Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Diversity Executive Magazine: Americans Say Employ Those With Disabilities

by: Kellye Whitney, 11-16-2009 (used with permission)

A new survey released by National Industries for the Blind (NIB) reports that more than 9 out of every 10 Americans believe the government should support programs creating employment opportunities for people who are blind or have other significant disabilities.

Yet figures also show that more than 60 percent of people who are blind or have other significant disabilities are not employed.

Kevin Lynch, president and CEO of National Industries for the Blind, said he isn’t surprised there is an open attitude regarding people with disabilities or people who are blind. But he said diversity executives and other leaders with the power to influence hiring decisions must be willing to make the initial, relatively minimal, investment necessary to accommodate those who are blind or have visual impairments or other disabilities.

“This is an investment that has a great return,” he explained. “[NIB has] a dedicated workforce of individuals that on a daily basis are out to prove that they are capable and able to do what anyone can do. Certainly technology these days has leveled the playing field particularly for individuals who are blind, and they don’t want anyone to be able to utilize the fact that they may have a visual impairment or be blind as an excuse for their not being able to perform.”

Read the entire story in Diversity Executive Magazine online at http://www.diversity-executive.com/article.php?article=776

Find out about NIB's "Business Leaders Program" at offers business training at four levels for people who are blind at www.nib.org.

Monday, November 2, 2009

LOUISIANA ASSOCIATION FOR THE BLIND PROVIDES SAFETY WALK MATERIAL FOR USS NEW YORK

LOUISIANA ASSOCIATION FOR THE BLIND
1750 Claiborne Avenue
Shreveport, LA 71103
Heather Broussard - Community Relations and Government Affairs
Business: 318-635-6471

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Shreveport, LA Oct. 30, 2009 – The Louisiana Association for the Blind (LAB) today announced it has supplied the more than 10,000 square feet of SKILCRAFT ®/3M Safety Walk TM Slip Resistant Material for the USS New York (LPD 21), an amphibious transport dock ship built and delivered by Northrop Grumman Shipbuilding – Gulf Coast’s Avondale shipyard. Through the Ability One Program, LAB is able to provide quality employment to the visually impaired and currently employs 125 people, 42 of those who are blind. LAB’s Safety Walk TM Department, which consists of six blind and three sighted employees, has played a significant role in manufacturing and supplying the Safety Walk TM material for the ship.

While working on the LPD 21 project, LAB’s Safety Walk TM division performed various operations that include the AutoCAD TM designing aspect, cutting the peel and stick material and packaging of the product. Willie Marie Chapman, one of the employees involved with the project commented, “It is an honor to have been involved with making the kits for the USS New York and I am thankful for the opportunities that LAB provides to me and other visually impaired individuals.”

“LAB has supplied slip resistant materials to the U.S. Navy since 1988, but we’re especially excited we were given the opportunity to provide materials for such an historic and memorable ship,” said Shelly Taylor, President and Chief Executive Officer, Louisiana Association for the Blind.

There are a total of 65 compartments on the ship where the Safety Walk TM material will be placed to date and LAB will work on additional compartments in the weeks leading up to the commissioning date. LAB employees converted bulk Safety-Walk material into 1,440 made-to-order pieces, ranging in size from slightly more than three square feet to over 500 square feet. These custom pieces were then applied to surfaces throughout the ship to help improve traction.

Taylor added, “LAB is an authorized distributor and converter of 3M Traction Systems for the Federal government and offers a variety of anti-slip and safety matting materials in rolls, cut sizes and custom kits. Nine LAB employees were involved with this project and performed operations that included design, cutting the material and packaging the product.”

The USS New York (LPD 21), named in honor of victims of the September 11, 2001, attack on the World Trade Center, has seven and a half tons of steel recovered from the twin towers welded into her bow. This is the sixth ship of the U.S. Navy to be named after the state of New York. USS New York, is designed to deliver a troop of 700 Marines.

During the construction process of the ship 24 tons of steel were used and came from the rubble from the World Trade Center. This steel was melted down at Amite Foundry and Machine in Amite, Louisiana to cast the ship's bow section. It was poured into the molds on September 9, 2003. LPD 21 was built and delivered by Avondale, which is located on the banks of the Mississippi River in the greater New Orleans area. Avondale has direct access to the Gulf of Mexico via the Mississippi River and is easily accessed by the nation's interstate highway system and by rail.

USS New York's commissioning ceremony is scheduled to occur on November 7, 2009 in New York City. Commissioning is the ceremony in which New York will become a unit of the operating forces of the United States Navy. It is the occasion when the ship will "Come Alive" and officially becomes USS New York.

About LAB
LAB is a private, non-profit organization that provides quality employment, rehabilitation, vocational training, and recreational activities to individuals who are blind and visually impaired in Louisiana and the surrounding areas. Established in April 1927, LAB has two facilities in Shreveport where paper products such as writing tablets, index cards, and copy paper and anti-slip traction material are manufactured. LAB is an associated agency of the National Industries for the Blind.