Sunday, January 18, 2015

Facebook post lands woman with Down Syndrome a job




This article focuses on how much more difficult it is to find employment when you live with a disability. It emphasizes how frustrating it is for an individual with a disability because they want to work but they cannot find meaningful employment.

The article also previews a documentary being produced about the difficulties of individuals living with a disability finding employment. The documentary is called “Talent Untapped”. It is about this invisible, untapped talent pool.
‘Look beyond white cane,’  ‘look beyond Down Syndrome or the developmental disability and look beyond the wheelchair because there is so much talent untapped.’
‘I don't want to just sit there, I’ll get bored at my house,’
‘You just seem to go in a loop,’ ‘a loop of nothing (looking for employment.)’
http://ottawa.ctvnews.ca/mobile/facebook-post-lands-woman-with-down-syndrome-a-job-1.2185168

Sunday, January 11, 2015

Creating Employment One Coffee at a Time

Source: Indiegogo.com
Our cousin Emily has been at the Coffee Shed for several years now and I've seen how it's enabled her providing a place that utilizes her abilities and to meet and socialize with others. It's a simple business model that has made tremendous impact for those that face barriers to employment. They are currently running an Indiegogo campaign to enhance what they are doing.
Less than half of working-age Canadians with disabilities have jobs, according to Statistics Canada. But one Toronto organization is working to reverse that statistic by appealing to the city's love of coffee culture. 
Common Ground Cooperative is a local non-profit that provides social enterprise and empowered employment opportunities to people with developmental disabilities. One of the participants is The Coffee Shed – a coffee shop run by adults with developmental disabilities headquartered in Surrey Place Centre near Queen's Park. 
Last month, The Coffee Shed launched an Indiegogo campaign to fund a barista training program inside their premises. Called Made by Mavericks, the training program was created by Gerald Patrick Fantone, a job coach at Common Ground, who came up with the idea after reading about the Galician Down Barista Championships – Spain's competition for baristas with Down syndrome – in Barista Magazine.
Read the entire article at Now Toronto and contribute the Indiegogo campaign.