BAC Rutland

Business Advisory Council – Sponsored by VABIR

Archive for March, 2008

Spitzer’s Successor: David Paterson, NY’s First Blind Governor

David Paterson, NY’s First Blind GovernorWhen David Paterson was three months old, he got an ear infection that spread to his optic nerve, leaving him legally blind. Fifty-three years later, Eliot Spitzer’s resignation, effective Monday, will make him the first blind governor of New York.

“People are fond of saying of people with disabilities that they are just like everybody else,” Paterson told the Associated Press in 2002, when he was elected Democratic leader of the state senate. “But that’s just something to say to make them feel better. When you have a disability you are not like everyone else. You are uniquely defined by a lack of vision.” (more…)

Violence Prevention Educator To Speak In Burlington, St. Johnsbury

Paul Kivel, a social justice activist and violence prevention educator, will be in Vermont for public speaking events and private workshop presentations on April 7 and April 8 in St. Johnsbury and Burlington. (more…)

Disability Awareness Day – Coming Together for Rights, Opportunities and Change

Tuesday, April 15th in Montpelier is your chance to take part in Disability Awareness Day. Come and meet your legislators (please arrange in advance), tour the State House and take an Advocacy Workshop and Dinner Program at the Capitol Plaza. This event is sponsored by the Vermont Coalition for Disability Rights. If you have any questions or need further information, please visit VCDR’s website at www.vcdr.org, contact Sheila Smith at 223-6140, or email ssmith@sover.net.

VSA Arts of Vermont and Union Institute & University present “Crazy”

VSA Arts of Vermont and Union Institute & University present “Crazy,” on March 22nd @ 7pm. It’s a one-woman show with music and comedy by Gail Marlene Schwartz, exploring the experience of anxiety and depression, with panel discussion and workshop following the performance. Attend the performance in the Chapel of College Hall on the campus of Union Institute & University, College St., Montpelier, VT. No admission fee. For more information call VSA Arts of Vermont (802) 655-7772 or write info@vsavt.org

3rd Annual Celebration of the Americans with Disabilities Act

The Vermont Center for Independent Living is proud to host the 3rd Annual Celebration of the Americans with Disabilities Act. The ADA turns 18 this year with a gathering on the Vermont State House lawn in Montpelier. Event hours are from 11AM to 2PM. This event is free and open to the public.

Community Forum

There will be an information session regarding the impacts of the pending closure of the Vermont State Hospital from 5-7PM at the CVPS/Leahy Health Education Center of the Rutland Regional Medical Center at 160 Allen Street Rutland, Vermont.The Rutland Regional Medical Center has been working with the State of Vermont for several months on planning for the closure of the Vermont State Hospital. Discussions have focused on expanding capacity of the Psychiatric Services Inpatient Unit from 14 beds to 25 beds with the expectation that the expanded unit would serve as a regional option for patients currently be served at VSH. This forum will focus on changes in planning that now anticipate new construction of a new building attached to Rutland Regional, rather than renovation of existing space. A description of the programmatic design and the preliminaryarchitectural layout will be discussed. There will be time to provide feedback and to ask questions.

Beyond Barrier-Free Environments: A Conference on Universal Design

The Vermont Center for Independent Living works to promote the dignity, independence, and civil rights of Vermonters with disabilities. VCIL is committed to cross disability services, the promotion of active citizenship, and working with others to create services that support self-determination and full participation in community life. Early Registration: April 1, 2008. Cost is $35.00. Registration Deadline: April 12, 2008. Cost is $50.00 after early registration date. For more information, please contact: Vermont Center For Independent Living, 11 East State Street, Montpelier, VT 05602 or call (800) 639-1522.

Finding A Place For the State’s [California’s] Severely Mentally Ill

The policy of clearing California’s institutions is nearing the end. Left are the cases that are most difficult to relocate. For four decades, California has been trying to place developmentally disabled people like Bobby in less restrictive facilities, moving them out of large state hospitals and into community care.Now, as the state nears the end of the deinstitutionalization process, it is faced with finding new homes for its toughest cases. And it is coming up against increasing resistance from families. Read more…

High Schools Add Classes Scripted by Corporations

Lockheed Corporation through its  Intel Fund Engineering Courses is helping to create its own workforce.In a recent class at Abraham Clark High School in Roselle, N.J., business teacher Barbara Govahn distributed glossy classroom materials that invited students to think about what they want to be when they grow up. Eighteen career paths were profiled, including a writer, a magician, a town mayor — and five employees from accounting giant Deloitte LLP.”Consider a career you may never have imagined,” the book suggests. “Working as a professional auditor.”The curriculum, provided free to the public school by a nonprofit arm of Deloitte, aims to persuade students to join the company’s ranks. One 18-year-old senior in Ms. Govahn’s class, Hipolito Rivera, says the company-sponsored lesson drove home how professionals in all fields need accountants. “They make it sound pretty good,” he says.Deloitte and other corporations are reaching out to classrooms — drafting curricula while also conveying the benefits of working for the sponsor companies. Hoping to create a pipeline of workers far into the future, these corporations furnish free lesson plans and may also underwrite classroom materials, computers or training seminars for teachers.The programs represent a new dimension of the business world’s influence in public schools. Companies such as McDonald’s Corp. and Yum Brands Inc.’s Pizza Hut have long attempted to use school promotions to turn students into customers. The latest initiatives would turn them into employees. Read More…

Join the Movement- MS Awareness Week

March 10-17, 2008. Mark Your Calendars!!The All America Chapter of the National MS Society’s Vermont Office is taking part in this year’s nationwide awareness campaign.  We want to recognize the people who have already joined the MS movement and also welcome new people who are joining the movement for the first time.  We are asking that everyone take time during MS Awareness Week to do something NOW to move us closer to a world free of MS.  Movement is all around us, our bodies and minds in constant motion, connecting with and expressing ourselves to the world.  It is so much of who we are; it’s easy to take movement for granted.  Multiple sclerosis stops people from moving. We exist to make sure it doesn’t.What will you do? It’s easy!  Every action that you take helps to raise awareness for the nearly 1,600 people living with and 11,000 people affected by MS in Vermont.  You can help support MS Awareness Week by joining us at the kick-off event to be held at:  American Flatbread in Burlington on Monday, March 10 from 4:30pm-6pm. Please, come together with friends and family to celebrate the start of MS Awareness Week 2008.

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