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 United Cerebral Palsy of Michigan

Newsletter October 2011 

In This Issue
Michigan Family Support Initiative
Back From The Bench
Online Benefits Planning Calculators
Michigan's Integrated Care Plan
Upcoming Events

Donate Now!  

 

UCP Michigan needs your support!

 
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2011 Board of Directors

Officers

President Jackie Doig 
Center for Civil Justice

Chairperson John Peck
Grand Valley State University

Vice President Dan Vivian
Michigan Protection & Advocacy Service, Inc.

Vice President Judy Cerano
White Lake

Secretary Lou Reinwasser
Office of the Attorney General

Treasurer Charlie Hawes
Yeo & Yeo, Lansing

Directors at Large

Mickey Hirten
Lansing State Journal

Andrea Sarto
North Country Community Mental Health

J.J. Jackson
Okemos

John Lawton

Lansing

Seth Warschausky, PhD
University of Michigan

David Miller
Comerica Bank
UCP Michigan Staff Contacts 

Executive Director
Kathleen Brockel
 
brockel@ucpmichigan.org

Glenn Ashley
Grants Manager/Project Coordinator

ashley@ucpmichigan.org

Sara Stech
Community Work Incentives Coordinator

stech@ucpmichigan.org

Anne Shell
Communications Coordinator

shell@ucpmichigan.org

Sara Menzel
AT Center Manager

menzel@ucpmichigan.org

Lynn Ross
WIPA Coordinator

ross@ucpmichigan.org

Jack Anderson
Community Work Incentives Coordinator

anderson@ucpmichigan.org

Michele Seybert
Loan Funds Manager

seybert@ucpmichigan.org

Tisha Robinson
Secretary, I & R

robinson@ucpmichigan.org

Michelle Sneathen
Special Needs Advocate

sneathen@ucpmichigan.org

Lisa Bucher
Community Work Incentives Coordinator

bucher@ucpmichigan.org

 

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Issue: VOctober 2011

UCP MiCommunity Dayschigan News

 

UCP Michigan November Fundraiser

We are pleased to be part of Younker's Community Days 2011 event in November. UCP Michigan supporters are invited to give back to their communities and help UCP at the same time by making a $5 donation to UCP, and receiving a shopping booklet filled with $200 worth of coupon booklet offers, including $10 off an item of $10 or more. This will be a two day event, starting Friday, November 11 at 9 a.m. and Saturday, November 12 at 6 a.m., just in time for the start of your holiday shopping! Good at Younkers, Bon Ton, Bergner's, Boston Store, Carson's, Elder-Beerman, Herberger's, and Parisian- online too (see booklets for complete details). Call us at 517-203-1200 or email ucp@ucpmichigan.org to get your coupon booklets today!

Michigan Family Support Initiative
MFSI
The Michigan Family Support Initiative (MFSI) program will reunite, preserve, strengthen and maintain citizens with developmental disabilities in family units in their home communities through intense individualized planning, local navigation training, individual and family monitoring, technical support and evaluation. 
Visit the Wayne State University Developmental Disabilities Institute website for complete information.

Back from the Bench

MELF Loan Gets Sportscaster Back On The Airwaves With Own Radio Show

 

ButchYou could say William "Butch" Davis was practically born with a microphone in his hand.

 

The Metro Detroit resident has the communications business in his blood. His father, William E. Davis, Jr., owned his own local radio television business in Ecorse, Michigan, and growing up, young Butch watched and listened as his father conducted his business. 
 

Today, thanks to the Michigan Employment Loan Fund (MELF), Butch's dreams of following in his father's footsteps have finally come to fruition.
 

"It's a challenge that I'm enjoying tremendously," the longtime

sportswriter and announcer says of his "Butch On Sports" radio program.

 

Given his journey to get here, Butch's radio program is much more triumph than challenge. His journey started about five years ago, when he was diagnosed with diabetes, and soon found himself unable to work. Butch decided to file for Social Security disability, and was approved after four months. But his desire to work had not diminished. One day, he received a letter about Ticket to Work, a federal program that helps people receiving Social Security benefits find and maintain employment. "I thought, 'Whoa, this is cool,' " said Butch. " 'They'll help me get retrained and I might get a job.' "

 

Butch started to work with Michigan Rehabilitation Services (MRS) to utilize the Ticket to Work. However, he resisted the suggestion to just take any available job. "I didn't want that," Butch explained. "I said, 'I've been doing disc jockey work, I've been doing communication work, I've been in sports now for doggone close to almost 25 years. Why should I throw that down the drain because of what someone else wants me to do?' "

 

Butch has never been one to back down from a challenge - especially one involving his passion for sports.

 

As a youth growing up in Detroit, Butch was always interested in athletics, playing hockey, football, baseball and basketball. He graduated from Detroit Southwestern High School, and won a scholarship to play football at Portland State University, where he minored in radio and television communications. That was where he also began his career spinning records at the local station.

 

"I was nervous as heck, but that was the beginning of my relationship with radio," says Butch. He eventually took on his first radio job at the Portland station as a jazz disc jockey.

 

In 1995, Butch moved back to Detroit, where a knee injury left him on the sidelines. Unable to work for about a year, Butch eventually went back to college full time in his early 40s, earning a degree in journalism.

 

During that time, Butch was also spinning records at a college radio station in Dearborn. When his show was moved to the evening slot, "that's when I got my notoriety there," Butch said with a laugh.

 

Butch got to know many people in the business during that time, and did many freelance assignments, gaining experience all the way. In the late 90s, Butch took a step into a new field. "There was a neighborhood newspaper called the Telegram News, and they were always printing about things that had nothing to do with the neighborhood, so me, being the clown that I am, I went down there and complained about it," Butch recalls. He ended up with a job, and eventually became the paper's sports editor. He is still a contributor to the paper to this day, volunteering his writing skills.

 

But Butch was raised on radio - and blessed with a gift of gab. He knew deep down he belonged back on the air.

 

He said the idea to start a radio show came overnight. "'Why am I working for everybody else when I can work for myself?'" he continued. "'I've got all the skills in town, I've got all the accolades, I'm very well-respected by my peers in Michigan, why am I doing this? Why am I throwing myself away?' And that started the process. I've been doing sports for years; I want to have my own radio show. I can't depend on other radio stations to hire me because this is a competitive business."

 

Butch said the idea for a radio show was a first for someone working with MRS. "I thought, 'I'm almost a Guinea pig on this,' " he said. "You have many people who were doubters or didn't understand the concept of what it is to do a radio show. I was very comfortable with the concept and all of what I needed to do."

 

One of the major things he needed to do in order to work with MRS was to write a business plan. "I'm a good writer ... but a business plan? Oh boy," said Butch. He spent about two years working on a plan, only to find it wasn't acceptable. "I got turned down a couple times there, and I just kept on plugging away," he said.

 

Finally, after doing some research, he discovered that he had the right to have someone write him a business plan. He had one written up, and at the same time started thinking about what resources of his own he could bring to the table. He had some equipment, but not everything that he would need. So he turned to the Michigan Employment Loan Fund, a program of UCP Michigan.

 

Butch is very positive about his experience with UCP. "Your organization gave me the key to start the car," Butch said. "If it wasn't for your organization doing what they're doing, I'm not sure I'd be where I'm at right now, at all."

 

As soon as everything was finalized with MRS and his loan from MELF, Butch went out and purchased a laptop computer, a digital recorder, and other essential equipment. "It made things a lot simpler to have that loan," he said.  "I was able to get the major things that I needed in order to get started and be self-reliant." He put on a pilot episode of the show in November, 2010. "That's where I discovered what I need to do in order to enhance the show, so by the time I got the money I needed from your organization, the game plan was already set," he explained.

 

Despite his health challenges, Butch remains positive about running his business. "Do I have to arrange things where things are going to be comfortable for me?" he said. "Yes. But you get out there every morning, you get the work done, you try to advertise your business the best you can, you keep battling. You've got to stay positive in this stuff." 

 

Staying positive is a philosophy Butch has embraced throughout his life, as he melded his passions for sports and radio. Butch is thrilled that he has been able to turn his love of writing, radio, and sports into a job that he is passionate about. "If you don't have a passion for what you do, don't go after the money," he said. "If you have a passion and you stick to the passion and learn the system and do everything right, the money will be there."

 

Butch's next goal is to expand the show from a half hour to an hour, which would most likely involve a move to a different station. "It's easier to carry it over, to say, 'Look, we're proven' rather than break the show down and have nothing and have to start all over," he explained. Butch is grateful that the show's audience is growing, and is hopeful that an increase in advertisers will follow. He is also looking at innovative ways to create revenue sources, such as podcasting.

 

In the meantime, Butch said he is having fun and is pleased with the outcome of the show so far.

 

"Sports are one of the things that make a lot of people happy, no matter what their problems," he said.

 

You can hear "Butch on Sports" on radio station AM1440 WDRJ Detroit between 6 and 6:30 p.m. You can also listen to the show via the internet.  Butch has covered the Detroit Pistons, Tigers, Lions, Shock and Red Wings, plus the NBA Finals, WNBA Finals, NBA All-Star Game and other major sports events including the 2000 Olympics in Australia.

 

United Cerebral Palsy of Michigan's Employment Loan Fund (MELF)

The mission of the Michigan Employment Loan Fund is to reduce or eliminate barriers to employment through low-interest loans.

Financial loans can be used to buy equipment for self-employment or to work for an employer from home or a telework center. For more information, please visit our website.

Online Benefits Planning Calculators 
Check out online benefits planning calculators

 

This website host two online calculators - "Benefits to Work" and "School to Work" that can help individuals understand how working or working more hours will impact their SSI, SSDI, and other state programs. The calculators also provide information on Social Security's work incentive programs that are designed to allow beneficiaries to work with less impact on their cash benefits and protection of vital health benefits. 

 

These calculators were developed by the World Institute on Disability and are specific to Michigan programs and provisions. By entering in minimal, non-identifying information about their benefits and work plan, these calculators allow people to see the impact of work on their benefit programs for many years in the future! Professionals can use this with individuals considering becoming employing or looking to work more hours, and results can be printed, saved, and emailed to others working with the beneficiary.
Apply to Develop Michigan's Integrated Care Plan
Michigan
The State of Michigan Department of Community Health is developing a plan to integrate the financing and delivery of services and supports for people who are eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid. The state is organizing four work groups to meet and provide in-depth input into the proposed plan. The four workgoups are:

 

·         Care Coordination and Assessment

·         Education, Outreach, and Enrollee Protections

·         Performance Measurement and Quality Management

·         Service Array and Provider Network

 

Each workgroup is limited to 35 people. People with disabilities, their families and advocates are encouraged to apply to participate in the workgroups. YOUR voice and experience will greatly enhance the final outcome of the proposed plan.

  

To apply for a workgroup go to:  

https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/DualEligibles_WorkgroupForm

 

Deadline to apply is October 21st.

 

You can submit comments to: Integratedcare@michigan.gov

  

For more information go to:   https://janus.pscinc.com/dualeligibles/
 

Upcoming Events

View upcoming events around the state on the UCP Michigan website!

We hope you have enjoyed this newsletter. Please forward on to friends, family, and colleagues who may be interested in reading it. We appreciate your support!

 

Sincerely,

 

Kathleen Brockel

Executive Director

United Cerebral Palsy of Michigan