New Orleans, July 6, 1957

 

To hear this speech in his own voice go to

https://nfb.org/images/nfb/audio/banqspeech/cross_of_blindness.mp3

 

>From the Editor: While serving as the national representative at the

Arizona convention, I was pleased to participate in a philosophy session.

The format was different from anything I've encountered before. A clip from

an important event at which one of our leaders was speaking was played, a

panel was to address what had been said, and then the audience was asked to

chime in with questions, differing views, or their own observations which

no one had mentioned.

      When we got to the topic of civil rights and then the speech about

the day after civil rights, one member asked if we had really reached the

day beyond, and another admitted that some days she fears that all of the

educating she has tried to do throughout her life has been for nothing; the

symptoms may be different, but the illness, the basic problem, remains the

same. When it was my turn to respond, I said that I agreed with her. I told

her and the group that I naively started by believing that being a member

of the Federation would mean being so successful that I would work myself

out of a job-not single-handedly but certainly my talented colleagues would

figure it out. The problem is that too many fairytales end with "happily

ever after," and too many John Wayne movies end in victory, the hero's

reputation safely secured for eternity. But real life isn't like that: real

life is taking a step up the hill to find that the next step, while giving

a different view, still requires the same energy as the step before.

      For this reason we are running a speech by Dr. tenBroek so that it

can be seen in the context of the challenges we face today. Are we still

confronted with the issues Dr. tenBroek relates? Not often. Are we still

confronted by the root of those problems, a basic misunderstanding about

blind people that is painted in today's colors as we face today's issues?

Yes. Here is Dr. tenBroek's speech. As you read it, think about how far we

have come, and consider too how far we have to go. Finally, recommit

yourself to helping all of us figure out how to get to the equality we

seek, the vision of which has driven our organization since its beginnings:

 

      In the short seventeen years since our founding of the National

Federation of the Blind, we have grown from a handful of men and women

scattered over seven states to a federation of forty-three state

affiliates. The first convention of the NFB in 1940 was attended by twelve

or fifteen persons-our convention last year had a registration of seven

hundred and five from every corner of the Union.

      That is rapid organizational growth by any yardstick. Who are these

people of the National Federation of the Blind? What is the purpose that

has led them to self-organization in such numbers and unites them now with

such apparent dedication and enthusiasm?

      It is not enough, I think, to answer that the members of the NFB are

drawn together by their common interest in the welfare of the blind; for

many of the sighted share that too. Nor is it sufficient to say that we are

united only because we are blind; many who are affiliated with agencies for

the blind have that characteristic also. It is fundamental to the

uniqueness of our group that we are the only nationwide organization for

the blind which is also of the blind. The composition of the NFB, indeed,

is living testimony to the fact-unfortunately not yet accepted by society

as a whole-that the blind are capable of self-organization: which is to

say, of leading themselves, of directing their own destiny.

      Yet this is still only half the truth, only a part of the

characteristic which defines our Federation and provides its reason for

being. Our real distinction from other organizations in the field of blind

welfare lies in the social precept and personal conviction which are the

motive source of our activity and the wellspring of our faith. The belief

that we who are blind are normal human beings sets us sharply apart from

other groups designed to aid the blind. We have all the typical and

ordinary range of talents and techniques, attitudes and aspirations. Our

underlying assumption is not-as it is with some other groups-the intrinsic

helplessness and everlasting dependency of those who happen to lack sight,

but rather their innate capacity to nullify and overrule this disability-to

find their place in the community with the same degree of success and

failure to be found among the general population.

      Perhaps I can best document this thesis of the normality of the blind

with a random sample of the occupations represented at our national

convention a year ago in San Francisco. Among the blind delegates in

attendance, there were three blind physicists engaged in experimental work

for the United States government. There was one blind chemist also doing

experimental work for the national government. There were two university

instructors of the rank of full professor, a number of other college

instructors of various ranks, and several blind teachers of sighted

students in primary and secondary grades in the public schools. There were

thirteen lawyers, most in private practice, two employed as attorneys by

the United States government, one serving as the chairman of a state public

service commission, one serving as a clerk to a state chief justice. There

were three chiropractors, one osteopath, ten secretaries, seventeen factory

workers, one shoemaker, one cab dispatcher, one bookmender, one appliance

repairman, four telephone switchboard operators, numerous businessmen in

various businesses, five musicians, thirty students, many directors and

workers in programs for the blind, and sixty-one housewives.

      At any other convention there would be nothing at all remarkable

about this broad cross-section of achievement and ability; it is exactly

what you would expect to find at a gathering of the American Legion or the

Exalted Order of Elks, or at a town meeting in your community. Anywhere

else, that is, but at a convention of the blind. It never ceases to

surprise the public that a blind man may be able to hold his own in

business, operate a farm successfully, argue a brief in a court of law,

teach a class of sighted students, or conduct experiments in a chemistry

lab. It comes as a shock to the average person to discover that the blind

not only can but do perform as well as the next man in all the normal and

varied callings of the community.

      But this shock of recognition, on the part of many people, too easily

gives way to a mood of satisfaction and an attitude of complacency. After

all, if the blind are so capable, so successful, and so independent, what

is all the fuss about? Where is the need for all this organization and

militant activity? Why can't the blind let well enough alone?

      These are reasonable questions, surely, and deserve a reasoned

answer. I believe that the answer may best be given by reciting a list of

sixteen specific events which have taken place recently in various parts of

the country. The events are:

      1. A blind man (incidentally a distinguished educator and citizen of

his community) was denied a room in a well-known YMCA in New York City-not

on the ground that his appearance betokened inability to pay, which it did

not; not on the ground that he had an unsavory reputation, which he did

not; not on the ground that his behavior was or was likely to be

disorderly, which it was not-but on the ground that he was blind.

      2. A blind man was rejected as a donor by the blood bank in his city-

not on the ground that his blood was not red; not on the ground that his

blood was watery, defective in corpuscles, or diseased; not on the ground

that he would be physically harmed by the loss of the blood-but on the

ground that he was blind.

      3. A blind man (in this case a successful lawyer with an established

reputation in his community) was denied the rental of a safety-deposit box

by his bank-not on the ground that he was a well-known bank robber; not on

the ground that he had nothing to put in it; not on the ground that he

couldn't pay the rental price-but on the ground that he was blind.

      4. A blind man was rejected for jury duty in a California city-not on

the ground of mental incompetence; not on the ground of moral

irresponsibility; not on the ground that he would not weigh the evidence

impartially and come to a just verdict-but on the ground that he was blind.

      5. A blind college student majoring in education was denied

permission to perform practice teaching by a state university-not on the

ground that her academic record was poor; not on the ground that she had

not satisfied the prerequisites; not on the ground that she lacked the

educational or personal qualifications--but on the ground that she was

blind.

      6. A blind applicant for public employment was denied consideration

by a state civil service commission-not on the ground that he lacked the

education or experience specifications; not on the ground that he was not

of good moral character; not on the ground that he lacked the residence or

citizenship requirements-but on the ground that he was blind.

      7. A blind woman was refused a plane ticket by an airline-not on the

ground that she couldn't pay for her ticket; not on the ground that her

heart was weak and couldn't stand the excitement; not on the ground that

she was a carrier of contagion-but on the ground that she was blind.

      8. A blind machinist was declared ineligible for a position he had

already held for five years. This declaration was the result of a routine

medical examination. It came on the heels of his complete clearance and

reinstatement on the job following a similar medical finding the year

before. These determinations were made-not on the ground of new medical

evidence showing that he was blind, for that was known all along; not on

the ground that he could not do the job which he had successfully performed

for five years with high ratings; not on the ground of any factor related

to his employment-they were made on the ground that he was blind.

      9. A blind high school student who was a duly qualified candidate for

student body president was removed from the list of candidates by authority

of the principal and faculty of the school-not on the ground that he was an

outside infiltrator from some other school; not on the ground that he was

on probation; not on the ground that he was not loyal to the principles of

the United States Constitution-but on the ground that he was blind.

      10. Traveler's Insurance Company, in its standard policy issued to

cover trips on railroads, expressly exempts the blind from coverage-not on

the ground that there is statistical or actuarial evidence that blind

travelers are more prone to accident than sighted travelers are; not on the

ground that suitcases or fellow passengers fall on them more often; not on

the ground that trains carrying blind passengers are more likely to be

wrecked unless it is the engineer who is blind-but solely on the ground of

blindness. Many, if not most, other insurance companies selling other forms

of insurance either will not cover the blind or increase the premium.

      11. A blind man, who had been a successful justice court and police

court judge in his community for eleven years, ran for the position of

superior court judge in the general election of 1956. During the campaign

his opponents did not argue that he was ignorant of the law and therefore

incompetent; or that he had been guilty of bilking widows and orphans; or

that he lacked the quality of mercy. Almost the only argument that they

used against him was that he was blind. The voters, however, elected him

handily. At the next session of the state legislature a bill was introduced

disqualifying blind persons as judges. The organized blind of the state

were able to modify this bill but not to defeat it.

      12. More than sixty blind men and women-among them doctors, teachers,

businessmen, and members of various professions-were recently ordered by

the building and safety authority of a large city to move out of their

hotel-type living quarters. This was not on the ground that they were

pyromaniacs and likely to start fires; not on the ground that they were

delinquent in their rent; not on the ground that they disturbed their

neighbors with riotous living-but on the ground that as blind people they

were subject to the code provisions regarding the "bed-ridden, ambulatory,

and helpless," that anyone who is legally blind must live in an institution-

type building-with all the rooms on the ground floor, with no stairs at the

end of halls, with hard, fireproof furniture, with chairs and smoking-

stands lined up along the wall "so they won't fall over them."

      13. The education code of one of our states provides that deaf, dumb,

and blind children may be sent at state expense to a school for the deaf,

dumb, or blind, if they possess the following qualifications: (1) they are

free from offensive or contagious diseases; (2) they have no parent,

relative, guardian, or nearest friend able to pay for their education; (3)

that by reason of deafness, dumbness, or blindness, they are disqualified

from being taught by the ordinary process of instruction or education.

      14. In a recent opinion the supreme court of one of the states held

that a blind person who sought compensation for an injury due to an

accident which he claimed arose out of and in the course of his employment

by the state board of industries for the blind, was a ward of the state and

therefore not entitled to compensation. The conception that blind shop

workers are wards of the state was only overcome in another state by a

recent legislative enactment.

      15. A blind person, duly convicted of a felony and sentenced to a

state penitentiary, was denied parole when he became eligible therefore-not

on the ground that he had not served the required time; not on the ground

that his prison behavior had been bad; not on the ground that he had not

been rehabilitated-but on the ground that he was blind.

      16. A blind man who sat down at a gambling table in Reno, where such

things are legal, was denied an opportunity to play-not on the ground that

he didn't know the rules of the game; not on the ground that he might cheat

the dealer or the other players; not on the ground that he didn't have any

money to lose-but on the ground that he was blind.

      These last two cases show that the blind are normal in every respect.

      What emerges from this set of events is the age-old stereotype of

blindness as witlessness and helplessness. By virtue of this pervasive

impression, a blind man is held to be incapable of weighing the evidence

presented at a trial or performing the duties of a teacher. He cannot take

care of himself in a room of his own and is not to be trusted on a plane. A

sightless person would not know what he has put into or removed from a

safety deposit box; and he has no right to employment in the public

service. He must not even be permitted to continue on a job he has

performed successfully for years. Even his blood cannot be given

voluntarily for the common cause.

      Contrast these two lists-the one of the occupations represented at

the NFB convention; the other of the discriminatory activities-the first is

a list of accomplishments of what the blind have done and therefore can do;

the second is a list of prohibitions of what the blind are thought

incompetent to do and therefore are debarred from attempting. The first

list refers to the physical disability of blindness. It demonstrates in

graphic fashion how slight a disadvantage is the mere loss of sight to the

mental capacity and vocational talent of the individual. The second list

refers not to the disability but to the handicap which is imposed upon the

blind by others. The origin of the disability is plainly inside the blind

person. The origin and responsibility for the handicap are just as plainly

outside him-in the attitudes and preconceptions of the community.

      Let me be very clear about this. I have no wish to minimize the

character and extent of blindness as a disability. It is for all of us a

constant nuisance and a serious inconvenience. To overcome it requires

effort and patience and initiative and guts. It is not compensated for,

despite the fairy tales to the contrary, by the spontaneous emergence of a

miraculous "sixth sense" or any other magical powers. It means nothing more

or less than the loss of one of the five senses and a corresponding greater

reliance upon the four that remain-as well as upon the brain, the heart,

and the spirit.

      It may be said that the discriminatory acts which I have cited, and

others like them which are occurring all the time, simply do not reflect

informed thought. They are occasional happenings, unpremeditated,

irrational, or accidental. Surely no one would justify them; no one would

say that they represent an accurate appraisal of the blind and of

blindness.

      Well, let us see. Let us look at some pronouncements of presumably

thoughtful and informed persons writing about the blind-agency heads,

educators, administrators, social workers, historians, psychologists, and

public officials. What do they have to say about the potentialities of the

blind in terms of intellectual capacity, vocational talent, and

psychological condition? What do they report concerning the prospects for

social integration on the basis of normality and economic advancement on

the basis of talent?

      First, an educator. Here are the words of a prominent authority on

the education of the blind, himself for thirty years a superintendent of a

school for the blind. "It is wrong to start with the school," this

authority writes, "and to teach there a number of occupations that the

blind can do, but to teach them out of relation to their practical and

relative values. This is equivalent to attempting to create trades for the

blind and then more or less angrily to demand that the world recognize the

work and buy the product, whether useful or useless." More than this, it is

necessary to recognize the unfitness of the blind "as a class" for any sort

of competition and therefore to afford them not only protection but

monopoly wherever possible. Declaring that "it must be unqualifiedly

conceded that there is little in an industrial way that a blind person can

do at all that cannot be done better and more expeditiously by people with

sight," this expert considers that there are only two ways out: one being

the extension of concessions and monopolies, and the other the designation

of certain "preferred" occupations for the blind-"leaving the battle of

wits only to those select few that may be considered, and determined to be,

specially fit."

      The conclusion that employment possibilities for the blind are

confined, with only negligible exceptions, to the purview of sheltered

workshops is contained in this set of "facts" about the blind which the

same authority asserts are "generally conceded by those who have given the

subject much thought: that the handcrafts in which the blind can do first-

class work are very limited in number, with basketry, weaving, knitting,

broom- and brush-making, and chair caning as the most promising and most

thoroughly tried out...that in these crafts the blind cannot enter into

direct competition with the seeing either in the quality of product or the

amount turned out in a given time...that the crafts pursued by the blind

may best be carried on in special workshops under the charge of government

officials or trained officers of certain benevolent associations...that

among the 'higher' callings piano-tuning and massage are, under favoring

conditions such as prevail for masseurs in Japan, the fields offering the

greatest chance of success, while the learned professions, including

teaching, are on the whole only for those of very superior talent and, more

particularly, very superior courage and determination to win at all costs."

      Second, an historian. The basis for this assessment, and its

justification, have been presented in blunt and explicit language by a well-

known historian of blindness and the blind in the United States. He says,

"[T]here exists in the community a body of men who, by reason of a physical

defect, namely, the loss of sight, are disqualified from engaging in the

regular pursuits of men and who are thus largely rendered incapable of

providing for themselves independently." They are to be regarded as a

"disabled and infirm fraction of the people" or, more specifically, as

"sighted men in a dark room." "Rather than let them drift into absolute

dependence and become a distinct burden, society is to lend an appropriate

helping hand" through the creation of sheltered, publicly subsidized

employment.

      Third, administrators. That this pessimistic appraisal of the range

of talent among the blind has not been limited to the schoolmen and

historians may be shown by two succinct statements from wartime pamphlets

produced by the Civil Service Commission in an effort to broaden employment

opportunities for the physically disabled. "The blind," it was found, "are

especially proficient in manual occupations requiring a delicate sense of

touch. They are well suited to jobs which are repetitious in nature."

Again: "The placement of persons who are blind presents various special

problems. Small groups of positions in sheltered environment, involving

repetitive work, were surveyed in government establishments and were found

to have placement potentialities for the blind." Such findings as these

were doubtless at the base of a remark of a certain public official who

wrote that: "Helping the blind has its strong appeal to the sensibilities

of everyone; on the other hand, we should avoid making the public service

an eleemosynary institution."

      Fourth, a blind agency head. The executive director of one of the

largest private agencies for the blind justifies the failure of the

philanthropic groups in these blunt terms: "The fact that so few workers or

organizations are doing anything appreciable to [improve the condition of

the blind] cannot be explained entirely on the grounds that they are not in

the vanguard of social thinking. It is rather because they are realistic

enough to recognize that the rank and file of blind persons have neither

the exceptional urge for independence nor the personal qualifications

necessary to satisfactory adjustment in the sighted world.... It is very

difficult and exceptional for a blind person to be as productive as a

sighted person."

      Fifth, a psychologist. Even plainer language-as well as more

impressive jargon-has been used by another authority who is widely

considered the preeminent expert in the field of blind psychology. "Until

recently," he writes, "the blind and those interested in them have insisted

that society revise and modify its attitude toward this specific group.

Obviously, for many reasons, this is an impossibility, and effort spent on

such a program is as futile as spitting into the wind.... It is extremely

doubtful whether the degree of emotional maturity and social adaptability

of the blind would long support and sustain any social change of attitude

if it were possible to achieve it." If this is not plain enough, the writer

continues: "A further confusion of attitude is found in educators and

workers for the blind who try to propagandize society with the rational

concept that the blind are normal individuals without vision. This

desperate whistling in the dark does more damage than good. The blind

perceive it as a hypocritical distortion of actual facts.... It is dodging

the issue to place the responsibility on the unbelieving and nonreceptive

popular attitudes.... The only true answer lies in the unfortunate

circumstance that the blind share with other neurotics-the nonaggressive

personality and the inability to participate fully in society.... There are

two general directions for attacking such a problem, either to adjust the

individual to his environment, or to rearrange the environment so that it

ceases to be a difficulty to the individual. It is quite obvious that the

latter program is not only inadvisable but also impossible. However, it is

the attack that nearly every frustrated, maladjusted person futilely

attempts."

      Sixth, a social worker. This sweeping negation of all attempts to

modify the prejudicial attitudes of society toward the blind, however

eccentric and extreme it may sound, finds strong support in the field of

social casework. In areas where "such ideas remain steadfast," reads a

typical report, "it is the function of the social caseworker to assist the

blind person to work within these preconceived ideas. Since handicapped

persons are a minority group in society, there is greater possibility of

bringing about a change in an individual within a stated length of time

than there is in reversing accepted concepts within the culture." The "well-

adjusted blind person," it is argued, should be able to get along in this

restrictive social setting, and the caseworker must concentrate on his

personal adjustment since it is easier to reform the client than to reform

society.

      Seventh, a blind philanthropist. Let me close my list of testimonials

with one final citation. I think it must already be sufficiently obvious

that, granting the assumptions contained in all these statements, the blind

have no business organizing themselves apart from sighted supervision; that

a social movement of the blind and by the blind is doomed to futility,

frustration, and failure. But just in case the point is not clear enough, I

offer the considered opinion of a well-known figure in the history of blind

philanthropy: "It cannot, then, be through the all-blind society that the

blind person finds adequate opportunity for the exercise of his leadership.

The wise leader will know that the best interests of each blind person lie

within the keeping of the nine hundred and ninety-nine sighted people who,

with himself, make up each one thousand of any average population. He will

know, further, that if he wishes to promote the interests of the blind, he

must become a leader of the sighted upon whose understanding and patronage

the fulfillment of these interests depends.... There is...no advantage

accruing from membership in an all-blind organization which might not be

acquired in greater measure through membership in a society of sighted

people."

      What is the substance of all these damning commentaries? What are the

common assumptions which underlie the attitudes of the leaders of blind

philanthropy and the authorities on blind welfare? The fundamental concepts

can, I think, be simply stated. First, the blind are by virtue of their

defect emotionally immature if not psychologically abnormal; they are

mentally inferior and narrowly circumscribed in the range of their ability-

and therefore inevitably doomed to vocational monotony, economic

dependence, and social isolation. Second, even if their capabilities were

different, they are necessarily bound to the fixed status and subordinate

role ordained by society, whose attitudes toward them are permanent and

unalterable. Third, they must place their faith and trust, not in

themselves and in their own organizations, but in the sighted public and

most particularly in those who have appointed themselves the protectors and

custodians of the blind.

      A few simple observations are in order. First, as to the immutability

of social attitudes and discriminatory actions towards the blind, we know

from intimate experience that the sighted public wishes well for the blind

and that its misconceptions are rather the result of innocence and

superstition than of deliberate cruelty and malice aforethought. There was

a time, in the days of Rome, when blind infants were thrown to the wolves

or sold into slavery. That time is no more. There was a time, in the Middle

Ages, when blind beggars were the butts of amusement at country fairs,

decked out in paper spectacles and donkeys' ears. That time is no more.

There was a time, which still exists to a surprising extent, when the

parents of a blind child regarded his disability as a divine judgment upon

their own sins. But that time is now beginning to disappear, at least in

the civilized world.

      The blind are no longer greeted by society with open hostility and

frantic avoidance but with compassion and sympathy. It is true that an open

heart is no guarantee of an open mind. It is true that good intentions are

not enough. It is true that tolerance is a far cry from brotherhood and

that protection and trusteeship are not the synonyms of equality and

freedom. But the remarkable progress already made in the civilizing of

brute impulses and the humanizing of social attitudes towards the blind is

compelling evidence that there is nothing fixed or immutable about the

social status quo for the blind and that, if the blind themselves are

capable of independence and interdependence within society, society is

capable of welcoming them.

      Our own experience as individuals and as members of the National

Federation of the Blind gives support at short range to what long-range

history already makes plain. We have observed and experienced the gradual

breakdown of legal obstacles and prejudicial acts; we have participated in

the expansion of opportunities for the blind in virtually every phase of

social life and economic livelihood-in federal, state, and local civil

service; in teaching and other professions; in the addition of a

constructive element to public welfare. Let anyone who thinks social

attitudes cannot be changed read this statement contained in a recent

pamphlet of the Federal Civil Service Commission:

      Sometimes a mistaken notion is held that...the blind can do work only

where keenness of vision is not important in the job. The truth appears to

be that the blind can do work demanding different degrees of keenness of

vision on the part of the sighted. If there is any difference in job

proficiency related to a degree of keenness of vision required for the

sighted, it is this: the blind appear to work with greater proficiency at

jobs where the element is present to a noticeable extent in the sighted job

than where vision is only generally useful.

      Second, are the blind mentally inferior, emotionally adolescent, and

psychologically disturbed; or on the contrary, are they normal and capable

of social and economic integration? The evidence that they are the latter

can be drawn from many quarters: scientific, medical, historical, and

theoretical. But the evidence which is most persuasive is that which I have

already presented: it is the evidence displayed in the lives and

performance of such average and ordinary blind men and women as those who

attended our national convention last summer. It is the evidence of their

vocational accomplishments, their personal achievements, the plain

normality of their daily lives. To me their record is more than an

impressive demonstration: it is a clinching rebuttal.

      It would, of course, be a gross exaggeration to maintain that all

blind persons have surmounted their physical disability and conquered their

social handicap.

      It is not the education of the sighted only which is needed to

establish the right of the blind to equality and integration. Just as

necessary is the education of the blind themselves. For the process of

their rehabilitation is not ended with physical and vocational training; it

is complete only when they have driven the last vestige of the public

stereotype of the blind from their own minds. In this sense, and to this

extent only, is it true that the blind person must "adjust" to his handicap

and to society. His adjustment need not-indeed must not-mean his submission

to all prevailing social norms and values. His goal is not conformity but

autonomy: not acquiescence, but self-determination and self-control.

      From all of this it should be clear that it is a long way yet from

the blind alleys of dependency and segregation to the main thoroughfares of

personal independence and social integration which we have set as our goal.

And I believe it is equally plain that our progress toward that goal will

demand the most forceful and skillful application of all the means at our

command: that is, the means of education, persuasion, demonstration, and

legislation.

      We need the means of education to bring the public and the blind

themselves to a true recognition of the nature of blindness--to tear away

the fossil layers of mythology and prejudice. We need persuasion to induce

employers to try us out and convince society to take us in. We need

demonstration to prove our capacity and normality in every act of living

and of making a living. And finally we need legislation to reform the

statute books and obliterate the legal barriers which stand in the way of

normal life and equal opportunity-replacing them with laws which accurately

reflect the accumulated knowledge of modern science and the ethics of

democratic society.

      This final platform in our program of equality-the platform of

adequate legislation-is in many respects the most crucial and pressing of

all. For until the blind are guaranteed freedom of opportunity and endeavor

within the law, there can be little demonstration of their ability and

little prospect of persuasion. What is needed is nothing less than a new

spirit of the laws, which will uproot the discriminatory clauses and

prejudicial assumptions that presently hinder the efforts of the blind

toward self-advancement and self-support. The new philosophy requires that

programs for the blind be founded upon the social conception of their

normality and the social purpose of their reintegration into the community,

with aids and services adjusted to these conceptions.

      These then are the objectives of the self-organized blind, goals

freely chosen for them by themselves. And this is the true significance of

an organization of the blind, by the blind, for the blind. For the blind

the age of charity, like that of chivalry, is dead; but this is not to say

that there is no place for either of these virtues. In order to achieve the

equality that is their right, in order to gain the opportunity that is

their due, and in order to attain the position of full membership in the

community that is their goal, the blind have continuing need for the

understanding and sympathy and liberality of their sighted neighbors and

fellow citizens. But their overriding need is first of all for recognition-

recognition of themselves as normal and of their purposes as legitimate.

The greatest hope of the blind is that they may be seen as they are, not as

they have been portrayed; and since they are neither wards nor children,

their hope is to be not only seen but also heard-in their own accents and

for whatever their cause may be worth.

                                 ----------

              Settlement That May Benefit Some Monitor Readers

 

            NOTICE OF PROPOSED SETTLEMENT OF CLASS ACTION LAWSUIT

 

      ATTENTION: ALL LEGALLY BLIND INDIVIDUALS WHO ATTEMPTED BUT WERE

UNABLE TO ACCESS OR WHO WERE DETERRED FROM ACCESSING PRODUCTS OR SERVICES

AVAILABLE AT COINSTAR KIOSKS IN ALL 50 STATES AND THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

STARTING ON FEBRUARY 8, 2014, THROUGH JULY 14, 2017, EXCEPT IN CALIFORNIA

WHERE THE STARTING DATE IS FEBRUARY 8, 2013.

 

      This notice is to inform you about the proposed settlement that would

resolve two class action lawsuits: Nguyen v. Outerwall Inc., No. 5:16-cv-

00611-LS (E.D. Pa.) and Boyer v. Outerwall Inc., No. 2:17-cv-00853 (E.D.

Pa.). The lawsuit alleges that Coinstar, LLC (fka Outerwall Inc.) violated

federal law and California state law by offering services at self-service,

touchscreen Coinstar kiosks that the lawsuit alleges were not independently

useable by persons who are Legally Blind. Coinstar denies all liability in

the case. In the proposed settlement, Coinstar will complete modification

of one Coinstar Kiosk at each of its retail locations nationwide. The

modifications will include ensuring a functional and tactile keypad exists

on each modified Kiosk, the addition of a 3.5mm headphone jack, and the

addition of text-to-speech output via audio through the headphone jack.

Further information regarding the modifications is available at

www.coinstarkiosksettlement.com.

      If you used or attempted to use a Coinstar Kiosk in California at any

point between February 8, 2013, and July 14, 2017, you may be entitled to

payment of money as part of this settlement. This is because the California

law allegedly violated allows for monetary payments. Depending on the

number of individuals who submit a valid Claim Form, California Sub-Class

Members may be eligible for up to $4,000.00 in monetary relief under the

settlement. You may complete and submit a claim form on the settlement

website at www.coinstarkiosksettlement.com or by requesting a Claim Form

from Settlement Services Inc., the Claims Administrator, by phone, letter,

fax, or email at: Nguyen v. Outerwall Inc., Claims Administrator, P.O. Box

71,  Tallahassee, FL 32302-0071; Toll-Free: (855) 928-2272; Fax: (850) 385-

6008; Email: staff at settlementservicesinc.com. All claims submitted must be

received by December 1, 2017. Further information regarding the California

Sub-Class is available at www.coinstarkiosksettlement.com.

      You also have the right to object to the settlement. California Sub-

Class Members also have the right to opt-out of the damages portion of the

settlement only. If you do either, your documents submitted must be

received by December 1, 2017. The settlement website

www.coinstarkiosksettlement.com contains a more detailed notice with

procedures for opting-out of the damages portion of the settlement and to

objecting to the settlement, and information about other provisions of the

settlement, including attorneys' fees and costs.

      Any questions about the settlement, including requests for documents

in alternate accessible formats, should be directed to class counsel using

the contact information below:

 

Claims Administrator:

Nguyen v. Outerwall Inc.

Claims Administrator

P.O. Box 71

Tallahassee, FL 32302

Toll-Free: (855) 928-2272

Fax: (850) 385-6008

Email: staff at settlementservicesinc.com

 

Class Counsel:

Gerald D. Wells, III

Stephen E. Connolly

Connolly Wells & Gray, LLP

2200 Renaissance Boulevard, Suite 275

King of Prussia, PA 19406

Telephone: (610) 822-3700

Email: gwells at cwglaw.com

Email: sconnolly at cwglaw.com

 

Class Counsel:

Arkady "Eric" Rayz

Kalikhman & Rayz, LLC

1051 Country Line Road, Ste. A

Huntingdon Valley, PA 19006

Telephone: (215) 364-5030

Email: erayz at kalraylaw.com

                                 ----------

                                   Recipes

 

      The NFB Krafters Division is an active part of the NFB. It has a very

busy list (nfb-krafters-korner at nfbnet.org) and website

www.krafterskorner.org. The division holds a telephone conference chat most

Monday evenings and offers several classes each month by email and

telephone. Members do embroidery, knitting, crocheting, pottery, soap,

latch-hook, sewing, jewelry, and more. Recently, this group exchanged

recipes, and it seemed a good opportunity to share some with Monitor

readers. Most are for food items, but recipes here include some items that

are not for eating, as well.

 

                              Large Pasta Salad

                               by Bernice Bird

 

      This recipe is from Bernice, who lives in Rochester, New York. She

stays busy with her job, crafts, and family. She says she learned basic

cooking skills from a school for the blind, and her skills have evolved

over the years. She enjoys sharing her recipes and dishes with friends and

family.

 

Ingredients:

1 pound spiral, corkscrew, rotini, or other pasta

8 to 12 ounces sliced pepperoni

12 to 16 ounces shredded mozzarella cheese

1/2 each red, yellow, orange, and green sweet bell peppers

1/2 of a large seedless cucumber

8 ounces grape tomatoes

1 small bunch fresh broccoli

2 large carrots

1/2 Vidalia or 1 medium red onion

4 stalks celery

1 cup stuffed green or seeded black olives

1/2 cup each frozen corn and peas

 

Dressing:

1 cup extra virgin olive oil

1 cup red wine vinegar

1 cup balsamic vinegar

Juice from 1/2 lemon

2 tablespoons oregano

3 tablespoons parsley flakes

1 tablespoon rosemary

3 tablespoons basil

1 tablespoon chives

1 teaspoon black pepper

2 teaspoons salt

2 teaspoons garlic powder

2 teaspoons onion powder

1 teaspoon savory

4 garlic cloves, crushed

 

Method:

      Dressing: Make the day before. Add all ingredients together and shake

or stir vigorously. Refrigerate dressing overnight and mix well before

pouring over salad.

      Salad: Cook pasta in salted water with a little olive oil. Drain and

let cool while preparing all of the other ingredients. Dice all peppers,

onion, celery, and cucumber. Slice tomatoes in half. Peel carrots. After

all peel is off, keep using your vegetable peeler to make thin strips of

carrot. Cut broccoli florets into small pieces. Peel and dice cucumber.

Make a stack of the pepperoni slices. Cut the stack into quarters; repeat

until all pepperoni is cut into little wedges. Cut olives in half if

desired. You can also buy a jar of already sliced green olives. If using

them, drain. Mix all ingredients in a large bowl, and add enough dressing

to make the mixture wet with a little dressing standing. If you think you

will have leftovers or if you make it a day ahead, make extra dressing

because the macaroni absorbs the dressing. Of course, this only makes it

more flavorful.

      Notes: This makes a very large bowl of salad and could be cut down a

great deal. You can add any fresh or cooked vegetables to the salad you

want. You could add zucchini or yellow summer squash, but I don't happen to

like them. Mushrooms would be good also. Sweet pickle relish would give a

slightly sweet zing to the salad. You could substitute diced chicken for

the pepperoni. You could also use an Italian blend of cheeses instead of

mozzarella cheese. If you don't want to make your own dressing, you could

use your favorite bottled Italian dressing.

                                 ----------

                        Poppa Peanut's Bar-B-Q Sauce

                             by Tanya VanHouten

 

      Tanya VanHouten lives in Lonoke, Arkansas, and is a member of the At-

Large Chapter. She owns her own business and enjoys gardening, crafts, and

cooking. Her family has a lot of cookouts, and her dad taught her how to

make this sauce. You need to make this in a giant pot or maybe your

bathtub. You could halve the recipe if you don't want such a large amount.

You can also bottle it and give as gifts or make up the giant batch and

grill a whole cow.

 

Ingredients:

1 gallon Cattlemen's BBQ sauce

1 gallon ketchup

1/2 cup chili powder

1/2 cup A-1 sauce

1/2 cup balsamic vinegar

1/2 cup dried mustard dissolved in beer

1/2 cup prepared mustard

1-1/2 cups Splenda

1/4 cup cayenne pepper

1/4 cup black pepper

1-1/2 liters Dr. Pepper

1/2 cup lemon juice

 

      Method: Combine all ingredients well. This makes a large batch, so

save containers to store it.

                                 ----------

[PHOTO CAPTION: Courtney Smith]

                                 Grape Salad

                              by Courtney Smith

 

      Courtney Smith belongs to a chapter at large and is a Krafters Korner

board member. She lives in Iuka, Mississippi, with her husband Jason and

their fur baby Ranger. She enjoys cooking and crafting, with a primary

focus on loom knitting.

 

Ingredients:

8 ounces cream cheese, softened

1 cup sour cream

2 pounds red seedless grapes

2 pounds green seedless grapes

1/3 cup sugar

2 teaspoons vanilla extract

3 tablespoons brown sugar

3 tablespoons chopped pecans

 

      Method: Mix cream cheese, sour cream, sugar, and vanilla extract.

Fold in grapes.

Cover and refrigerate. Just before serving, sprinkle with brown sugar and

pecans.

                                 ----------

                                Fruit Compote

                              by Courtney Smith

 

Ingredients:

2 medium tart apples

1 teaspoon salt

12 ounces frozen or fresh cranberries

1/4 teaspoon allspice

1-1/4 cups sugar

1/4 teaspoon cinnamon

1 cup golden raisins

1 teaspoon orange peel

1/4 cup orange juice

15-1/4 ounces sliced peaches, in own juice

15-1/4 ounces apricot halves, in own juice

1 cup pecans (or other nuts)

 

      Method: Peel and slice apples. Combine first nine ingredients

(through orange juice) in large sauce pan. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat and

simmer uncovered ten minutes or until berries pop. Add peaches and

apricots. Stir in pecans, heat. Serve warm or cold.

      Notes: I have used whole cranberry sauce, and you don't have to wait

for the berries to pop. We also add one can of fruit cocktail to add more

fruit. Have leftover compote? Use it to make a cobbler!

 

                            Fruit Compote Cobbler

                              by Courtney Smith

 

Ingredients:

1 cup milk

1 cup flour

1 cup sugar

1 stick butter

2-3 cups fruit compote

 

      Method: Heat oven to 350 degrees. Melt butter in nine-by-thirteen-

inch pan. Mix together milk, flour, and sugar. Add to pan over butter. Do

not mix. Spoon fruit compote over milk mixture. Bake for one hour. Enjoy.

                                 ----------

                              Mom's Baked Beans

                             by Pearl Thurkettle

 

      Pearl is the mother of Joyce Kane, president of the NFB Krafter's

Division. Joyce has this to say about her mother and this recipe, "Mom is

ninety-nine years old and turns 100 in January 2018. She has been making

these baked beans for a long time. She still makes them for all our picnics

and events. Although I really don't cook much, I do love her beans."

 

Ingredients:

4 slices bacon

1/4 cup chopped onion

2 cans [16 oz. cans] Heinz vegetarian beans in tomato sauce

1/4 cup ketchup

3 tablespoons light brown sugar

1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce

dash of garlic powder

 

      Method: Sauti bacon until almost crisp; add onion, and continue to

sauti until onion is tender. Drain excess fat. Mix all ingredients in

baking dish. Bake uncovered in 375-degree oven for fifty to fifty-five

minutes. Recipe can be doubled for a large crowd or a hungry few.

                                 ----------

                          Apple Cinnamon Ornaments

                                by Terry Knox

 

      Terry Knox is a board member at Krafters Korner, and she's from

Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. She enjoys most all crafts but specializes in

designing miniatures. This craft is great to make for Christmas ornaments

but also useful for Valentine's Day and other holidays. This is a craft

project and not a food item. Please keep out of reach of small children, as

the smell is wonderful, and children want to place them in their mouths.

The glue in the ornaments makes them a non-food item.

 

Ingredients:

1 cup applesauce

1-1/2 cups or 6 ounces of cinnamon

1/3 cup of white glue like Elmer's or craft glue

Supplies:

large cutting board

cookie cutter of choice

drinking straw

rolling pin or other item to roll dough flat

bowl for mixing

ribbon, if using

 

      Method: Mix applesauce and cinnamon together to form a ball; use spoon

or your hands. Add in your glue as you form the ball. Place in the

refrigerator for at least thirty minutes. Sprinkle cutting board with some

extra cinnamon and roll out the mixture. If your mixture is too dry, add

more applesauce. If too wet, add more cinnamon and place in refrigerator

for about five more minutes. When mixing your ball, you can add scent of

lemon, vanilla, or mint to add to the smell. Roll out your mixture to one-

quarter inch thick, no less as mixture will tear. Cut out ornaments using

cookie cutters. Use straw to cut hole near the top; if making garland, cut

two holes, one each side. Remove from cutting board and place on wire rack.

Allow to dry for at least two days. While the ornaments are still damp you

can write on the wet mixture by using a pointed item to inscribe letters

(print or reverse Braille). You can also add things like glitter, beads,

stones, and other small items of your choice to stick in the mixture. A

suggestion: cut out ginger men shapes; when dry paint on eyes and buttons,

and they last for years. Use the ribbon to thread through the holes so

ornaments can be hung. At the end of the year, wrap in tissue paper and

place in plastic bag or box; they will last until the next year. Caution:

the smell might attract pests to your storage area.

                                 ----------

                             Relaxing Bath Salts

                               by Nella Foster

 

      Nella Foster lives in northwest Arkansas and is a member of the At-

Large Chapter. She owns and manages a small goat dairy, and in her free

time she enjoys gardening, crafts, cooking, and writing.

 

Warning: This product is only to be used on the skin and is not for human

consumption.

 

Ingredients:

1/4 cup grape seed oil

1 cup Epsom salts

 

      Note: You can add a few drops of your favorite essential oils, such

as lavender, eucalyptus or peppermint. Any fragrance will work, and you can

make the scent as strong or as subtle as you wish.

      Method: Mix all ingredients well and store in a covered container.

You can put the bath salts in a pretty jar and give as gifts.

                                 ----------

                                  Lip Fudge

                               by Nella Foster

 

      This lip balm smells yummy and feels great on your lips too. Remember

this is a cosmetic, not a food, so it should probably be kept out of the

reach of small children.

 

Ingredients:

1 ounce cocoa butter

1-1/2 tablespoons solid coconut oil

2 teaspoons grated cosmetic grade beeswax (can be purchased at drug and

craft stores)

1/2 teaspoon vitamin E oil (optional)

10 chocolate chips

2 to 3 small clean containers (you can purchase containers for lip balms at

craft supply stores and online.)

 

      Method: Mix all ingredients in a small glass bowl and microwave for

about sixty seconds. Once everything is melted, stir to make sure the

mixture is well blended, then transfer into containers. This is the hardest

part because the containers are small, and the lip balm starts to firm up

as it cools down. Let sit for a few hours or put into refrigerator until

the lip balm is firm. You can double or triple this recipe and make as

gifts.

                                 ----------

                             Monitor Miniatures

 

      News from the Federation Family

 

NFB Helps Santa Answer His Mail:

      Santa Claus has made the staff at the National Federation of the Blind

honorary elves.  He has asked us to help him send letters in Braille

to very young blind boys and girls (those under the age of ten) in the

United States.

      Between November 13 and December 15, parents can go online at

www.nfb.org/santa-letters and fill out a Santa Braille Letter request form.

The form can also be printed and faxed to (410) 685-2340.  Beginning

December 4, the Braille letters from Santa will start going out to boys and

girls around the country. The Braille letter will also be accompanied by a

print copy (for mom and dad to read) as well as some other fun

Christmastime activities.

      The deadline for letter requests is December 15 to ensure that a

return letter in Braille is received before Christmas. For more

information, please visit our website at www.nfb.org.

 

NFB 2018 Scholarship Program:

      These scholarships are for legally blind high school seniors through

grad school students. The program begins November 1, 2017, and closes at

midnight EST on March 31, 2018. Thirty scholarships are available ranging

from $12,000 to $3,000 plus other gifts. Go to www.nfb.org/scholarships. To

apply during the five-month open period: read the rules and the Submission

Checklist, complete the official 2018 Scholarship Application Form (online

or in print), supply all required documents, and request and complete an

interview by an NFB affiliate president. Read the Frequently Asked

Questions (FAQ) page for detailed information. Chairperson is Cayte Mendez;

email scholarships at nfb.org or call (410) 659 -9314, ext. 2415, (8 a.m. - 5

p.m. EST).

 

2018 Dr. Jacob Bolotin Awards:

      Application materials will be available beginning November 15, 2017,

and must be received electronically or postmarked by March 31, 2018. These

awards (named for a pioneering blind physician who practiced in the early

twentieth century and are made possible through the generosity of his late

nephew and niece) recognize individuals and organizations working in the

field of blindness that have demonstrated exemplary leadership and

extraordinary accomplishments toward achieving the full integration of the

blind into society on a basis of equality. Only individuals who are over

eighteen years of age may apply for a Dr. Jacob Bolotin Award. For more

information, please go to https://nfb.org/bolotin-award-main.

 

National Federation of the Blind Assistive Technology Trainers Division

Notes:

      Nancy Coffman sends us the following announcement: The National

Federation of the Blind Assistive Technology Trainers Division met on

Wednesday, July 12, 2017, during our annual convention. Several topics were

discussed during our meeting including deciding what tasks are best suited

to what devices. How can we incorporate Structured Discovery techniques

into the communication technology classroom? We were pleased to hear from

the Hadley Institute for the Blind and Visually Impaired about new video

lessons available on using Voiceover on the Macintosh.

      We adopted a new name for the division this year since the

constitution had to be reviewed and approved. It is reflected in the title

of this piece. We let everyone know that by paying dues, they are invited

to a members-only list.

      Stay tuned. Next year, we are planning to have a trainer's breakfast

in addition to our meeting.

 

Celebrate the Holiday Season with a Gift to the National Federation of the

Blind:

      Have you received gifts from the National Federation of the Blind?

Lots of us have. A mom recently thanked us for sponsoring a Braille

Enrichment for Literacy and Learning (BELL) Academy by sharing:

 

            Rudy and I would like to thank all that made Braille BELL Camp

      this Summer possible. Since Rudy does not qualify for Braille and

      mobility services through his school, this camp is an answer to our

      prayer for helping Rudy learn. There was an unfortunate conflict in

      planning his summer that jeopardized the chance of him attending,

      which caused a great deal of worry. Rudy stated, "I have to go! It

      helps me so much." My heart ached as I saw how much he wanted and

      needed the professional touch these smart teachers provided.

      Thankfully we were able to sort out our conflict, and he was able to

      attend. The relief in his eyes was enough to realize how powerfully

      important this week was towards supporting and educating Rudy while he

      learns how to read and navigate.

            Thank you ALL from the bottom of our hearts.

 

 

      Libby Houston

 

      We make dreams come true. You can help. We give people free white

canes, literacy, and confidence. If you have gained from contact with the

NFB or NFB members, enjoyed our publications, or participated in an academy

or program, we are asking you to give back. Celebrate the holiday season by

donating much needed funds. It is easy. You can mail a donation or give

online.

      To mail your donation simply make out your check to the National

Federation of the Blind. Please mail it to 200 East Wells Street at

Jernigan Place, Attention: Outreach, Baltimore, MD 21230. To give online

visit https://nfb.org/donate2017.

      Together with love, hope, and determination we will continue making

dreams become reality.

 

Webmasters Group Meets at Convention:

      Affiliate, division, and chapter webmasters met at the 2017

convention to discuss how to create and maintain websites that are clearly

branded as part of the National Federation of the Blind. One of the issues

for website developers is to use a content management system, a clever

piece of software that lets someone other than the webmaster update the

part of the web for which he or she is responsible. Because we know that

many of our affiliates, divisions, and chapters use both Drupal and

WordPress, the webmasters group is offering templates, and a training

course for Drupal users was held on the last weekend in August. Our

commitment is to make the same kind of quality impression when one visits

our websites as we try to make when they visit our national headquarters.

To be a part of the webmasters mailing list, go to www.nfbnet.org, activate

the Join or Drop NFBNet Mailing Lists, and find the webmasters group. We

look forward to helping you, and in turn, giving you the opportunity to

help others.

 

Elected:

      The Deaf-Blind Division held elections at its meeting during

convention: president, Alice Eaddy (New Jersey); first vice president,

Marsha Drenth (Pennsylvania); second vice president, Janice Toothman

(Maryland); secretary, Danielle Burton (Kentucky); treasurer, John L.

Williams (Florida); and board members Brian Norton (Florida), Mark Gasaway

(Georgia), Dana Tarter (Georgia), and Robert Stigile (California).

 

Elected:

      The United Blind Industrial Workers of America Division held

elections at the convention with the following results: president, Sandy

Halverson; first vice president, Tom Page; second vice president, Kevan

Worley; recording secretary, Norma Crosby; treasurer, Kathy Tooten; one-

year board members Glenn Crosby and Anitra Weber; two-year members Paul

McNeal and Leonard Silkey, leaving two unfilled positions.

 

Elected:

      The following members were elected to the board of the National

Association of Blind Lawyers at the 2017 National Convention: president,

Scott LaBarre; first vice president, Ronza Othman; second vice president,

Timothy Elder; secretary, Ray Wayne; treasurer, Larry Povinelli; and board

members Noel Nightingale, Denise Avant, Anthony Thomas, Randy Farber,

Jackson Walker, Deepa Goraya, and Al Elia.

 

Elected:

      The National Federation of the Blind Assistive Technology Trainer's

Division elected the following officers and board members during the 2017

National Convention: president, Nancy Coffman; vice president, Chancey

Fleet; secretary, Chip Johnson; treasurer, Jeanine Lineback; and board

members Wesley Majerus, Amy Ruell, and Jim Portillo.

 

Elected:

      The Human Services Division held elections, the results are as

follows: president, Candice Chapman; first vice president, Jonathan Franks;

second vice president, Tabea Meyer; secretary, Jessica Snyder; treasurer,

Merry Schoch; and board members Dezman Jackson and Nooria Nodrat.

 

Elected:

      After elections at the convention, the board of directors of the

National Association of Guide Dog Users is as follows: president, Marion

Gwizdala; vice president, Michael Hingson; treasurer, Linda O'Connell;

secretary, Sherrill O'Brien; and board members Aleeha Dudley, Raul

Gallegos, and Jessica Snyder.

 

Elected:

      The National Organization of Parents of Blind Children would like to

present the 2017/18 NOPBC board of directors elected during the 2017

National Convention: president, Kim Cunningham (TX); first vice president,

Laura Bostick (LA); second vice president, Holly Miller (NJ); secretary,

Penny Duffy (NH); treasurer, Sandra Oliver (TX); board members Carol

Castellano (NJ); Pamela Gebert (AK), Jean Fultz (NY), Carol Akers

(OH), Melissa Riccobono (MD), Jean Bening (MN), Kimberly Banks (FL), Corbb

O'Connor (MN), Tabby Mitchell (VA), and Carlton Walker (PA).

 

Elected:

      The National Organization of Professionals in Blindness Education

Division election results are as follows: president, Eric Guillory; first

vice president, Denise Mackenstadt; second vice president, Jackie Anderson;

secretary, Emily Gibbs; treasurer, Krystal Guillory; and board members

Michell Gip, Shannon Kemlo, Casey Robertson, and Carlton Walker.

 

Elected:

      The following were elected during the meeting of the Science and

Engineering Division on July 12, 2017: president, John Miller; vice

president, Ashley Neybert; secretary, Louis Maher; treasurer, Alfred

Maneki; board members Donna Posont and Kristen Johnson.

 

Elected:

      The results of the election held by the Sports and Recreation

Division are as follows: president, Jessica Beecham; vice president, Audrey

Farnum; secretary, Lisamaria Martinez; treasurer, Danielle Fernandez-

Frampton; board members Roland Allen, Mike Armstrong, Maureen Nietfeld,

Amber Sherrard, and Cathy Tuton.

 

                                  In Brief

 

      Notices and information in this section may be of interest to Monitor

readers. We are not responsible for the accuracy of the information; we

have edited only for space and clarity.

 

New Brailler Repair Business:

      The Chesapeake Brailler Service run by Steve Bishop in central

Maryland is open and looking forward to serving the NFB community. Our

family is active with the Maryland Parents of Blind Children. We work on

all models of the classic Perkins Brailler (regular, large cell, light

touch, and electric). Our basic service fee is $100; this includes a

thorough cleaning and any adjustments needed to return the machine to

factory specs. Repairs may incur additional charges. Find us on Facebook at

Chesapeake Brailler Service. You can call us at (410) 315-9664 (voice only)

or email at chesapeakebrailler at gmail.com.

      If you have any questions, please contact me by phone or email. Thank

you for helping me get the word out about my new business.

                                 ----------

                                 NFB Pledge

      I pledge to participate actively in the efforts of the National

Federation of the Blind to achieve equality, opportunity, and security for

the blind; to support the policies and programs of the Federation; and to

abide by its constitution.

 

Forwarded by:

 

Brian A. Mackey

 

Brian A. Mackey

Owner, Mackey Enterprises, LLC

Treasurer & Webmaster, National Federation of the Blind of New Jersey

Webmaster, National Federation of the Blind of Delaware & Illinois

Member, National Federation of the Blind (NFB) Blind Users Innovating &
Leading Design (BUILD) Team

609-680-8488

 <mailto:Bmackey88 at gmail.com> Bmackey88 at gmail.com

 <http://www.mackeyenterprisesllc.com/> www.mackeyenterprisesllc.com

 

"Happy are those who dream dreams and are willing to pay the price to make
those dreams come true"

      -Vince Papale

 

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