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September 5, 2007 Deafweekly is an independent news report for the deaf and hard-of-hearing community that is mailed to subscribers every Wednesday and available to read at www.deafweekly.com. Please visit our website to read current and back issues, sign up for a subscription and advertise. Deafweekly is copyrighted 2007 and any unauthorized use, including reprinting of news, is prohibited. Please support our advertisers; they make it possible for you to receive Deafweekly at no charge.
We're giving away two FIRST CLASS roundtrip airline tickets and three brand-new Dell laptops! Enter NOW by taking our survey at http://www.ip-relay.com/survey.html! No purchase necessary to enter or win. Open to U.S. residents 18 years or older as of 5/01/07 who are deaf, hard of hearing, and/or with a speech disability. For official rules, visit http://www.ip-relay.com/sweep_rules.html. Sweepstakes ends September 25, 2007. © 2007 Verizon. All Rights Reserved. For complete service terms and conditions, please go to http://www.ip-relay.com/. ++++ADV+++++ADV+++++ADV++++ +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ September is "Pay For Your Deafweekly Subscription Month." Don't worry, Deafweekly is still free, just as it's always been since the first issue in October 2004. But if you appreciate the service that Deafweekly provides to you free of charge all year round and would like to express your thanks, a donation would be very much appreciated. Donations of any size will be accepted, but those who contribute $25 or more will receive a free copy of my new book, Deaf Haiku, as a gesture of thanks. To donate through Paypal, please go to our website (www.deafweekly.com) and click on PayPal Donate. Alternately, you may send a donation through the mail to Deafweekly, PO Box 18121, Rochester, NY 14618. Thank you!
SON OF DEAF PARENTS DROWNS WHILE HELPING FRIENDS A New Jersey teen who planned to become a sign-language interpreter drowned in the Delaware River last week while helping friends free a boat stuck on a sandbar during low tide. Ryan Lewis, 17, went missing around 9 p.m. last Wednesday night after swimming about 50 yards toward his friends, said the Philadelphia Inquirer. His body was recovered Saturday afternoon. Lewis, whose parents met as students at the Katzenbach School for the Deaf, planned to attend Camden County College, said a feature in the West Deptford High School newspaper (page 3). A memorial fund has been established. CONVICT GOES MISSING AT PITTSBURGH STATE PRISON A deaf convict failed to return August 25 to a minimum security section of a Pittsburgh, Pa. state prison, reported the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. State police were on the lookout for Bernard J. Davis, 39, described as black, about 5-foot-9, 180 pounds and with the name Poochie tattooed on his left forearm. He is serving time for burglary charges and has been convicted in the past for burglary and trespassing. Information on Davis’ whereabouts can be relayed to the state police in Pittsburgh at 412-787-2000. WOMAN CLAIMS JAIL NEGLECT LED TO SON’S DEATH The mother of a deaf Colorado man who died after a suicide attempt in Denver County Jail filed a lawsuit last Tuesday against the city and county of Denver. Debbie Ulibarri’s lawsuit claims sheriff’s deputies failed to make required checks on her son, Shawn Francisco Vigil, 23, reported The Denver Post. The suit, filed in U.S. District Court, also claims that jail employees did not accommodate Vigil’s disability by providing access to a TTY and closed captioning. Vigil was booked on August 28, 2005 on suspicion of sex assault and kidnapping and tried to hang himself in his cell one month later. An inmate discovered him, but Vigil died of his injuries. REWARD OFFERED FOR MAN MISSING 21 MONTHS Pamela Creech, the mother of a deaf Berkeley, Calif. man missing since December 2005, choked back tears at a news conference last Friday, said the San Jose Mercury News. Rodney Texera, 41, disappeared in Oroville after getting in an argument with a friend, said Berkeley police Sgt. Mary Kusmiss, and left with his backpack toward a grove of trees. He hasn’t been seen or heard from since. A $5,000 reward was announced last week, but stepfather Willis Creech isn’t optimistic. “I don’t think he’s out there,” he said. “He hasn’t taken any money out of his bank account, and it’s loaded.” WOMAN SUES LAS VEGAS CASINO OVER ACCIDENT A lawsuit filed by a deaf Las Vegas, Nev. woman against Station Casinos is expected to go before a judge this month, reported KVBC. Lena Morreale’s case centers on an accident five years ago, when she was hit by a speeding truck that made a sudden u-turn. She suffered hand and wrist injuries and lost her job as a typist and part of her ability to communicate. “I need my hands, that’s my livelihood, that’s my life,” she said. A settlement offer from Station Casinos was rejected as insufficient. For Morreale, “it’s a world that won’t ever be the same,” said her attorney, Marina Kolias. TEXAS CHURCH REPORTS TWO BURGLARIES The New Life Deaf Fellowship Church in Fort Worth, Texas was the target of two recent burglaries, reported CBS 11. In the first incident, $2,500 worth of lawn equipment and tools for volunteers was stolen from a storage shed. In the second incident, someone broke into the church and took $400 in donated change that was earmarked for a worship garden. The 125-member church is now hoping for an insurance check and Pastor Aric Randolph said there’s only so much that can be done. “If people want to break in,” he said, “they’re going to.” CHAMBER OF COMMERCE OPPOSES ADA RESTORATION ACT The U.S. Chamber of Commerce has gone on record opposing the ADA Restoration Act of 2007 (H.R. 3195), said a Justice for All action alert. A letter from the Chamber that urges Members of the U.S. House of Representatives not to cosponsor or support the Act “mischaracterizes” a measure that is simply meant to restore the original intent of Congress in passing the Americans with Disabilities Act in 1990, said the alert. Community members were asked to voice their displeasure to the Chamber’s national office in Washington, D.C. and to their own regional offices. COURTROOM GUIDE TO HELP JUDGES DEAL WITH DEAF Judges throughout Ohio have been given a new reference guide to help them meet Americans with Disabilities Act requirements regarding deaf and hard-of-hearing people. According to Gongwer News Service, the Ohio Supreme Court guide will help judges decide when special assistance is needed for defendants, witnesses and jury members. The card has questions judges can ask to determine communication preferences and decide if an interpreter is qualified. It also contains an oath to be administered to interpreters and model instructions judges can use to clarify the interpreters’ role. FEMA ISSUES GUIDE ON PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES The federal government has released “A Reference Guide for Accommodating Individuals with Disabilities in the Provision of Disaster Mass Care, Housing and Human Services.” According to a news release, the guide is the first of a series of disability-related guidelines to be produced by the Department of Homeland Security’s Federal Emergency Management Agency. “FEMA is committed to ensuring that its programs and emergency operations meet the needs of people with disabilities,” said FEMA Administrator R. David Paulison.
Select Your VRS Interpreter with Lifelinks VRS Yes, now you can select the gender of your VRS interpreter; select an interpreter whom you like, who understands you well, who speaks Spanish, who is friendly, personable, prompt and excellent. Lifelinks Video Relay SPEAKS YOUR LANGUAGE! Dial Lifelinks No Wait VRS: (Ask about LIFELINKS FREE WEB CAMERA offer at freewebcam@lifelinks.net) ++++ADV+++++ADV+++++ADV++++ Attention: Film Lovers! There is Show Me Deaf Film Festival in St. Louis, Missouri on September 27-30, 2007. See the vlog about it. Go to http://deafadvocate.blogspot.com/. It is at our new clubhouse. Order Tickets Now! Limited Seating. Take advantage of special prices! Go to http://www.deafimages.tv for updates and list of movies. Get a free SMDFF poster from there! Gary Brooks is the keynote speaker. Keith Wann will perform on Saturday, September 29th. There are more than 30 films (shorts and features) to watch during the weekend. Come for fun and social! Any inquiries, email at SMDFF@deafimages.tv. ++++ADV+++++ADV+++++ADV++++ +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ MAN KNIFED TO DEATH FOR HELPING DEAF FRIEND An England man celebrating his 21st birthday was stabbed to death when he tried to stop a group of bullies from taunting his deaf friend, reported Metro UK. David Haynes was attacked outside a restaurant in the early morning of August 26 in Wellingborough, Northamptonshire and died during surgery. As floral tributes piled up at the spot where Haynes was stabbed, three men were quickly arrested and charged with his murder. “He stood up to these yobs because he knew what they were doing wasn’t right,” said a friend. “But he paid the ultimate price.” TEEN GETS 3 YEARS FOR ASSAULT ON DEAF MAN An Aberdeen, Scotland teenager was sentenced to three years in prison for battering a deaf man, reported This Is Aberdeen. Jordan Milne, 18, punched 40-year-old Timothy Nicholson to the ground and then repeatedly stamped on his head, leaving the victim unconscious with a fractured jaw, and facial, skull and brain injuries. “This was an unprovoked attack on a person with a disability,” said Sheriff Kieran McKlernan. Milne was already on probation for attempting to set his father on fire and admitted to assault and attempted robbery of a girl in June. RESEARCH GRANT TO FUND HEARING ‘DUMMY’ Researchers at the University of Essex (England) have won a ?447,000 ($903,000 US) grant to create a “dummy” consisting of a computer program that can simulate a patient’s hearing ability. According to Scenta, the machine can take the place of a patient during testing to ensure that an accurate aid is created, eliminating the need for patients to return for adjustments. UE Prof. Ray Meddis, head of the research team and 20-year veteran of hearing studies, said the project will allow a more detailed measurement of a person’s hearing loss, leading to “a better idea of what remedies can be applied.” MOM’S 200-MILE CYCLING TRIP TO HELP CHARITY Abigail Willis, a 44-year-old deaf mother from Surrey, England, will ride her bicycle 200 miles along the Nile next year to raise money for the National Deaf Children’s Society. She wants to help the NDCS, said the Woking News and Mail, because the society helped her own family when she and her brother were born deaf – and continues to help with her own three deaf children, ages, 15, 17 and 19. (Husband Martin, 49, also deaf, works for an insurance company.) “The training will be tough,” said Willis, who has already made cycling trips in Mexico and Vietnam. With a sponsorship goal of ?2,500 ($5,065 US), Willis got a boost in July when a shopping center collection netted over ?1,000 ($2,025 US). WEEKEND BURGLARY LEAVES SCHOOL WITH ‘NOTHING’ A job training center for the deaf in Port-of-Spain, Trinidad and Tobago was victimized by burglars over the weekend of August 18-19, reported the Trinidad & Tobago Express. Items stolen from the 20-student Deaf Pioneers Life Center included computers, microwave ovens, sewing machines, televisions and more, totaling over 100,000 TTD ($15,975 US). “How can people be so heartless?” asked teacher and interpreter Sharon Henry. “Now we have nothing to assist the students.” AUSTRALIAN IMPLANT PIONEER NAMED FATHER OF YEAR Dr. John Quayle, chairman of the Queensland, Australia cochlear implant program since its inception 25 years ago, has been named Father of the Year by the Queensland Father’s Day Council. Quayle, a father of four and grandfather of 10, used the Brisbane award ceremony to criticize “political correctness” that prevents some deaf children from getting the best treatment, said The Age. “We can make the majority of deaf children hear and talk and learn, and for various reasons, we’re not doing it,” he said. The best outcomes occur when intervention such as a cochlear implant is made in the first six months, he added. COLLEGE FOR DEAF TAKES ROOT IN INDIA Deaf students in India have a new educational option with the establishment of the Satyabhama Devi College for Hearing Impaired. The college opens this month with 32 seats and courses that include English, computer science, economics and history. It’s the first such college in Orissa and second in the country, said the New Indian Express, and “will provide education through hearing aid, close circuit TV and overhead projectors.” CANADIAN CROQUET RAISES MONEY FOR CENTER A “laughter-filled” croquet tournament in Oak Bay, B.C., Canada raised more than $5,000 ($4,745 US) for the Island Deaf and Hard of Hearing Centre, said the Oak Bay News. The croque fest attracted 112 entrants in two-person teams with names such as the Rum and Croques. Islanders’ member Rush Dalziel described what makes a good croquet player: “An even temperament ... and people who can hold their alcohol.”
Sorenson IP Relay™ expands communication possibilities for deaf and hard-of hearing individuals by enabling free text-to-speech relay calls with any standard telephone user in the U.S. Sorenson
IP Relay calls can be initiated by visiting the Web site at www.siprelay.com from a personal computer, or can be made with a Sidekick, Blackberry, Tr?o or other mobile device. A trusted Sorenson Communications Assistant (CA) instantaneously facilitates the conversation between the Sorenson IP Relay user and a friend, doctor or business associate. Sorenson IP Relay calls are free for deaf and hard-of-hearing individuals. New! Sony Technology for Teaching and Learning ASL SANS Inc. is the exclusive licensor and developer of the Sony Virtuoso™ and Soloist Language Learning Instructional Software. With our software plug-ins for ASL and video camera, teachers and students can now easily communicate visually in an instructional classroom. Students are able to view lessons and digitally record their responses. Each student’s work can be saved in a LAN folder, reviewed, and assessed by the instructor at any time --- eliminating the need to lug stacks of video tapes! Contact us at sales@sansinc.com to arrange an on-site demo or visit at www.sansinc.com. ++++ADV+++++ADV+++++ADV++++ +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ DRIVE-THRU DEVICE DESIGNED TO AID ACCESSIBILITY A restaurant in Eau Claire, Wisc. is “serving up a special kind of service to make its drive-thru accessible to everyone,” reported WEAU TV 13. Culver’s Manager Shaun O’Meara says the “real convenient” new service allows hearing-impaired customers to “just drive up and push a button; it rings a bell inside and someone runs out.” The customer is then given an order form to fill out and bring to the window. The $600 system is “taking the barriers down so anyone that wants to can order in the drive-thru,” said O’Meara. DENVER POST OFFICES TO JOIN IN DEAF AWARENESS Five post offices in Denver, Colo. are planning special events in recognition of Deaf Awareness Month this month. Postal reps with interpreters will explain how to use a variety of U.S. Postal Service products and services, said an announcement, and registrations will be accepted for tours of the Denver General Mail Facility. The USPS has about 4,000 deaf employees nationwide including 65 in Denver. “This is the first postal event of its kind,” said USPS Deaf Liaison Saundra Calderone. “We are pleased to reach out to the deaf community.” LEADERSHIP, LIFESTYLE CAMP SEEKS PRESENTERS Workshop presenters are needed for the Leadership & Lifestyle Camp, scheduled for June 11-15, 2008 in Port Orchard, Wash. Hosted by the Northwest Rainbow Alliance of the Deaf, the conference is designed for deaf, deaf-blind and hard-of-hearing lesbians, gays, bisexuals, transgenders, intersexes and queers. The registration fee is $255 ($200 for ages 18-25). The deadline to propose a workshop is November 3. To learn more, click here. ++++ADV+++++ADV+++++ADV++++ More 25% Discounts at Harris Communications This week we have another selection of popular products on sale at 25% off: 1) Silent Call Carbon Monoxide Detector with Strobe (SC-14A896L) -only $164.95! 2) Viewpoints Set (VTVP1-3) -only $99.95! 3) ClearSounds CSC50 UltraClear Amplified Phone (HC-CSC50)-only $119.95! This sale ends September 20, 2007. Watch for new sales every week! Go to: http://www.harriscomm.com/link/?www.harriscomm.com?sr=dw or contact us at mailto:info@harriscomm.com. ++++ADV+++++ADV+++++ADV++++ America's funniest ASL comedian! ++++ADV+++++ADV+++++ADV++++ +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ CAPTIONING ON HANDHELD MEDIA FOCUS OF $600,000 GRANT WGBH in Boston is getting $600,000 from the federal government to help make handheld media accessible for people who are deaf or hard of hearing. The three-year grant, from the Department of Education’s National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research, will be used to research and develop ways to deliver captioning to iPods, cell phones, PDAs and other mobile devices. “More and more video content is being delivered through handheld media,” said WGBH’s Larry Goldberg in a news release, “yet the 28 million Americans who are deaf and hard of hearing can’t fully benefit from this content.” UTAH COLLEGE HIRES HUSBAND-WIFE TEAM Utah Valley State College has hired a husband-and-wife team from Gallaudet University to help build its new Deaf Studies program. Will Garrow and Flavia Fleischer are “going to be the key to the program,” Program Coordinator Bryan Eldredge told NetXNews. “Both of them bring energy; that’s the biggest thing.” Garrow and Fleischer, who met through the U.S. Deaf Ski Association, both enjoy Utah’s outdoor lifestyle and said they are eager to begin their new jobs. Said Garrow: “I’ve told my wife, ‘We’re not moving! This is home.’” $14 MILLION AD CAMPAIGN SET FOR HEARING AIDS Amplifon, one of the world’s largest distributors of hearing aids, has hired advertising giant Saatchi & Saatchi to lead a $14 million ad campaign. Founded in Italy in 1950, Amplifon is the owner of Miracle Ear, which it acquired in the late 1990s. Saatchi, which has 153 offices in 83 countries, will create television, direct marketing, in-store, print and online campaigns, reported the U.K.’s Marketing Week. “Getting a hearing aid is thought of as a negative experience,” said Saatchi’s Andy Bell. “We want to change the perceptions.” CALIFORNIA CALL CENTER SET TO CHANGE OWNERS A call center in Riverbank, Calif. that has changed management four times since opening in 1996 will do so again when Verizon sells the center to GoAmerica, Inc. The center, which employs about 700 relay service operators, will change hands (along with a Memphis, Tenn. call center) as part of GoAmerica’s $50 million cash buyout of Verizon’s relay services division. GoAmerica will continue to operate the center, company spokeswoman Laura Kowalcyk told The Modesto Bee, using Irving, Texas subcontractor Stellar Nordia Services to handle the center’s staffing and operation. The deal is expected to be finalized later this year, she said.
Save 15% on Simplicity Products for Home and School ++++ADV+++++ADV+++++ADV++++ Want to know who called? Just check your e-mail for Video Mail and Missed Calls from Hamilton Relay VRS! Sign up for your personal toll free number to begin receiving calls and messages! Visit www.hamiltonrelay.com/videorelay/videomail.htm for all the details. Remember, now you have the option of using Hamilton Relay VRS with any videophone. Try HamiltonVRS.tv today! It’s the freedom of VRS and the convenience of Video Mail and Missed Calls – complete with the service and commitment of Hamilton Relay. So get connected and stay connected with Hamilton Relay VRS Video Mail and Missed Calls. Hamilton Relay. That’s what I’m talking about. ++++ADV+++++ADV+++++ADV++++ ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ‘TRAIN GO SORRY’ AUTHOR PENS FOURTH NOVEL Author Leah Hager Cohen has published seven books in 14 years, said The Boston Globe, but it is her first – “Train Go Sorry,” about her childhood at a New York school for the deaf where her father was superintendent – that is probably still her best known. Cohen’s newest book, “House Lights,” is her fourth novel, to balance out her four nonfiction books. “As a reader, I was never interested in nonfiction,” said Cohen, but a New York agent bluntly told her he “didn’t see anything in my short stories that he could work with.” The agent, Barney Karpfinger, eventually agreed to represent her novels. He now says, “I am encouraging her to stay with her fiction.” FEMALE FILMMAKERS PLAN FIRST FILM FESTIVAL Onisha Blagdon and Mei Te have created a new organization, Deaf Women of Silver Screen, and announced plans for the first “Divas of Silver Screen” film festival. It is expected to take place March 21-22, 2008 in Orange County, Calif. Blagdon is a UCLA School of Film and Television graduate and owner of two production companies, Heaven Dragon Pictures and Deaf Everyday. Te is an artist and graphic designer who has done work for many companies. To learn more, visit www.dwss.org/1.html or write to deafwomensilverscreen@msn.com. SEATTLE MIXED-MEDIA SCULPTOR HAS GALLERY SHOW Mixed-media artist Jessica Geiger is having a show of her life-size, doll-like sculptures at Vision Gallery in Seattle, Wash. Geiger’s exhibit, titled “Fallen Through the Cracks: Outsiders and Renegades,” offers what said art reviewer Gary Faigin calls an “unflinching portrayal of flawed humanity” with subjects that include “homeless people, abused children, junkies, anorexics and other troubled souls rarely portrayed in art.” The exhibit, free and open to the public, runs through September 28. More about Geiger can be found on her website, www.jessicageiger.com.
20th Anniversary Celebration Means 20% off all Sonic Alert Clocks! ++++ADV+++++ADV+++++ADV++++ AT&T Relay -- your world delivered! The new AT&T is keeping you connected 24/7. Fast and free -- you ++++ADV+++++ADV+++++ADV++++ +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ BISON RETURN TO DIVISION III WITH 32-13 WIN The Gallaudet University Bison played their first football game in 12 years as a Division III team last Saturday, beating the Saint Vincent College Bearcats, 32-13, in Latrobe, Pa. According to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Gallaudet “did not show much offense in the first half” but still led 19-0 on two touchdown passes from Jason Coleman to Kevin Alley and a blocked punt that was recovered by Robin Shannon. The Bearcats, playing their first varsity game in 45 years, scored on their first possession in the second half, their first score since 1962. They cut the lead to 19-13 before Gallaudet pulled away. The Bison, subject of a recent Washington Post feature, have gone 16-2 under Coach Ed Hottle since he started two years ago. MARYLAND, OPPONENT COMBINE FOR 95 POINTS The Maryland School for the Deaf football team won their season opener last Friday against the Central Maryland Christian Crusaders by a score of 60-35. According to the Frederick News Post, the point total of 95 puts the game among the top five in Maryland prep football history. “I was expecting a lower score,” said MSD Coach Andy Bonheyo. The Orioles were hurt by 17 penalties totaling 120 yards, some that Bonheyo said were unnecessary. “We’re going to review the video tape to see where the mistakes are,” he said.
Deaf Community Auction – win a trip to Australia! Looking for amazing bargains on travel, sports memorabilia, housewares, and items made by members of the Deaf community? Browse through a “sneak preview” of DCARA’s Community Auction to see some of the exciting items up for bid—including a football signed by Joe Montana and a trip for two to Australia and New Zealand! More items will be added every week—sign up now to receive weekly email updates. Bidding opens September 10th and closes October 12th. Open to bidders nationwide—tell your friends and family! Registration open now at http://dcara.cmarket.com ! ++++ADV+++++ADV+++++ADV++++ +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ASHRAM IN NEW YORK TO HOST YOGA RETREAT Four deaf yoga instructors are coming together to lead the fall Northeast Deaf Yoga Retreat. It’s set for October 11-14 at the Sivananda Ashram in Woodbourne, N.Y. The event is limited to 30 participants. “This retreat is about community, self-discovery, health and healing,” said organizer Lila Lolling. “Come join us as we celebrate life and oneness!” To learn more, visit www.deafyoga.com/nyretreat. LAS VEGAS POKER TOURNEY SET FOR OCTOBER 13 The third annual Las Vegas World Deaf Poker Tournament, No Limit, Texas Hold Em, is set for 10 a.m. Saturday, October 13 at the world-famous Palms Casino Resort. Robert Brooke of Colorado won the first tournament and $11,620 in 2005, and Hubert Ruessman of Michigan won $15,977 last year. Southern Nevada Silver Knights, a tax-exempt group that aids deaf charities, is running the event with help from sponsor Full Tilt, an online poker company. For full details, visit www.lasvegasdeaf.org/poker.
STEPHEN WOLK, 64, FORMER GALLAUDET PROFESSOR Stephen Wolk, a research associate and professor at Gallaudet University from 1978 to 1986, died August 6 of heart disease at his home in Rockville, Md. He was 64. Dr. Wolk was born in Philadelphia and earned degrees from the University of Pennsylvania and Temple University, said The Washington Post. During his Gallaudet tenure, Dr. Wolk learned sign language and taught graduate courses in statistics. He retired in 2004 after managing drug trials for several pharmaceutical firms. He is survived by his wife of 41 years, Susan Wolk; a son, Matthew; and a brother.
You can advertise your job openings here for just $20 a week (up to 100 words, 10 cents each add'l word) and reach nearly 7,000 Deafweekly subscribers. Our website gets an additional 3,000+ page views each week. Start spreading the news! To place your ad, send the announcement to mail@deafweekly.com. +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Pressley Ridge, a nonprofit social services organization based in Pittsburgh PA, has a number of positions open in their Deaf Services requiring ASL fluency. Openings include: Mental Health Specialist, Classroom Teachers, Houseparent, Residential Supervisor, and overnight Counselor. Full details and contact information can be viewed at www.pressleyridge.org/careers or by emailing to bgibbons@pressleyridge.org. +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Warwick Family Services / MCC, Inc, 800 Clarmont Avenue, Suite B +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Position: HR DirectorHands On Video Relay Services, Inc. SUPERVISORY RESPONSIBILITY: +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ JOB OPPORTUNITIES AT GLAD GLAD is an Affirmative Action Employer with equal opportunity for men, women and people with disabilities. For more information on the following positions, please go to: www.gladinc.org. The status of all positions is: Regular, Full-time, Non-Exempt, Full Fringe Benefits unless otherwise noted. All positions are open until filled. – Regional Director – Riverside If interested for any of these positions then please submit resume and application to: Jeff Fetterman +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ DEAF SERVICES CENTER OPERATIONS DIRECTOR FOR COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES (Full Time Position) MA, MS, MSW in field related to human services treatment and minimum of 5 years post masters experience in behavioral health treatment of Deaf individuals. Advanced ASL fluency required. Strong leadership, administrative and supervisory experience required to oversee three programs: Partial Hospital, Case Management and Outpatient Services. Strong organizational and interpersonal communication skills (both
in person and in writing). Strong ability to manage and complete multiple tasks, priorities and projects. Familiarity with psychiatric treatment models and financial management. Ability to lead, teach, advise and motivate staff and consumers. Ability to establish program priorities, goals and outcome measures and conduct program evaluation and modification as necessary. Ability to develop program policies and procedures that promote consumers’ growth, independence and social relationships. Ability to establish and maintain positive relationships with Deaf consumers and their family members, staff, supervisors and government, public and private entities. +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY Position: Product Manager, Relay Services This position is responsible for managing the company’s product portfolio of new and existing Internet-based relay products, services, features and platforms, in timely response to customer, market, competitive, and operational requirements. This position includes the following responsibilities: (i) manage new and existing relay product/service offerings for deaf and hard-of-hearing customers; (ii) drive product/service development/management process within the company and with outside vendors, producing and iterating specifications throughout; (iii) develop and implement customer research and cultivate first-hand understanding of customers; (iv) monitor product/service performance and drive product/service lifecycle changes as required; (v) participate in development and management of overall customer communications strategy and customer/trade
promotion strategy; (vi) develop pricing/offers and pursue initiatives for new business development. This position reports to the Vice President of Product Management. Technical or marketing degree with 4-6 years of product management experience; telecommunications or hearing/speech industry experience desirable Application deadline: Until filled Please submit your resume or application to: hr@goamerica.com +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY Position: Product Manager, Hard of Hearing Products & Services This position is responsible for managing the company’s portfolio of new and existing products and services geared to, but not limited to, the Hard of Hearing market (e.g., hearing-aid compatible mobile phones, Internet-based captioned telephone service, voice carry over services), in timely response to customer, market, competitive, and operational requirements. This position includes the following responsibilities: (i) develop, recommend, and implement strategic/tactical product/service offerings
primarily targeting (but not limited to) the Hard of Hearing Market; (ii) manage new and existing product/service offerings for hard-of-hearing customers; (iii) drive Hard of Hearing product/service development/management process within the company and with outside vendors, producing and iterating specifications throughout; (iv) develop and implement customer research and cultivate first-hand understanding of customers; (v) monitor Hard of Hearing product/service performance and drive product/service lifecycle changes as required; (vi) participate in development and management of overall customer communications strategy and customer/trade promotion strategy; (vii) develop pricing/offers and pursue initiatives for new business development. This position reports to the Vice President of Product
Management. Technical or marketing degree with 4-6 years of product management experience; telecommunications or hearing/speech industry experience desirable Application deadline: Until filled Please submit your resume or application to: hr@goamerica.com +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ INDEPENDENT CONTRACTORS NEEDED Position: i711 Relay Specialist We are seeking independent contractors to help drive i711 relay services revenue by assisting customers with installing required hardware and/or software and by providing remote and/or onsite customer training to ensure positive, sustained, and increasing customer usage of i711 relay services. i711 Relay Specialists have the following responsibilities, among others: (1) complete an assigned number of remote installations of i711 VRS per month; (2) review and approve customer applications for webcams, and conduct follow up interactions with customers until installation and usage is confirmed; (3) provide technical assistance to customers requiring help in setting up webcams, updating their videophone directories, and placing VRS calls; (4) participate in trade shows and community events, with an emphasis on qualifying prospects, capturing installation leads, and arranging for fulfillment; (5) provide remote and/or onsite customer education and training on using i711 relay services; and (6) provide, on an escalation basis, second-tier customer support and/or technical assistance to relay users, in collaboration with the Customer Support team. QUALIFICATIONS: 4-year college degree or equivalent experience in a sales-, technical-, or community-related field Application deadline: Until filled Please submit your resume or application to: hr@goamerica.com +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Click here to subscribe or here to advertise. Home | Subscribe | Current Issue | Back Issues | Advertise | Submit News |
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September12, 2007 - Deaf art and memorabilia for sale this week on eBay >> |
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