Hiring People With Disabilities Helps Everyone
        
Kirk Adams is president and CEO of the American Foundation for the Blind.
For most of us, work is a big part of how we define ourselves and measure our value. For many people with disabilities, it’s also the key to independence.
That’s a point worth remembering in October, which is National Disability Employment Awareness Month.
Finding employment remains a monumental challenge for people with disabilities. And no wonder: A May 2016 study (PDF) by the Perkins School for the Blind found that…
    
    
                Blog Topics
                Employment, Personal Reflections
            
        Happy White Cane Day, from the American Foundation for the Blind!
        
White Cane Day is October 15! Every year since it was first established in 1964, this day has been set aside to celebrate the white cane as a symbol of independence and mobility for people who are blind or visually impaired.
In honor of White Cane Day, the American Foundation for the Blind is celebrating across its entire family of sites:
The AFB Directory of Services can connect you to agencies around the country that offer orientation and mobility training—the use of systematic…
    
    
                Blog Topics
                Independence, Orientation and Mobility
            
        5 Great Ways to Celebrate National Disability Employment Awareness Month
        It's National Disability Employment Awareness Month (NDEAM)! Observed each October, NDEAM celebrates the contributions of workers with disabilities and educates about the value of a diverse workforce inclusive of everyone's skills and talents. This year’s theme is "#InclusionWorks."
The American Foundation for the Blind is proud to participate in NDEAM every year. Here are some ideas for ways you can use AFB’s resources to celebrate and support a workforce that is fully inclusive of people…
    
    
                Blog Topics
                Employment, In the News
            
        If I Could Ask the Candidates: A Presidential Debate About Blindness and Visual Impairment
        
The upcoming presidential debates have me thinking about what I might ask the candidates if I were a debate moderator. It isn’t often that disability issues get front-and-center attention during a nationally televised event like a presidential debate, let alone issues specific to people who are blind or visually impaired.
But what if they did?
Would I use my opportunity to ask the candidates about their position on the payment of subminimum wages to people with disabilities? Would I ask…
    
    
                Blog Topics
                Education, In the News, Public Policy, Technology, Accessibility
            
        Voices Heard: Disability Policy Becomes Part of the Public Debate
        
The growing organization and activism of the disability community is successfully getting the attention of candidates running for office. Today's disability policy speech by Hillary Clinton, as well as the media's interest in asking candidates questions about disability policy, represents a significant shift from how the issues we champion have been acknowledged in past presidential elections. In Illinois, a landmark Senate race is taking place between two candidates with physical…
    
    
                Blog Topics
                In the News, Public Policy
            
        Beyond Recognition: What Machines Don't Read
        
Helen Keller reading braille at her home in Westport, Connecticut. October 1965.
I am delighted that the fifth in our series of posts focusing on the Helen Keller Digitization Project is from Mara Mills New York University Associate Professor of Media, Culture and Communication. Mara’s post - on the continued importance of human transcribers - is fascinating and I encourage everyone to read it. Many thanks, Mara!
On Helen Keller’s birthday this year, archivist Helen Selsdon wrote a piece…
    
    
                Blog Topics
                Accessible PDF, Assistive Technology, Braille, Helen Keller, Technology, Accessibility
            
        Checking in from the CTIA Super Mobility Conference
        
Paul Schroeder, AFB Vice President, Programs and Policy
This week in Las Vegas it's everything wireless at the CTIA Super Mobility conference. CTIA, the Cellular Telecommunications and Internet Association, hosts the show and notably also hosts an Accessibility Outreach Initiative Forum as part of the conference. I am pleased to participate in the forum and express appreciation to CTIA for making it possible to attend. I thought I'd share some of the points from the forum on September 7.
AFB…
    
    
                Blog Topics
                Assistive Technology, Public Policy, Accessibility
            
        A Director’s Experience: Creating Employment Opportunities for Individuals Who Are Blind
        This blog post is by guest blogger Ben Caro, a film editor, screenwriter, and director on a mission to change the perception of blindness in our society. Ben is directing Cathedrals, a short film starring an actor who is visually impaired. Read about his passion project and mission to advocate for employment opportunities for individuals with vision loss.
Cathedrals by Ben Caro
I had to look in strange places for the right actor to play the lead role in my passion film, an adaptation of…
    
    
                Blog Topics
                Arts and Leisure, Cultural Diversity, Employment, Personal Reflections
            
        Helen Keller: A Love Affair
        
Image: Helen Keller smelling flowers, circa 1919.
This is the fourth in our series of posts celebrating Helen Keller and the wonderful new avenues that are opening up for research about her life and legacy as a result of the Helen Keller Digitization Project. This week’s post is from Christopher Carlson, author, screenwriter and playwright. Enjoy!
  I’m thrilled by the diligent work being done at American Foundation for the Blind to digitize its prodigious Helen Keller archive – so needed…
    
    
                Blog Topics
                Arts and Leisure, Helen Keller
            
        The ADA Anniversary: What We're Not Celebrating
        
This year marks the 26th anniversary of the signing of the landmark Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). Each year, advocates look for ways in which to properly commemorate the ADA and to celebrate the promise of equal access that it represents. We at the American Foundation for the Blind are also weighing in, not only with praise for the barriers that the ADA has broken down, but also with concern about the work that still needs to be done.
We are deeply disappointed that we're…
    
    
                Blog Topics
                Public Policy, Technology, Accessibility
            
        
