Job-Seeker with Double Disabilities Struggles To Overcome Employers’ Concerns

OKLAHOMA CITY − Robert Girard has what it takes to get a job – work experience,
advanced training and a strong desire to make products with his hands in a
woodworking or metal shop. At 35, he has power tools, the necessary skills and
performance awards from previous jobs, but many employers are reluctant to give
him a chance.
Girard has Usher syndrome. This medical condition caused deafness and retinitis
pigmentosa, an eye disorder limiting his vision to the central area directly in
front of him.
Technically, Robert Girard is deaf-blind, a disability that many associate with
Helen Keller, the author and lecturer who remains one of the best known
Americans with deaf-blindness, although she died nearly 40 years ago.
Unlike Keller, however, Girard has useable vision.
“People don’t need to be afraid of hiring a person who is deaf-blind,” Girard
said through a sign language interpreter. “If an employer will give me a chance,
I’m willing to do whatever I need to do so I can be productive and support
myself.”
Girard’s Visual Services rehabilitation counselor Janie Fugitt hopes that new
incentives, such as stimulus fund payments to employers for hiring and training
qualified workers with disabilities, will help him find a job soon. The agency
may also pay a percentage of the new employees’ monthly salaries for a short
time with the understanding that they will be hired on a permanent basis if they
meet the job standards.
Fugitt coordinates with Joan Blake and Services to the Deaf Direct Care
Specialist Keri Nutt to help Girard locate and follow up on job leads. Dale
Rogers Training Center Job Coach Vivian Kelleher is an important part of the job
search team.
While he waits to be hired, Girard makes and sells wooden crafts with holiday or
fantasy themes – the kind that people put in their yards. He uses carbon paper
or an overhead projector to sketch designs, an electric saw to cut the shapes
and finally paints and assembles the finished pieces.
“I can see to do this work,” he explains, “and I don’t get hurt.
“Robert works hard to find a job and has done all the right things,” said Joan
Blake, Specialist on Deaf-Blindness for the Division of Visual Services in the
Department of Rehabilitation Services (DRS). “He should be wildly successful,
but he comes up against a brick wall.”
In order to increase public awareness about the needs and abilities of
Oklahomans with severe sight and hearing impairments, Governor Brad Henry
declared June 21-27 as Helen Keller Deaf-Blind Awareness Week in Oklahoma
While specific employment numbers are not available for deaf-blind workers, U.S.
Census data indicates that 37.7% of Oklahomans with all types of disabilities,
ages 16 to 64, are employed, compared to 80.4% of individuals in the same age
range with no disabilities.
To boost Girard’s employment chances, DRS’ Visual Services sent him to the Helen
Keller National Center in Sands Point, New York for assessment and intensive
training focused on employment skills, travel, computer use, and financial and
household management.
Rehabilitation of the Blind Specialist Christine Baldwin worked with Girard on
travel skills and orientation to his apartment, bus routes and safe travel
routes to potential jobs.
“Robert might need DRS to provide an interpreter when he’s first on the job, but
once he learns the job he won’t need an interpreter most of the time,” Brinkley
said.
Girard also communicates with written notes.
“People with vision and hearing losses can do many jobs very well and can live
independently in their own homes, like Robert does, assisted by special
technology,” Joan Blake explained. “About the only thing they can’t do is get in
the car and drive.”
“Sometimes the boss and co-workers are not willing to work with me,” Robert
Girard said, “but those who gave me a chance in the past found out I can be a
benefit to the company.”
For more information about available services for Oklahomans who are deaf and
blind, contact Joan Blake at (405) 522-3417 or email
jblake@drs.state.ok.us .