By Maria Robins-Somerville, Bklyner | January 16, 2019

Original article on Bklyner’s website

Helen Keller Services (HKS) is an organization that has served the blind, deaf, those with vision loss and DeafBlind communities for 125 years, providing early intervention programs, preschool, summer camps, vocational training, a vision clinic, recreational activities and rehabilitation, among other services.

HKS CEO Joseph F. Bruno delivered remarks alongside Councilwoman Laurie Cumbo, Councilman Robert Cornegy, and others at the event, addressing a crowd that included HKS board members, preschoolers, staff, clients and members of other disability advocacy groups.

There were eight HKS Children’s Learning Center preschoolers in attendance who wiggled quietly at the front of the crowd—the program currently has 39 students and is tuition-free for all. Speakers heralded HKS’s loving environment and dedication to children with disabilities.

A woman raising her hand next to a man and speaking into a microphone. She is standing behind a podium that has the Helen Keller Services logo on it.
Laurie Cumbo speaks about education for all at the Helen Keller Services ribbon-cutting ceremony (Photo: Maria Robins-Somerville/Bklyner)

“It is our responsibility to meet them right where they are at because it is what is known as differences that create innovation,” Cumbo said. “It is those differences, those abilities to have super-abilities, that’s what creates a better world, a more innovative world and that’s where we’ll find solutions to the issues that challenge us every day.”

Rosemary “Rose” Romano is blind and has worked with HKS for over fifty years. Helen Keller Services hired her in 1964 to help teach switchboard mechanics to others who were blind or had vision loss.

A older woman looking into the camera
Rose Romano tells her story of 50-years at Helen Keller Services (Photo: Maria Robins-Somerville/Bklyner)

“I met my husband here. He was the one person they told me to stay away from because he was a real ladies man,” she said laughing.

In addition to switchboard mechanics, she taught touch-typing and braille and has long been a chatty and vibrant member of the HKS community.

“I prefer the interpersonal stuff,” she said in describing her transition from switchboard operator to teaching others.

A group of people looking at a man who is speaking behind a podium with the Helen Keller Services logo on it
Crowd watches as CEO Joseph F. Bruno delivers remarks at the Helen Keller Services ribbon-cutting ceremony (Photo: Maria Robins-Somerville/Bklyner)

CEO Joseph F. Bruno said that in addition to helping deaf, blind or folks with vision loss find and sustain work at places such as National Grid or Macy’s, the group puts a focus on individuals. Bruno gave the example of Gus Chalkias, who started at HKS as an intern four years ago.

“Gus sits here every day at lunch with a bunch of people and it’s a great conversation just listening to him. He’s smart, they admire him because he teaches them a lot about how to deal with the students and other clients they might have.”

Chalkias works at HKS, teaching clients how to use assistive technology. He said his background in rehabilitation and mental health counseling has come in handy with his work in HKS Youth Services. Chalkias said the HKS environment feels like family.

“Everyone was so welcoming and they just opened their doors and their hearts and I haven’t wanted to leave,” Chalkias told Bklyner.

A group of smiling men and women. Many of them hold a scissor together and cut through the middle of a large red horizontal ribbon.
Community members cut the ribbon at the new Helen Keller Services headquarters (Photo: Maria Robins-Somerville/Bklyner)

The new space was designed to consider the specific obstacles that individuals who are blind, deaf or have low vision might face. For example, while ample glass doors provide light and a feeling of openness, the glass displays the organization’s logo, called a “distraction band,” to keep those with impaired vision safe. Areas, where hallways intersect, have a unique texture embossed in rubber on the floor so that those who are blind or have vision loss can tell where they might need to turn down a hallway. All signs are also written in braille.

The waiting area of the Children's Learning Center. In the waiting area there are 2 orange couches, a white wall with braille on it to the left, and a Helen Keller Children's Learning Center sign mounted to a wooden wall on the right..
The waiting area at the Children’s Learning Center at Helen Keller Services (Photo: Maria Robins-Somerville/Bklyner)

The classrooms are insulated with SonaSpray to keep noise levels down and fitted with special lights for vision training. Orange couches and colorful wall patterns are meant to bring warmth to both the classroom and office spaces.

A preschool classroom showing blue mats on the ground and propped against a wall, items in a shelf, a bookcase, and a small desk and chair.
New preschool classroom at the Children’s Learning Center at Helen Keller Services (Photo: Maria Robins-Somerville/Bklyner)

Bruno told Bklyner that the organization is focused on independence, something that can mean different things to different clients. For some, this might just be the confidence in safely crossing the street, or for an elderly person –  regaining a level of self-sufficiency in their own home.

“Independence could be a job, having done all the other stuff and being able to know how to move about. The independence is ‘I want to work’ or ‘I’m a young person and I don’t want to be in my house with my family. I want to get an education. I want to move forward,’” Bruno said.

Original article on Bklyner’s website

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