Disability Network of Mid-Michigan logo

Disability Network of Mid-Michigan
Decem
ber 2014 Newsletter
top1705 South Saginaw Road 
Midland, MI 48640
(989) 835-4041  (800) 782-4160

It's Piano Palooza Time! 

 

Piano Palooza logo with multiple pictures of attendees surrounding the logo.

 

The Ninth Annual Piano Palooza is Saturday, February 7th, 2015.  It will take place from 6-10pm at the Midland Country Club.

 

Tickets are on sale now! Contact Matthew Ivan at 989-835-4041 to reserve your spot! Seating is limited...Call today!  You can also click here to donate and/or purchase tickets online. 

 

Join us for an evening at one of the great fundraisers of the year!

 

Various corporate sponsorships are available. If you would like to sponsor, contact Matthew Ivan. You can also click the image below for a menu of available sponsorships. 

 

        

DNMM and Family & Children's Services of Midland Collaborating to Raise Awareness of Seasonal Mental Health Issues  

 

In a new collaborative effort entitled "Light Up a Life", Family & Children's Services and Disability Network of Mid-Michigan are teaming up to raise awareness about depression and other mental health issues, like Seasonal Affective Disorder, that are often associated with the winter and holiday seasons.

 

Light up a Life logo with FCS and DNMM logos and a lit up christmas tree

 

During the month of December, both agencies will be providing information about seasonal mental health disorders and the services each agency provides for individuals and their families. Both agencies will be posting information on their social media sites as well as discussing the issues on a half-hour public access television show. Beginning with "Giving Tuesday," December third, the agencies will also be accepting donations to help off-set the costs of providing services to those living with mental health issues.

 

"Coping with a mental health disorder is never easy especially during the holidays," said Beth Sorenson-Prince, Chief Executive Officer of Family and Children's Services. "Often during the excitement and magic of the season, we forget about our friends, family and neighbors who are struggling with depression. It is important we, as a community, come together and let those who are coping with these disorders know that we stand by their side." 

 

Disability Network of Mid-Michigan Executive Director David Emmel echoed the importance of collaboration. "The Great Lakes Bay Region is blessed to have a number of non-profit organizations providing needed services to people with disabilities. Collaborative efforts not only help spread the word about available services to a wider audience, but they also help ensure the consumer receives any and all services he or she feels are needed." 


During this campaign, donations to Disability Network and FCS can help Light Up a Life by providing mental health counseling and peer mentoring supports for your friends, family, and neighbors who utilize our services.  

   

Disability Network: What a Team!    


 
At Disability Network, we seek to create accessible and inclusive communities by promoting independence for all people with disabilities. Our person-centered services are provided based on what an individual wants as opposed to what we think the individual might need. The services we provide across our twelve-county region range from skill-building and peer support to community awareness and individual advocacy. 

 

We strive to not only provide as many services as possible but also to employ the most qualified people to provide those services. The majority of our staff are people with disabilities. In many cases, our staff have personally faced the struggles and situations our consumers are currently facing. Our staff is dedicated to the person-centered-approach and to helping our consumers live as independently as they so choose.

 

DNMM Staff recognized at Piano Palooza 2014

 

With those thoughts in mind, we would like to recognize the following individuals for their milestone years of service not only to Disability Network, but to the lives of consumers, their families and their communities.

 

TWENTY YEARS

Nora Maza  -  Skill Development Specialist
Kelly PeLong  -  Independent Living Program Manager
Fran Ramirez - Independent Living Assistant

 

FIFTEEN YEARS

Sandy Hall  -  Independent Living Assistant
Claudia Juarez  -  Independent Living Assistant
Stephanie Peterson  -  Independent Living Assistant
Lara Beth Sullivan  -  Skill Development Specialist
Tara White  -  Independent Living Support Coordinator

 

TEN YEARS

Lowell Gisel  -  Skill Development Program Manager
Sandra Lee  -  Independent Living Assistant
Tim Ogden  -  Skill Development Specialist
Kristin Penberthy  -  Independent Living Assistant
Nancy Pococke  -  Director of Operations
Danie Verhaege  -  Bay County IL Program Specialist
Dorea Walker  -  Independent Living Assistant
Gary Wright  -  Independent Living Assistant

 

FIVE YEARS

Denise Arnold  -  Independent Living Assistant
Beth Blakley  -  Independent Living Assistant
Jim Bowker  -  Independent Living Assistant
Terri Cady  - Community Education & Outreach Program Manager
Shannon Curtis  -  Independent Living Assistant
Darlene Ferguson  -  Administrative Assistant
Kelly Hair  -  Independent Living Assistant
Kelsey Hall  -  Independent Living Assistant
Jessica Lamkin  -  Independent Living Assistant
Steven Locke  -  Associate Director
Darlene Nadane  -  Nursing Facility Transition Outreach Specialist
Andrew Schmidt  -  Independent Living Assistant
Andrea Sneller  -  Information & Referral Specialist

 

We are grateful to these individuals for their many years of service. We are fortunate to have such an outstanding and dedicated team!

 

Curling League for Persons with Disabilities

Andy Young Several years ago, Andy Young began curling as a result of a Boy Scout trip with his father, Gregg, and younger brother, Jonny. Andy and Jonny continued to play the game through the Midland Curling Club's youth group at the Midland Curling Center, but once Jonny left for college and Andy reached the age of 21, the youth league was no longer an option.

 

Andy, a 25-year-old Midland resident with a cognitive disability, now plays with his dad in "Andy's League," a Special Olympians' curling league in Midland, which began play in November, 2011. Gregg Young, owner of the Midland-based consulting firm Young Associates, Inc., started Andy's League as a way to keep his son on the ice, playing the sport he loves.

 

Young said that he wanted to give others the same opportunity to enjoy the game that the Curling Club had given his family.

 

"I figured that we've got a Curling Club and sponsor (for it) right here in town, so why not try to put (a Special Olympics curling group) together and see if we can start (that). I had watched Andy play using his stick and realized why couldn't all the Special Olympics players do it, too?"

 

Participants at Midland Curling Club

Currently, Andy's League has about 60 regular participants, with 34 Special Olympics athletes, as well as parents, friends, paraprofessionals and other caregivers making up the rest of the group. Teams are often comprised of Special Olympians and their friends and family members.

 

Young also remarked that the league members have been some of the best advertisers for the league, using word-of-mouth to tell their friends.

 

Andy's League meets at the Midland Curling Center on Saturday mornings, from 9 a.m. to noon. 

 

Disability Network and Michigan Sports Unlimited will be showcasing Andy's League on Saturday, January 10th.  Participants using wheelchairs are encouraged to attend to learn more about this fully accessible sport! More information about that event will be posted on social media, the web, and in January's newsletter. 

 

The remaining sessions for Andy's League this season are:

December 6th and 20th

January 3rd and 10th

February 7th, 14th, 21st, and 28th

March 7th

 

For more information, contact Gregg Young at Gregg@youngassocinc.com.

 


Supreme Court To Weigh Police Obligations Under ADA

 

US Supreme Court Building The U.S. Supreme Court agreed last week to hear San Francisco's appeal of a ruling allowing a mentally ill, knife-wielding woman to sue police for shooting her, a case that could set standards for police treatment of people with disabilities.

The Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco ruled in February that a jury ought to decide whether two officers should have waited for backup rather than charging into Teresa Sheehan's room and shooting her when she lunged at them. The 2-1 ruling reinstated Sheehan's damage suit, which a federal judge had dismissed.

The nation's high court granted review of the case last Tuesday and will schedule a hearing for a ruling due by the end of June.

The central issue is how the Americans with Disabilities Act, which requires government agencies to make reasonable accommodations for those with disabilities, applies to police conduct toward a person with mental illness who may be violent.

"Police officers deserve clarity concerning their obligations under federal law, and public safety demands it," San Francisco City Attorney Dennis Herrera, whose office represents the officers, said. "We hope the high court reverses the Ninth Circuit's mistaken decision and restores reasonableness to this area of the law."

Ben Nisenbaum, a lawyer for Sheehan, said the law must draw distinctions between a person with mental illness who poses a threat to the public - like "a person running down the street with a knife" - and someone confronted by officers while alone in her room, with backup police on their way.

According to the appeals court, Sheehan, then 56, suffered from schizophrenia and had threatened her social worker with a knife before he summoned police to her room in a Mission District group home in August 2008.

When Sgt. Kimberly Reynolds and Officer Katherine Holder entered the room, Sheehan came at them with a knife and threatened to kill them, the court said. They left and called for backup, but re-entered shortly before help arrived, breaking down the door when Sheehan tried to block it.

They tried to subdue her with pepper spray, and when she still refused to drop the knife, they shot her five or six times, the court said.

Sheehan survived but needed two hip-replacement operations, a lawyer said. Prosecutors charged her with assault, but dropped the charges after a jury deadlocked.

In defending against Sheehan's civil suit, Reynolds and Holder said they had re-entered her room because they feared she might have access to other weapons or might escape. But the appeals court, in an opinion by Judge Raymond Fisher, said a reasonable jury "could find that Sheehan was in a confined area and not a threat to others," and that the officers had known that a deadly confrontation was likely when they entered with guns drawn.

In its appeal to the Supreme Court, San Francisco argued that the federal disability law does not require police to consider the mental health needs of "armed and violent suspects who are disabled." When mental illness causes "unpredictable, violent behavior as it did in this case," said Deputy City Attorney Peter Keith, "officers must make split-second decisions that protect the public and themselves."

Only eight Supreme Court justices will hear the case, as Justice Stephen Breyer's brother, U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer, was the judge who dismissed Sheehan's suit.

The case is San Francisco vs. Sheehan, 13-1412.

      

questionCommunity Feedback: Questions of the Month

 

We need your input! Here's an easy way for your voice to be heard!

 

As part of our on-going efforts to make our communities accessible, we're asking our readers questions each month. We'll use your answers, your suggestions, and your opinions as a basis for determining what we can do, in terms of services and advocacy, to build fully inclusive communities.

December 2014 Questions: 

What barriers, if any, have you encountered as you seek Housing? Have you been able to find affordable accessible housing? Can you offer any advice to other people with disabilities seeking housing?

 

Click here to submit your answer(s) to the question.  Your responses will be anonymous and we will not share your name or email information with any third party. 

   

STATEMENT OF ACCESSIBILITY 

 

DNMM advocates for the removal of barriers to independence and full inclusion of people with disabilities throughout the Mid-Michigan area. DNMM pledges to ensure accessibility. Each year, DNMM conducts a review of its own architectural, environmental, attitudinal, employment, communication, transportation, and other barriers that may exist which prohibit full access to our services.  

 

If you have any issues of concern regarding the accessibility of DNMM services and facilities, we encourage you to share that information with us.  

 

Please send your concerns or suggestions to:

 

        Executive Director

        Disability Network of Mid-Michigan

        1705 S. Saginaw Road

        Midland, MI 48640

 

 

CARF Accredited
Disability Network of Mid-Michigan is a CARF - Accredited, United Way non-profit agency.

United Way logo

 

In This Issue
Piano Palooza 2015!
Light Up A Life
Disability Network: What a Team!
Andy's League: A Curling League for Persons with Disabilities
US Supreme Court to Decide Police Obligations under ADA
Community Feedback: Question of the Month
 
Board of Directors
 
 Officers:
 Harry Leaver 
 - President

 Teresa Oliver 
 - Vice President

 Andrea Bridgewater 
 - Secretary

 Norm Donker 
 - Treasurer

 Members at Large:
 Jerry Pritchett
 Dr. Bill Bateman
 Tim Troy 
 June Price          
 Frank Champagne
 Mary Laforet
 Mary Reif
 Dr. Barbara Gibson
 Tom Provoast
   


 

 Executive Director: 

 David Emmel 

 
On The Web
 


 

Social Media  

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"There are very few people, even with the most severe disabilities, who cannot take control of their own lives. And there is no life without taking risks."

-Ed Roberts
Founder of the Independent Living Movement
 

 

DNMM 25 Year Anniversary Logo

Disability Network of
 Mid-Michigan celebrates
25 years of promoting  and encouraging independence for all people with disabilities.


 

Cover of core services brochure.
Click to download our Core Services Brochure
MI Assistive Technology Loan Fund brochure. Low Interest loans for people with disabilities and seniors to buy assistive equipment and devices. Pictures includes the MI ATLF logo and two pictures of children with disabilities.
Click to download the Michigan AT Loan Fund Brochure
CARF Accredited


Getting Hired
Bridging the Gap Between Job Seekers with Disabilities & Employers Looking to Hire

Piano Palooza logo with multiple pictures of attendees surrounding the logo.
Click here for information about Piano Palooza 2015!