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OFFICE OF HANDICAPPED CONCERNS
WILL'S CORNER, OKLAHOMA
(Serving the Disability Community of Oklahoma)
Volume 5, Issue 4
October, 2004
ELECTION TIME AGAIN!
It is a fact that people with disabilities vote in lesser
percentages than other minority groups nationwide. This is
probably a result of a lot of things. Just dealing with a
disability on a day-by-day basis consumes our energy where there
is little time or energy left to deal with something which may
not promise immediate returns. Learning about candidates,
pressing candidates for a position on issues, and learning about
issues themselves can be an intimidating experience in itself.
Add to this accessibility issues of the polling place itself and
you have formidable obstacles which discourage us. Is the effort
it would take me to become an informed voter and registering to
vote really worth it all? You bet it is. We may have other
concerns to occupy us as persons with disabilities for the
immediate future, but in the long range we have much to gain
from actively involving ourselves in the democratic process.
Let’s look at some of the things we can do.
In past issues of Will’s Corner, Oklahoma we have addressed
voting and accessibility of polling places several times. To
recap some of that information, a person can register to vote at
the county election board or at any authorized tag agency. You
may also make changes in your registration there. If you want to
vote in a particular election, you must register at least 24
days prior to that election. For most of you reading this
article right now, it is too late to register to vote for the
upcoming presidential election, but don’t worry about this.
Register anyway. You’ll be able to vote in future elections.
Some people with disabilities may find it more convenient to
vote absentee. To vote absentee you may request an application
from the county election board. (County election boards are in
each Oklahoma County and can be located under county government
in the phone book.) You may choose to vote absentee in a
specified election or in all the elections held in a given year.
The election board will mail your ballot a reasonable time
before the election. For your absentee ballot to be counted, it
must be received in the mail at the election board by 7 p.m. on
the day of the election. The advantage of absentee voting is the
convenience of voting in your own home and mailing your ballot.
This avoids problems of accessibility at the polling places.
Polling places across Oklahoma are reporting that 91% are
accessible to all people with disabilities. The Disability Law
Center is receiving information on accessibility of individual
polling places in our state. If you have information to share,
contact Melissa Sublet at 918-743-6220 in Tulsa or 800-226-5883.
If you feel your polling place is inaccessible to you, you may
request to be transferred to another voting location that is
accessible. This request is addressed to the local county
election board and should be done well in advance of an
election.
What other accommodations are possible? A voter may ask for an
assistant to help them vote. This assistant may be either a
polling official or an assistant of the voter’s choice. For
individuals unable to enter the polling station, assistance is
available curbside. The voter may choose as their assistant
someone they bring with them or a polling official. If you feel
you will need special accommodations, it is important that you
contact your local election board. Tell them what your
disability is and how this affects your voting. Ask for what you
need. Election officials are there to serve you and to allow you
to exercise your right to express your political opinion.
We have a major election coming up in Oklahoma and nationwide on
November 2. There will be nine state questions on the ballot.
You will have the opportunity to approve or disapprove of each
of these questions. You may call your county election board to
find out what these issues are before you actually cast your
ballot.
In the U.S. presidential race, you will be able to choose
between the Democratic and Republican candidates. We have a
Republican, a Democrat, and an Independent candidate running for
the U.S. Senate. All five Oklahoma congressional districts will
be electing a representative to go to Washington, D.C.
We will be electing many state senators and state
representatives in November to represent us in state government
in Oklahoma City. You may call the county election board to
receive a sample ballot in advance of the election to prepare
yourself for Election Day. Radio, television, and newspapers
continue to cover national, state, and local political
campaigns. Issues affecting people with disabilities are present
in federal, state, and local elections. How do you stand with
the issues and with the candidates?
_______________________________________
Quotable Quote:
The superior man is slow in his words and earnest in his
conduct.
Confucius
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OHC web site:
www.ohc.state.ok.us
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ACCESSIBILITY News from Stillwater, OK.
So, what’s going on in Stillwater, Oklahoma as far as
accessibility for people with disabilities? Apparently a lot is
going on. I’ve been talking with Jason Gage who is the City
Manager of that city, and he’s been letting me in on some
interesting things. Let me share with you a little.
The City of Stillwater is interested in serving all their
citizens. That may or may not sound like a noteworthy
phenomenon. Government is charged with serving its citizens. But
some citizens may have special needs. That word “special” scares
me. Is it going to cost more to serve citizens with special
needs? It may cost more but the advantages are present to all
citizens regardless of ability. Let’s look at an example of
that.
Jason says that in Stillwater they’re discussing changing the
building codes on new and renovated sidewalks to make them five
feet wide instead of four feet wide. Obviously that would help
individuals in wheelchairs get out into the community, but it
also helps young families who take their baby out in the
stroller. It also helps bicycle riders who legally can ride on
Stillwater sidewalks. That extra width costs more to construct,
but that initial cost pays off in a better quality of life for
everyone—not just people with disabilities.
Stillwater has a Community Center which they have converted out
of an old junior high school. They are renovating the theater
and west wing of the Community Center, and in this renovation
they are dedicating 20% of the funds to making that theater and
community center more accessible to people with disabilities.
Jason says that the City of Stillwater needs to look at more
than just physical accessibility, but they also need to look at
program accessibility. For instance, people who are hearing
impaired need assistance in hearing at meetings in community
conference rooms. Jason wants the main meeting room equipped
with assisted listening devices for the hearing impaired, and he
wants a portable listening device to take to other conference
rooms which the city operates. Good idea.
The biggest area in the Stillwater budget impacting public
programs is the Stillwater Parks, Events, and Recreation
Department. Recreation includes a number of programs to teach
the arts to Stillwater citizens. Jason suggests we look at how
we teach painting, weaving, and glassblowing classes that would
make these classes accessible to people with developmental
disabilities. What if that person had only limited use of their
hands? How could the class be structured which would permit that
individual to participate as well? I like those kinds of
questions. How can we serve everybody when everybody is not
alike? Let’s broaden our programs to meet everyone’s needs.
Steve Stokes, the Director of the Office of Handicapped Concerns
always says, “We are all only temporarily able bodied.” If we
broaden our services today, we may actually help ourselves in
the future. Something to think about.
You say, well, it’s nice to talk about all this theory, but how
does it translate into real life. How is life in Stillwater,
Oklahoma going to change? How can theory help me? I need to be
able to get my wheelchair into City Hall today. I need to be
able to use a public restroom if I am out in the community. I
would like to use a public sidewalk and to be able to cross the
street with a curb cut. I want to go to a play at the Community
Theater. These are legitimate desires of citizens with
disabilities who want the right to participate in community
affairs but who have long been excluded.
Jason Gage tells me that the City of Stillwater has allocated
$50,000 just to work on accessibility issues on sidewalks and
ramps. The City hired the company Complete Actions Solutions,
L.L.C. of Wichita, Kansas to survey all the Stillwater
facilities and property looking for structural barriers to
people with disabilities. This survey was completed in February
of this year and is to be used in guiding planning to eliminate
structural barriers. Stillwater found out that even in newer
buildings, they are not 100% compliant with the Accessibility
Guidelines of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). With
this in mind, Jason is recommending the establishment of an
Accessibility Advisory Board to the City of Stillwater, and this
board would include members of the disability community.
The City of Stillwater has also adopted the Accessibility
Guidelines of the ADA into their city codes for public parking.
As the Accessibility Guidelines become stricter, city code will
follow automatically. Stillwater is serious about this issue.
Elected officials are open to improving accessibility to all
citizens. Jason talks about educating the city building staff on
the Americans with Disabilities Act and how this federal
legislation impacts what they do locally in Stillwater. He talks
about bringing in the business community with what the city is
doing and the needs for accessibility locally. He talks about
being in communication with the Disability Coordinator of
Oklahoma State University. Leadership. People working together
to help people. Communication. These are things necessary to
change a community. Jason Gage, the City Manager of Stillwater
says, “Stillwater prides itself as a progressive and educated
community, and as a result we believe improving community
accessibility for all our citizens is the right thing to do.”
Now is a good time to contact your city commissioners about
structural accessibility and program accessibility in city
government in Stillwater. You may want to get a copy of the
accessibility study done back in February. Call the Office of
the City Manager at 405-742-8209. Mary Rupp, the Assistant City
Manager, is also the ADA Coordinator for the City of Stillwater.
You may have a concern to share with her. Stillwater has 525
employees with an annual budget of $84 million. This city is
serious about making its buildings and programs accessible to
everyone.
_______________________________________
Quotable Quote:
The sentence: “The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog” uses
every letter of the alphabet.
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State of Oklahoma
www.youroklahoma.com
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P.A.L.S. (Practical Assistive Living Services)
You’ve got a pal in Mel Nowland, and I’ll bet you never even
knew it. Mel is a retiree from AT&T and has spent the last forty
years building and repairing equipment to make life easier for
people with disabilities. It started out in 1962 when his wife
quite suddenly became disabled with rheumatoid arthritis. He
built her a knob turner out of a block of wood which would catch
on the knob to turn the stove on. The long handle magnified her
grasp. Back in the 60’s bouffant hairdos were popular, and one
day Mel walked in on his wife bent down trying to activate an
aerosol can of hairspray. She couldn’t depress the small button.
Mel thought about things awhile and came up with a gadget which
fit on top of an aerosol spray can and had a three-inch trigger
attached which she could pull and easily activate the spray. Not
only was she able to use her hairspray, but she was also able to
use the Windex bottle to clean the bathroom mirror. She had felt
so helpless after developing the arthritis, but now she began to
be able to function in the world Mel was creating for her.
That’s how it all got started. But maybe I should go back even
further than that. Maybe I should go back to the time Mel
Nowland was thinking about what he could do to serve the Lord.
Mel thought about preaching, but his audience went to sleep.
Nope, that wouldn’t work. Mel thought about laying on of hands,
but he found out he didn’t have the gift of healing. Mel was
stumped for awhile until he looked around and said to himself,
“God has given me technical ability to work with my hands. Let
me use that ability to help others. That’s what my calling
really is.”
Sure enough, Mel had overlooked his strong suit by trying to fit
himself into someone else’s mold. He could fix things. He could
make things. Now he had to find out how to channel this talent
to help other people. He and his wife had good friends who
worked at Easterseals in Oklahoma City. In 1964 Mel began
adapting toys for children with disabilities. A speech therapist
came to him in desperation that she worked with an eleven year
old boy who absolutely did not speak. He did not utter a sound
of any kind, and she had to figure out how to get this boy to
talk so that he would be able to find a home in foster care.
What can I do. Everything fails. Can you help me?
Mel’s brain went into gear. He bought an N-gauge electric train
and mounted in on a big piece of plywood. He hooked the train up
to a voice-activated switch and set the whole thing in front of
the boy. Now he demonstrated how he could make the train run
through his voice. Nurses at the facility did the same, but it
seemed like all efforts were ignored. This young man was not
going to be able to talk—ever. Never say never is how the saying
goes. Two days later nurses walked in on the boy shouting “Yeah,
yeah, yeah” as the train sped along the tracks. Ten days later
the boy could use eight words meaningfully, and within six
months the nurses couldn’t shut him up. Mel had had his first
great success. A boy whom everyone had given up on began to talk
and when he was able to talk, he found a foster home to live in.
Success. Let’s see what else we can do.
Some parents of children with severe visual disabilities decided
they’d like to have an Easter egg hunt for their children. One
problem—their children couldn’t see. What to do? Mel bought a
cart full of plastic Easter eggs at Target and proceeded to
install a blinking LED, a buzzer, and a battery in each one.
Guess what—the eggs began to beep and could be located by that
constant sound. Some blind kids got to go on their first Easter
egg hunt, and it was fun, fun, fun. Mel’s reaction? “Can you
think of a better way for an old man to play with toys and not
get laughed at?” Go guy.
In 1994 Mel worked on a technical project for the Oklahoma City
United Cerebral Palsy which they submitted at the national
convention in Chicago. I guess you already know who won that
competition. Channel 5 in Oklahoma City featured Mel in their
Five Who Care series. He has been interviewed in numerous
articles for the Daily Oklahoman down through the years.
Recently an instructor at the University of Central Oklahoma has
been taking her special education students to visit Mel and
learn about the things he does.
And by the way, all the things Mel has done have been done in
his off-duty time while he was still working at AT&T and as a
volunteer after he retired. You see, Mel did this in addition to
being a husband and father and provider for his family. Today he
is 70 years old and still making and repairing equipment for
people with disabilities. Mel wasn’t good with words to keep an
audience alive. He didn’t have any special talents, but he could
work on things and figure out how to help people live better
lives. That’s no special talent—or is it?
Which brings us back to the title of this article, P.A.L.S.
P.A.L.S stands for Practical Assisted Living Services. Mel
founded P.A.L.S as a non-profit organization to create and
repair adaptive equipment for people with disabilities. He works
out of his home, and his garage is filled with materials and
things he has created to make life easier for people with
disabilities. No patents. No government money. He works on the
shouts of that eleven year old boy, “Yeah, yeah, yeah!”
P.S. Maybe you’d like to talk with Mel awhile yourself. He can
be reached at 405-752-4241 or pals12345@aol.com.
_______________________________________
Quotable Quote:
You know it’s the 21st century when you just tried to enter your
password on the microwave.
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Read All About It!
The Office of Handicapped Concerns has published its new book on
housing for people with disabilities. Download it from the
website www.ohc.state.ok.us or call 800-522-8224 to reserve your
copy.
PRESCRIPTION ASSISTANCE: RSVP Please
Please RSVP for your prescription assistance. Yea, sure, like
it’s that easy. All I need to do is call in with a dial of the
fingers and instant relief from the high cost of prescription
medications. It is hard not to scoff at hope when it comes after
long delay—delay in which suffering is acute and painful. Maybe
a spark of hope comes after we had long ago given up hope in our
efforts to afford the medications we need.
The high cost of prescription medications continues in the
public eye earlier this year with the passage of Medicare
prescription assistance for Medicare beneficiaries. Americans
have asked themselves why the cost of prescriptions has been so
much higher for them than for the same medications in other
countries. They have been told various stories that prescription
medications were not as safe from other countries and that
offering Americans the same deal that other countries had would
undercut the research and development of new medications. The
argument goes that if we pay less, we will sacrifice the
continuing development of ever more sophisticated medications to
control the suffering of disease. And yet . . . .
With this in mind, let me share with you a new program in
Oklahoma run by the Norman R.S.V.P. (Retired Senior Volunteer
Program). Julie Lovegrove has been operating a Prescription
Assistance Program out of the Norman R.S.V.P. since February 18
of this year. She works along with the Oklahoma Pharmacy Council
established by the Oklahoma Legislature to begin this pilot
program in Norman to see what can be done to get people the
prescriptions they need at a reduced cost. One stipulation of
any planning was that the program would operate legally and with
the full cooperation of the large drug manufacturers, most of
whom are headquartered in this country. Sound impossible? Too
good to be true? Well, 500+ people who have been assisted in
receiving over $3 million worth of medications at reduced charge
say different.
One 55 year old man with disabilities says, “(It) changed my
life, I can spend some quality time with my family and not be
afraid of my seizure disorder causing problems.” A 48 year old
single mother of two with severe, chronic depression says, “I am
now able to work and support my family because I don’t have to
choose between food and shelter and my medication. I used to
feel so helpless because my children only knew about the
problems we have. I can be a fun Mom sometimes now.”
And what about the couple who are both hearing impaired and have
diabetes? The husband works full time, but like many working
Oklahomans, has no prescription coverage. He appreciates RSVP
saying, “(It) helped out a lot, and my wife feels much better
now.” Affordable prescription medications is an issue right here
in Oklahoma as well as the rest of the nation.
Julie Lovegrove of the Norman R.S.V.P. office sought funding
from the United Way and the local Community Action program to
get this program off the ground last February. Staff is provided
through volunteers who work in the Retired Senior Volunteer
Program to assist other Oklahomans receive affordable medical
prescriptions. Julie tells me that the Norman R.S.V.P.
technically serves only Cleveland and McClain Counties but that
the Prescription Assistance Program of R.S.V.P. has had
customers from across Oklahoma who have heard about the program
and come to learn more. The Norman R.S.V.P. has helped consumers
from as far away as Woodward in the northwest or Altus in the
southwest. Since they are the only pilot program of prescription
assistance in the state, they are not turning people away. Let’s
see how the program works.
When you come to Norman, you will be given a simple form (two
pages) to be completed giving basic demographic information and
a list of your medications. (You may receive this form through
the mail if driving into the office is inconvenient.) R.S.V.P.
has special computer software which connects with a website from
the various drug manufacturing companies. Applications for the
prescription assistance programs of all the drug manufacturers
pop up on the computer screen, and the volunteers are able to
merge your demographic information onto the application of the
manufacturer of your particular medications. You sign the
application after it is printed out and take the application to
your doctor who in turn attaches a prescription to mail to the
pharmaceutical company. Depending on the company, the filled
prescription is sent either to your doctor or to your home and
generally comes within three weeks.
Through this program you receive only brand name medications.
For some of the pharmaceutical companies, your application is
good for only 90 days. For some it is good for a year. The
Prescription Assistance Program of R.S.V.P. asks that you have
an income of less that 200% of poverty for your county. They
also check to see that you have no other prescription assistance
program such as Medicaid or private insurance. If you do have
Medicaid, they will assist you in getting prescriptions only if
you need more prescriptions that what Medicaid will pay for.
Julie Lovegrove explains that this program helps the working
poor who have no health insurance through their jobs.
Julie continues, “This is a win/win program for pharmaceutical
companies, doctors, emergency rooms, the individual and the
community. We can help people who are barely getting by obtain
their medicine and continue to be productive.” As the pilot
prescription assistance project demonstrates success, it will
spread to other Retired Senior Volunteer Programs across
Oklahoma. For now we can use the Norman chapter to assist us to
meet our prescription medication needs.
If you have computer access, you can actually do some of this
search for meds on your own without the assistance of the
Prescription Assistance Program of the Norman R.S.V.P. Go to the
website www.rxassist.org and you will find out how to search for
medications by brand name, generic name, drug class, or drug
manufacturers. Many companies have prescription assistance
programs to help low-income individuals who do not have other
programs to pay for their medications.
We want to thank the Norman chapter of the Retired Senior
Volunteer Program for piloting prescription assistance as one of
its services. If you want to learn more about this program,
contact Julie Lovegrove at the Norman R.S.V.P. office—1125 E.
Main Street in Norman. You may ask for her at 405-701-2185 or
email her at jlovegrove@cocaa.org. You may be seeking
prescription assistance or you may want to volunteer your time
and/or money to help others. The Norman R.S.V.P. operates with
volunteers. People helping people makes a difference.
_______________________________________
Quotable Quote:
Amazing!...
You just hang something in your closet for awhile, and it
shrinks two sizes.
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CALENDAR OF EVENTS
October 26, 2004 The Mayor’s Committee on Disability Concerns is
having their annual awards luncheon at the Clarion Hotel in
Oklahoma City. Contact Milly Tibbits for more information at
405-553-3482.
November 2, 2004 Election Day statewide. Register to vote at the
county Election board or local tag agency.
November 4-5, 2004 Transformations for Recovery: 2004 Best
Practices sponsored by the Oklahoma Dept. Mental Health and
Substance Abuse geared for mental health professionals. The
conference will take place at the Reed Conference Center in
Midwest City. For more information call 405-522-8300.
November 20, 2004 First-ever conference on Parkinson’s Disease
free to the public. The conference will be at Mercy Health
Center room C in OKC. Call 405-752-3600 for more information.
December 4, 2004 The Wrightslaw Special Education Law and
Advocacy Training Program will be sponsored by the Disability
Law Center at the Nigh University Ballroom of the University of
Central Oklahoma. Free registration for parents or primary
educational caregivers of students with disabilities. Call
405-409-5761 or 405-409-5759.
If you have an event coming up relating to disability, let us
know at 800-522-8224 and we’ll help you publicize.
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