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March 02, 2010

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Leslie B.

A helpful document to recommend for raising awareness of both the spirit and specifics of disability rights is at:
http://www.ada.gov/reachingout/intro1.htm
This on-line course consists of 10 short lessons. It provides perspective and examples that help people find the balance between reasonable accommodations and undue hardships. It's very well-written and practical. It's really written for the small-business merchant, but I think everyone can gain pearls from this course. It's introductory premise is that people with disabilities, as well as their friends and families, are potential customers. The better the business person is at understanding and providing reasonable accommodations, the better for that person's business!

Good gosh! Can you give us any examples of your hate mail after writing this column? Yikes!!

elizabeth

I'm going to send you a link of a small debate on the subject out here on SV Moms Blog -- unbelievable stuff!

Thanks for yours, and I intend on posting it on my own blog tomorrow when I run the Special Olympics Stamp Out the R-Word campaign poster tomorrow.

elizabeth

I've posted about this terrific article that you wrote -- thanks, again, for your wise words!

Leslie B.

Here is a story of another Isaac, that is, in many ways, as tragic as that of Isaac Woodward's.

This is from a PBS documentary "The Eyes of Me", which profiles four high school students in residence at the Texas School for the Blind. The doc is now showing on local PBS stations on the series "Independent Lens".

http://www.pbs.org/independentlens/eyes-of-me/

Isaac
“I know what it’s like to be sighted, and I know what it’s like to be blind. And I do think going blind has given me a different point of view.”
In the film, Isaac had been blind less than a year. When his retina detached after an accident at the age of 14, his uninsured grandparents could not afford emergency eye surgery, and one morning Isaac woke up blind. As a high-school freshman, he left his rural home in Paris, Texas to adjust to a new city, a new school, and a new life.
Isaac graduated from high school in Fort Worth, Texas in 2009. He has returned to Austin with Rolex, his guide dog, and is concentrating on gaining skills for living independently.

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