[Promotion-technology] Remembering "Disability Champion" Jay Stiteley
David Andrews
dandrews at visi.com
Fri Sep 2 01:43:57 UTC 2016
>FYI:
Some people may be interested in this:
>
>Remembering "Disability Champion" Jay Stiteley
>Date Posted: 08/25/2016
>
>While many friends and colleagues at the recent
>International Conference of the Association for
>Education and Rehabilitation of the Blind and Visually
>Impaired (AER) were recording audio greetings
>and well wishes for Jay H. Stiteley, who was
>fighting an aggressive form of cancer, Mr. Stiteley died during
>the conference, on July 23, 2016. Described as a
>"disability champion," Mr. Stiteley was most
>recently working as the manager of the Mayor's Office for
>People with Disabilities (MOPD), Department of
>Neighborhoods, City of Houston, Texas, a position he had held since 2014.
>
>As manager of MOPD, Mr. Stiteley served as the
>primary advocate for the disability community of
>Houston, and he worked closely with city officials, the
>Houston Commission on Disabilities, and partner
>agencies to ensure the delivery of essential
>services, including legal clinics, financial empowerment workshops,
>tax-preparation assistance, and job and health
>fairs. He introduced "disability etiquette"
>workshops for local professionals, partnered with the Houston
>Center for Independent Living on a
>voter-registration drive, and most recently
>collaborated with community partners to present employment and workforce
>training workshops and a job fair for veterans
>and people with disabilities in the spring of 2016.
>
>Born September 15, 1954, in Plainfield,
>Illinois, Mr. Stiteley had more than 30 years of
>professional experience in the field of visual impairment. He
>began his higher education at Rockford College
>(now Rockford University) in Rockford, Illinois,
>where he earned a bachelor's degree in history. He went
>on to earn a master's degree in rehabilitation
>teaching for visually impaired adults from
>Northern Illinois University in DeKalb, was certified to teach
>visually impaired children, and he continued his
>education with a second master's degree in
>management from Thomas Edison State College (now Thomas Edison
>State University) in Trenton, New Jersey. Over
>the course of his career, Mr. Stiteley worked
>for five years as a rehabilitation teacher in both residential
>and itinerant programs, he worked with children
>and adults as an assistive technology specialist
>for 13 years. His experience in management includes work
>as director of the former Chicago,
>Illinoisbased National Technology Program of
>the American Foundation for the Blind (AFB; now AFB Tech, based in Huntington,
>West Virginia), dean of students for the
>Tennessee School for the Blind in Nashville, and
>director of Rehabilitation Services for World Services for the
>Blind in Little Rock, Arkansas. In addition, he
>held several positions over the course of many
>years at The Seeing Eye, a dog guide school in Morristown,
>New Jersey, including as its associate manager.
>A dog guide user himself, at the time of his
>death, he was handling his seventh dog guide, Nelson, with
>whom he trained at The Seeing Eye. A man of many
>talents, a little-known fact about Mr. Stiteley
>is that he participated in the 1980 games of the Olympics
>for the Disabled (now called Paralympics) in
>Arnhem, Holland, as a member of the U.S. swimming and track team.
>
>A passionate advocate for assistive technology,
>Mr. Stiteley established two computer-training
>programs for visually impaired people at the Western Blind
>Rehabilitation Center, VA Palo Alto Health Care
>System, in California, and at the Criss Cole
>Rehabilitation Center, Texas Commission for the Blind and
>Visually Impaired, in Austin, Texas. His
>consumer-advocacy work included service on the
>Federal Communications Commission Consumer Advisory Committee and
>on the advisory boards for the
>telecommunications company Verizon, which is
>based in New York, and the Atlanta, Georgiabased airline Delta Air Lines.
>He also served on the Board of Directors for AER
>and as president and chair of the Board of
>Directors for the Academy for Certification of Vision Rehabilitation
>and Education Professionals (ACVREP).
>
>Under Mr. Stiteley's leadership, in 2014, ACREP
>established a five-year exam scholarship fund,
>to which $2,000 had been added annually, a process that
>was planned to continue through 2019. The ACVREP
>Board of Directors recently voted to rename the
>scholarship fund The Jay H. Stiteley Memorial Scholarship
>Fund and to make it a permanent offering. Until
>the time of his death, Mr. Stiteley served as
>the founding chair of the Certified Assistive Technology
>Instructional Specialist for People with Visual
>Impairments (CATIS) Subject Matter Expert Committee for ACVREP.
>
>Since his death, Mr. Stiteley has been hailed by
>friends and colleagues. The current chair of the
>ACVREP Board, Mickey Damelio, Florida State University,
>stated,
>
>block quote
>Jay was a lion of a man and professional in our
>field. If you had the privilege to work with
>him, you quickly learned to respect his wisdom, gentle leadership
>style, and genuine nature. He was passionate
>about people with vision loss achieving their
>full potential, accessing independence and employment, and having
>the appropriate education and tools to do so. .
>. . ACVREP mourns his passing and will miss him
>tremendously, I'll miss him as a mentor and dear friend.
>block quote end
>
>Mr. Stiteley was described in his obituary as,
>"Always shining as an example of a successful,
>independent blind person, [he] touched the lives of everyone
>he met. . . . Though many will mourn his
>passing, he will be especially missed by his
>dog-guide, Nelson." Mr. Stiteley's survivors include his wife of
>20 years, Karen Stiteley, who is also a
>professional in the field of visual impairment.
>His funeral was held July 29, 2016, at St. Anne's Catholic Church
>in Houston, and a further celebration of his
>life is planned for Friday, September 16th,
>2016, with friends and colleagues joining in a national celebration
>from various locations around the United States,
>including at The Seeing Eye and the Texas School
>for the Blind and Visually Impaired. For more information,
>contact: The Seeing Eye, P.O. Box 375,
>Morristown, NJ 07963; phone: 973-539-4425; e-mail:
>info at seeingeye.org
>; website:
>www.seeingeye.org.
>
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