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WELCOME to the

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WELCOME to the NEW JERSEY STATE COMMISSION FOR THE BLIND AND VISUALLY IMPAIRED (CBVI) NEW JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES This Presentation Will: Familiarize You ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: WELCOME to the


1
WELCOME to the
  • NEW JERSEY STATE
  • COMMISSION FOR THE BLIND AND VISUALLY IMPAIRED
  • (CBVI)
  • NEW JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES

2
This Presentation Will
  • Familiarize You With CBVI - Its Mission, Vision
    And Values
  • Provide You With A Global Picture of The
    Services the Commission Offers to New Jersey
    Residents
  • To Familiarize You With the Many Facets of Our
    Agency

3
You Will Learn
  • What the Commission Does
  • How the Mission, Vision and Values Drive Our Work
  • Where Our Consumers Fit In
  • How Important Our Mission Is to New Jersey
    Residents

4
OUR MOTTO AT CBVI
  • INDEPENDENCE
  • BELIEVE AND ACHIEVE!

5
Mission
  • The mission of the New Jersey Commission for
    the Blind and Visually Impaired is to promote and
    provide services in the areas of education,
    employment, independence and eye health through
    informed choice and partnership with persons who
    are blind or visually impaired, their families
    and the community.

6
New Jersey FactsStatistics based on 2000 Census
  • 290,000 NJ Residents Are Blind and Or Visually
    Impaired
  • 8,000 NJ Residents are Totally Blind
  • 39,000 NJ Residents are Legally Blind
  • 243,000 NJ Residents Have Severe Visual
    Impairments
  • Currently 9,571 New Jersey Residents Are Actively
    Being Served By NJ CBVI

7
Goals
  • Provide timely, effective, high-quality services
  • Increase competitive employment
  • Work toward excellence in the education of
    students who are blind or visually impaired
  • Work to decrease the incidence of blindness or
    significant vision loss through eye health
    programs
  • Actively promote equality and full inclusion into
    society

8
GOALS
  • Work in partnership with consumers
  • Encourage positive attitudes toward blindness and
    visually impairments by consumers and their
    families
  • Expand service delivery to historically
    underserved populations
  • Evaluate the effectiveness of assistive
    technology in the school and work environment

9
Eligibility
  • A New Jersey resident is eligible for services
    if he/she is visually impaired or legally blind
    with best correction, and is experiencing
    problems in his/her life as a result of vision
    loss.

10
Visually Impaired
  • Vision is 20/70 or less in the better eye (with
    best correction) (the person sees at 20 feet what
    a sighted person sees at 70 feet)
  • Field restriction of 40 degrees

11
Legally Blind
  • Ones vision is 20/200 or less in the better eye
    (with best correction)
  • If there is a restricted vision field limited to
    20 degrees or less

12
ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE
  • Vito DeSantis Executive Director
  • Lori Ghio
  • Executive Secretary
  • 153 HALSEY STREET
  • 6th FLOOR
  • PO BOX 47017
  • Newark, New Jersey 07101
  • 973-648-3333

13
Management Team 2007
  • Vito DeSantis Executive Director
  • Dr. Bernice Davis Executive Assistant
  • Frank Scheick Manager Fiscal
  • Marc Stabile Manager Human Resource
  • Ines Matos Manager MIS
  • David DeNotaris Manager Statewide
  • Jose Morales Manager NRO
  • Pat Davis Manager SRO
  • John Reiff Manager CRO
  • Donald Potenski Manager JKRC

14
Management Team 2007
  • COORDINATORS
  • Amelia Ricciardi Education
  • Lorraine Clark Allied Services
  • Gregory Patty Vocational Rehabilitation
  • Bruce Kastner,OD Blindness Prevention, Low
    Vision Services
  • Pamela Gaston Executive Assistant
  • Michael Kosec Quality Assurance
  • Hugo Ruiz Employee Relations Officer
  • Sandra Deitel Staff Development

15
REGIONAL OFFICES
  • Northern (Newark)
  • Bergen, Essex, Hudson, Morris, Passaic, Sussex
    and Warren
  • Central (Toms River)
  • Union, Middlesex, Somerset, Hunterdon, Mercer,
    Monmouth and Ocean
  • Southern (Camden)
  • Atlantic, Burlington, Camden, Cape May,
    Cumberland, Gloucester and Salem

16
Regional Services
Vocational Rehabilitation
Client
Independent Living Services
Education
Eye Health
17
EDUCATION
  • CBVI provides education services
  • from birth through age twenty-one to eligible
    children and their families. These services are
    designed to allow students who are visually
    impaired to participate equally with other
    students in regular classroom activities.

18
Education Services
  • Comprehensive itinerant services
  • Inclusion, integration, mainstreaming
  • Collaboration with school districts
  • Partnership with the Office and Departments of
    Education
  • Legislative Law, Funding, Reimbursement

19
Vocational Rehabilitation Services
The goal of this program is to assist persons who
are blind and visually impaired develop, acquire,
or update skills that will help in securing and
maintaining suitable employment. This may
include working in the competitive labor force,
operating their own business, supportive
employment, or managing their own home.
20
Vocational Rehabilitation Services (VR)
  • Evaluation
  • Counseling and Guidance
  • Training
  • Job Placement
  • Post-Employment
  • College Counseling/Support
  • High School Transition
  • Business Enterprise Program
  • Entrepreneurial Programs
  • Special Services for persons who are
    Multi-disabled
  • Joseph Kohn Rehabilitation Center
  • Programs
  • Special services for persons who are
    Multi-disabled
  • Joseph Kohn Rehabilitation Center

21
Employer Services UnitProvides the following
services at no cost to employers
  • Job retention services for staff with vision loss
  • Technical Support on ADA issues
  • Work-site analysis and modification
  • Agency Resources Linkages to the information you
    need
  • Achieve diversity and inclusion goals in
    strategic plans
  • Financial incentives and tax credits
  • Employee Assistance Programs (EAP)

22
Employer Services Unit Provides
  • Opportunities for partnering
  • Website Accessibility
  • Assistive Technology Consults
  • Pre-Screened Labor Pool
  • Diversity and Inclusion
  • Long-term follow-up
  • Internships
  • Career Development Activities
  • Employer Advisory Council

23
Independent Living Services (Allied Services)
  • Social Casework
  • In home instruction in daily living skills
  • Instruction for independent travel and
    orientation to the home, community, work or
    school environment
  • Child care skills
  • Instruction in communication methods
  • Referral to community resources

24
Independent Living Skills
  • The goal of this program is to enable persons
    who are blind or visually impaired to lead a full
    and productive life and to assist them in
    adjusting to their vision loss

25
Orientation and MobilityInstruction (OM)
  • Safe Independent Travel Training
  • (Home, School, Work, Community)
  • Emphasizing Awareness of Surrounding Environments
  • Use of Remaining Senses
  • (Hearing and Vision)

26
Eye Health Nurse
  • Case-Management
  • Diabetes Education
  • Instruction on Adaptive Equipment/Devices
    (insulin syringes, talking glucose monitors)
  • Monitoring Health Care

27
Home Instruction
  • Home Management Skills
  • Kitchen Safety, Meal Preparation, Laundry
    Skills, Clothing Identification
  • Adaptive Equipment
  • Talking Watches, Timers, Calculators
  • Communication Skills
  • Braille, Keyboarding, Check writing, Telephone
    Dialing, Handwriting
  • Adjustment to Vision Loss

28
Statewide Operations
  • Statewide Services
  • Prevention
  • Early Intervention
  • Education
  • Deaf-Blind
  • Transition
  • /College Services
  • Camp Marcella
  • Drew University

29
Prevention Services/Eye Health
  • The goal of this program is to save sight and
    restore vision whenever it is medically possible.
    Statistics show that 50 of all blindness and
    vision loss could be prevented with proper
    medical eye care. CBVI conducts and sponsors a
    variety of educational programs and eye health
    screening throughout the state to detect vision
    problems.

30
Prevention Services
  • Mobile Eye Exams
  • Vision Screening for preschool and school age
    children
  • Eye health nursing
  • On site screening at institutions and in the
    community on invitation
  • Special diabetic outreach program
  • Other specialized eye screening programs which
    target minorities, the elderly and migrant farm
    workers

31
Early Intervention
  • Provides statewide itinerant education for
    infants and toddlers (birth to age 3), who are
    blind or visually impaired, multi-handicapped
    visually impaired, or deaf-blind and their
    families. Disability-specific services are
    provided in the childs natural environment.

32
Early Intervention Services
  • Eligibility Determination Education Services
  • Assessment and Evaluation of Visual Impairment
  • Collaboration With Families
  • Technical Assistance to Families and Providers
  • Specialized Instruction i.e. Transition to
    Pre-School Services
  • Availability of Additional Commission Services

33
Deaf-Blind Unit
  • Assists Individuals who are Deaf-Blind, their
    parents, counselors, educators, employers and
    consumers through various services
  • Determine Eligibility
  • Counseling
  • Participate in Educational Planning
  • Provide Functional Vision Assessments
  • In-Service Presentations
  • Recommend and Provide Specialized Adaptive
    Equipment
  • Locate training programs for employment needs
  • Assist with job placement and maintaining current
    employment

34
Transition Unit
  • Serves high school students
  • Career assessment, planning and training
  • Coordinate two summer career exploration
    opportunities

35
College Unit
  • Assists college students with
  • Funding
  • Counseling
  • Guidance
  • Advocacy
  • Job Placement

36
Drew Program
  • Simulated Residential College experience on the
    Campus of Drew University in Madison
  • 10th through 12th graders are eligible
  • 4 weeks duration
  • Academic Classes
  • Orientation/Mobility
  • Daily Living Skills
  • Leisure Activities on Weekends and Evenings

37
The College of New JerseyWork Skills Prep
  • Residential work experience program on the campus
    of TCNJ in Ewing, NJ
  • 10th through 12th graders are eligible
  • 3 weeks duration
  • Career exploration
  • Orientation/Mobility
  • Daily Living Skills
  • Leisure Activities on Weekends and Evenings

38
JKRC Transition Summer Program
  • Open to ninth graders who are blind and or
    visually impaired
  • Two Week Residential Session at JKRC
  • Career Exploration
  • Visits to Businesses
  • OM instruction
  • Daily Living Skills
  • Computer Skills
  • Peer Sharing

39
Camp Marcella Sleep-Away Camp in Rockaway NJIn
Partnership With the Lions Club
  • 200 blind and visually impaired children between
    ages 5 and 16 attend camp each summer
  • Camp offers a chance to participate in swimming,
    boating, hiking, music, arts/crafts, sports/games
  • Computer Lab and Library
  • Camp fosters a childs sense of independence and
    self confidence and helps develop social skills

40
Other Statewide Services
  • George F. Meyer Instructional Resource Center
    (Newark)
  • Joseph Kohn Rehabilitation Center (New Brunswick)
  • (Norma K. Krajczar Technology Resource and
    Development Center, Bridge Program)
  • Business Enterprise Program (BEP)
  • (Quakerbridge Plaza, Mercerville)

41
George F. Meyer Instructional Resource Center
  • This center provides materials to enable
    children to function on an equal footing with
    their sighted classmates.
  • Provides Adaptive Aids
  • Adaptive textbooks (large print or Braille),
    materials , and technical equipment
  • Enriching toys and materials
  • Assistive Technology

42
Joseph Kohn Rehabilitation Center (JKRC)
  • JKRC offers blind and visually impaired adults
    an opportunity to learn skills that enable
    independence. It is an intensive program to
    develop vocational skills.
  • 16 week residential program
  • Career Assessment
  • Vocational Counseling
  • Communication Skills
  • Braille
  • Orientation and Mobility
  • Activities of Daily Living Skills
  • Kitchen Skills
  • Assistive Technology Skills
  • Adjustment to Vision Loss
  • Psychological Services
  • Social Services

43
Norma F. Krajczar Technology Resource and
Development Center
  • Located Within JKRC
  • Open to the public for hands on experience with
    the latest technology products
  • Demonstrations of state of the art products for
    people who are blind and visually impaired
  • DeWitt Contract

44
BEP AND NEW JERSEYPERFECT TOGETHER!
  • Since the passage of the 1937 Randolph-Sheppard
    Act, NJ CBVI BEP has worked to help NJ residents
    who are blind or visually impaired become
    independent business operators and entrepreneurs!
  • Currently NJ has 60 active operators owning
  • SNACK BARS
  • VENDING MACHINES
  • CAFES/CAFETERIAS
  • The average operator income is 54,000
  • 18,544,163 gross sales as of 6/30/06

45
Types of Contracted Services
  • Independent Living for elderly or deaf/blind
  • Prevention of Blindness
  • Volunteers
  • Training and employment/supported employment
  • Psychological Services
  • Advocacy/Legal
  • Recorded Books
  • Recreation
  • Assistive Technology

46
To Contract or Not to Contract Services
  • Can we provide service ourselves?
  • Can we provide services efficiently ourselves?
  • Can we provide services effectively ourselves?

47
Contract Facts
  • 15 Contracts
  • 4.5 Million in Value
  • Smallest Contract-Cumberland County at 20,868.00
  • Largest contract DeWitt Associates at 1.3
    Million
  • 12 different funding sources

48
Assistive Technology
  • Any piece of equipment that will give
    independence to someone who is blind or visually
    impaired
  • These tools may assist consumers in gaining
    access to information both print and electronic
    and facilitates written communication
  • Indispensable service provided by the Commission
  • Maintaining current relevant resources to ensure
    our consumers and staff are literate and
    competent is critical in the fast changing world
    of assistive technology

49
RTAC(REGIONAL TECHNOLOGY ASSESSMENT CENTER)
  • Located in each regional office
  • Provides training, demonstrations, and
    evaluations of assistive technology to our
    consumers, educators and or other interested
    parties

50
Independence Believe and Achieve
  • 11 of the Commissions Workforce is blind and or
    visually impaired
  • Approximately 103 NJ Citizens go through
    programming at the Kohn Center Each Year
  • We rank third in the United States for Assistive
    Technology Use
  • In 2006, 303 NJ VR clients became gainfully
    employed through the Commissions Vocational
    Rehabilitation Program
  • CBVI provides assistive technology devices to our
    consumers such as computers, notetakers, Braille
    displays, Braille embossers (printer), scanners,
    CCTV (Closed Circuit TV)

51
Independence, Believe and Achieve
  • We partner with 402 school districts
  • We serve 2300 children ages birth to 21
  • CBVI supplies school districts with Braille
    production systems to assist the child enabling
    children to compete with their sighted peers in a
    classroom environment
  • CBVI staff have the ability to Braille documents
    and information for staff and consumers
  • We facilitate an annual two day workshop for
    educators throughout the state to become more
    familiar with instruction to students who are
    blind or visually impaired

52
INDEPENDENCE BELIEVE AND ACHIEVE
  • We provide staff with the latest assistive
    technology training so they can better serve our
    consumers
  • 45,862 eye screenings were done in Fiscal Year 06
  • 25,539 of the above were pre-school screenings
  • 870 Consumers were referred to the Commission in
    Fiscal year 06

53
Regional Offices
  • Northern Regional Office
  • 153 Halsey Street 5th fl.
  • Newark, NJ 07101
  • 973-648-2111
  • Fax 973-648-7674
  • Central Regional Office
  • 1510 Hooper Avenue
  • Toms River, NJ 08753
  • 732-255-0723
  • Fax 732-255-0949
  • Southern Regional Office
  • 101 Haddon Avenue
  • Camden, NJ. 08103
  • 856-614-3000
  • Fax 856-614-3075
  • Toll Free 1-877-685-8878
  • WWW.CBVI.NJ.GOV
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