[nfbmi-talk] NFB-NEWSLINE in Michigan threatened press release

Larry Posont president.nfb.mi at gmail.com
Wed Sep 29 20:52:01 UTC 2010


Hello:

    This is the most recent Press Release concerning Newsline. Please distribute it far and wide to any newspapers for which you 
have contacts. Please give my contact information to anyone involved with the media who expresses an interest in Newsline.

Larry Posont

President, National Federation of the Blind of Michigan



FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE



CONTACT:



Larry Posont, President

National Federation of the Blind of Michigan

Phone: (313) 271-3058
E-mail: president.nfb.mi at gmail.com













Critical Funding Shortage Threatens NFB-NEWSLINE® in Michigan


On Friday Thousands of Print-Disabled Michigan Residents May Lose Free,
Independent Access to Newspapers and Magazines



Dearborn Heights, Michigan (September 29, 2010):  Due to lack of funding, NFB-NEWSLINE®, a free service that provides independent 
access by print-disabled people to hundreds of local and national publications and TV listings, will be turned off in Michigan, 
effective this Friday, October 1.  Termination of this service will drastically limit the ability of thousands of print-disabled 
Michigan residents to obtain in-depth information about international affairs, local events, and breaking news easily and 
independently.



NFB-NEWSLINE® allows those who cannot read conventional newsprint due to a visual or physical disability to listen to newspapers and 
magazines over the telephone, on the Web, or by download to a digital talking-book player.  Through the service, print-disabled 
people can access over three hundred newspapers and magazines independently, determining how, when, and where they wish to read 
their favorite publications.  If funding is not found on or before Friday, October 1, blind and print-disabled Michigan residents 
will no longer have access to NFB-NEWSLINE®.



For the past several years, Michigan's NFB-NEWSLINE® service has been sponsored by the Michigan Commission for the Blind, but the 
funds themselves (approximately $80,000 annually) have been passed to the Commission through the Michigan Department of Education. 
In January of 2010 the NFB-NEWSLINE® funding was suddenly withdrawn from the Department of Education's budget, without explanation, 
but the Commission for the Blind gave no indication that it would cease to cover this vital service.  In fact, the Commission's 
state plan (a federally mandated document outlining all services provided by a vocational rehabilitation agency during each year), 
continued to include NFB-NEWSLINE® as late as June 22, 2010.



Larry Posont, president of the National Federation of the Blind of Michigan, said: "On Friday blind and print-disabled Michigan 
residents will be losing an incredibly valuable service that helps us to connect with the world at large and with our own 
communities.  One of the things that makes this service so popular is the fact that it is easy to access anywhere in Michigan, even 
at the top of the Upper Peninsula, and you don't need to have a computer.  There are so many blind people, particularly older 
residents, who can't afford computers and really don't have any other way to access print media."



The Commission for the Blind has received nearly 4 million dollars in stimulus funding since 2009, of which it has spent less than 
25 percent.  Nonetheless, Commission Director Patrick Cannon has indicated that the agency will not fund NFB-NEWSLINE® without the 
funds from the Department of Education.



In response to this news, Larry Posont has written to Patrick Cannon three times in recent weeks, in an effort to avoid a shutdown. 
Mr. Cannon has refused to respond to any of Mr. Posont's inquiries, saying only that the Commission will not continue to provide 
funding for the NFB-NEWSLINE® service.



Dr. Marc Maurer, President of the National Federation of the Blind, said: "With NFB-NEWSLINE®, blind and print-disabled people can 
benefit from the vital news contained in newspapers and magazines.  Access to information such as analyses of current events, 
political commentary, and international news helps all individuals, including the print-disabled, to be successful participants in 
their workplaces and in the world.  NFB-NEWSLINE® offers us the ability to read the news independently, choosing the content that is 
of interest to us.  As a subscriber, I truly benefit from the service every day, and would very much miss reading the paper with my 
morning cup of coffee."



NFB-NEWSLINE® offers six Michigan newspapers, including the Detroit Free Press, the Detroit News, the Flint Journal, Grand Rapids 
Press, Lansing State Journal, and the Mining Journal, as well as the Michigan Associated Press wire feed.  In addition to state 
newspapers from Michigan and across the nation, subscribers have access to many national publications, including the New York Times, 
USA Today, Popular Science, the Economist, and the Christian Science Monitor.  NFB-NEWSLINE® also provides print-disabled Michigan 
residents access to information from state agencies and legislative bodies that can otherwise be difficult to obtain.  Through a 
state-specific channel on the

service, entities such as the Michigan Commission for the Blind, Michigan Legislative Service Bureau, the Michigan State House of 
Representatives, and the Michigan State Senate can provide, at no cost, vital information to this population in an accessible 
format.



Scott White, director of NFB-NEWSLINE®, said: "While it would be a great shame to close this vital service to blind Michigan 
residents, unless we are able to locate or are provided with a funding source, we have no choice but to turn off NFB-NEWSLINE® in 
Michigan on Friday."



To learn how you can help keep NFB-NEWSLINE® available in Michigan, please call Larry Posont, president of the National Federation 
of the Blind of Michigan, at (313) 271-3058 or send e-mail to president.nfb.mi at gmail.com.



To learn more about NFB-NEWSLINE®, please visit http://nfbmi.blogspot.com/.





###



About the National Federation of the Blind of Michigan



With chapters in most major cities, the Michigan affiliate of the National Federation of the Blind is the largest and most 
influential membership organization of blind people in the Great Lakes State.  Since 1941, in connection with thousands of blind 
Michigan residents, the National Federation of the Blind of Michigan has worked to improve the lives of blind citizens in its 
affiliate through advocacy, education, and programs encouraging independence and self-confidence.


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