[blind-democracy] Re: my cil in action

  • From: Richard Driscoll <llocsirdsr@xxxxxxx>
  • To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Thu, 12 May 2016 09:50:32 -0600

Joe:

It has been my experience that any bureaucrat in any bureaucracy will use any form as long as it is indicative that the entire bureau is termed 'in the possessive format'. This habit has been known to me for a goodly number of years. Thus any credit due for any specific or non specific activity is the result of the individual activity and the entire bureau is responsible to that person. Thus Mr. Zelley makes use of the term 'my company' implying he is the owner and leader and decision maker of the bureau which you note as Center for Independent Living.

Richard


On 5/12/2016 6:36 AM, joe harcz Comcast wrote:


Note Mike Zelley always refers to our center for Independent Living as “my company”. He even did that once again at the Michigan Department of Civil Rights public hearings on the Flint Water crisis held here on April 28. By the way The Disability Network has done virtually nothing for people with disabilities in these regards.

But, that is because Zelley thinks a center for independent living is his company. Oh, TDN is now run by his non-disabled son, Luke., No nepotism here though right?

Now Zelley will be speaking before the conservative American Enterprise Institute. I suppose he’ll be talking about how to funnel people with disabilities in to sheltered workshops like Peckham which TDN recently did and how to turn people with disabilities in to commodities to be literally warehoused on the taxpayer’s dime!

Some independent living philosophy huh?

This is my CIL in action.

Joe Harcz

Citizen with Disabilities

See AEI agenda here:

AEI’s exclusive Vision Talks series convenes America’s top scholars, civic leaders, and practitioners to offer fresh perspectives on key areas of public

debate and policy. These talks will be filmed and disseminated as stand-alone videos.

Too often, the conversation about opportunity and barriers to success is all policy and no people. The voices of individuals who have succeeded despite

setbacks are left out.

Join AEI for an evening of talks from those with firsthand experience in overcoming obstacles. Bryan Kelley spent 22 years behind bars for murder and now

helps ex-offenders successfully re-enter society. Melony Armstrong broke down occupational licensing laws in Mississippi to grow her African hair-braiding

business and open new opportunities for low-income women. Mike Zelley refused to allow a paralyzing accident to deter him from employment and now works

with businesses to connect individuals with disabilities with jobs.

Sen. Ben Sasse (R-NE) will deliver a keynote address, and a discussion of the lessons learned from the talks will follow.

We welcome attendees to follow the talks and comment on Twitter and Facebook with #AEIVisionTalks.

This event will not be livestreamed.

Agenda

5:30 PM

Registration

6:00 PM

Keynote address:

Ben Sasse, United States Senator (R-NE)

Talks:

Melony Armstrong, Naturally Speaking Salon; Armstrong Academy

Bryan Kelley, Prison Entrepreneurship Program

Mike Zelley, The Disability Network

7:10 PM

Discussion

Participants:

Melony Armstrong, Naturally Speaking Salon; Armstrong Academy

Timothy P. Carney, AEI

Bryan Kelley, Prison Entrepreneurship Program

Aparna Mathur, AEI

Mike Zelley, The Disability Network

Moderator:

Robert Doar, AEI

7:30 PM

Adjournment and reception

Event Contact Information

For more information, please contact Kathryn Whitehurst at Kathryn.Whitehurst@xxxxxxx, 202.862.5884.

Media Contact Information

For media inquiries, please contact MediaServices@xxxxxxx, 202.862.5829.

Speaker Biographies

Melony Armstrong successfully fought to reduce regulations on natural hair braiders in Mississippi after her attempt to start a business ran into obstacles

with the state cosmetology board. She is the founder and owner of Naturally Speaking Salon and Armstrong Academy, a natural hair care salon and training

center in Tupelo, Mississippi. She has trained more than 125 women who have gone on to earn a living in natural hair braiding, and her business provides

jobs for 25 women.

Robert Doar is the Morgridge Fellow in Poverty Studies at AEI, where he studies and evaluates how free enterprise and improved federal policies and programs

can reduce poverty and provide opportunities for vulnerable Americans. Before joining AEI, Mr. Doar worked for Mayor Michael Bloomberg as commissioner

of New York City’s Human Resources Administration, where he administered 12 public assistance programs, including welfare, food assistance, public health

insurance, and help for people living with HIV/AIDS. Before joining the Bloomberg administration, Mr. Doar was New York State commissioner of social services,

helping make New York a model for the implementation of welfare reform.

Bryan Kelley spent nearly 22 years behind bars and now helps returning citizens traverse the very steps he took less than two years ago. Mr. Kelley leads

a reentry team that picks up Prison EntrepreneurshipProgram participants at the prison gate upon release and ensures that they continue their journey

of success outside prison walls. In his role he wears many hats: life coach, counselor, property manager, recruiter, fundraiser, speaker, disciplinarian,

mentor, and impassioned ambassador for a program that helped change the trajectory of his life. Mr. Kelley earned a bachelor’s degree in psychology while

incarcerated and served as a peer educator for more than 10 years, a role that has prepared him well for his current responsibilities.

Ben Sasse is a United States senator representing Nebraska. He was elected in a 2014, winning each of Nebraska’s 93 counties and securing the second-largest

margin for a new senator in the history of the state. He came to the Senate having spent the previous five years as a college president. When he was recruited

to take over the failing Midland University, he was just 37 years old, making him one of the youngest college presidents in the nation. He has worked with

the Boston Consulting Group and McKinsey. He earned a bachelor’s at Harvard and a Ph.D. in American history at Yale.

Mike Zelley has been a paraplegic for 27 years as a result of an automobile accident, and he now works to connect and support individuals with disabilities

in employment. He is founder and president of the Disability Network, a consumer-driven, private nonprofit serving 6,000 individuals with disabilities.

Previously, Mr. Zelley was founder and president of TravAbility Inc. and senior vice president and board officer for SecureData Corporation.

Source:

http://www.aei.org/events/overcoming-barriers-to-opportunity-a-vision-talks-event/#14630553893592&pheight=20




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