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Stacey Milbern, a Warrior for Disability Justice, Dies at 33

Posted by ADA Sign Depot on Jun 09, 2020

Through her organizing, writing and speaking, Ms. Milbern was a prominent and widely respected figure in what is known as the disability justice movement, in the Bay Area and beyond. Since her death, friends and admirers have posted tributes on social media under the hashtag #StaceyTaughtUs. Some posts mention a book she recommended, others the importance of self-worth or cooperation or thinking big.

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A blind therapy dog brings joy to assisted-living residents

Posted by ADA Sign Depot on Jun 09, 2020

Baby, an 8-year-old therapy dog, is blind and had her eyes removed long ago. She doesn’t hear well, either. She has heart issues and survived cancer. But her gentleness offers warmth. Baby has become a beloved guest at Island City Assisted Living in Eaton Rapids, Mich., a small town about 20 miles from Lansing. After six years of weekly visits, she is a familiar face, even if residents can only peer through the glass. Sometimes they’re already waiting.

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Annie Glenn, who in a high-profile life as the wife of John Glenn, the astronaut and senator, became an inspiration to many who, like her, stuttered severely, advocating on behalf of people with communication disorders of all kinds, died on Tuesday at a nursing home near St. Paul, Minn. She was 100.

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Nearly a decade later, after struggling for years to find fulfilling work, Dunn became the driving force behind a state bill to provide alternative graduation paths for students with disabilities. Working with a group of advocates, Dunn testified in committees and spent long hours meeting with legislators, explaining how being denied a diploma made her feel undervalued and shut her out of jobs for which she was qualified. Her story brought some lawmakers to tears.

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A blind state leader is giving up his office to join the Jesuits

Posted by ADA Sign Depot on Apr 15, 2020

He went to public schools in the Seattle suburbs, and his parents insisted that he not be treated differently than other children were. Habib has often told the story of how his mother, Susan Amini, responded when she learned that he was being kept on the sidelines of the school playground because he was blind and administrators worried that he’d hurt himself: She marched to the principal’s office, declared that she would teach him the layout of the playground and demanded that he be given full access to it from then on. A broken arm, she said, could be fixed more easily than a broken spirit.

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