Visually Impaired Persons Support

618 - 14th Street, Modesto, CA 95354

(209) 522-8477 (VIPS)

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What's New

The city of Modesto leased 618 14th Street to VIPS to serve the Low Vision and Hearing Impaired population of the Central Valley.

How are  we Doing?

Letter from our Director

(in response to a supporters questions July 28, 2006)

Latest News

bullet Modesto Bee article July 10, 2006
bullet Services available at VIPS
bullet Volunteer at VIPS - Modesto Bee Article February 6, 2006
bullet Modesto Chamber of Commerce Progress Article
bullet Pictures of the VIPS home

 

Hello,

Although I have only been, officially, a part of VIPS since May 31 of this year, I will tell you all I can about the center.  Though still in its humble beginnings, VIPS hopes to be all those things you outlined in your message.

You asked: "What classes other than cooking, computer programs and Braille you do if any?"  A slight correction is in order.  We currently do not have an instructor for independent living skills, so cooking and the like will have to wait until a qualified applicant can be located.  As for computers, the bulk of the instruction is in Microsoft products such as Windows Explorer, Microsoft Word, Outlook Express, and Internet Explorer.  Eventually, more advanced topics like Microsoft Excel, Power Point, CD burning, and downloading music will be added to the curriculum.  The access programs available for instruction at VIPS include JAWS, Magic, Zoom Text, Open Book, and Kurzweil.  Computer maintenance is also slated for instruction so individuals can keep their own computers in proper running order.

On the topic of Braille, VIPS offers instruction in both grade 1 and grade 2.  But the instruction in Braille is so much more than teaching reading skills to the blind: It has developed into being a sort of mini support meeting with one, two, or three participants.  And speaking of support groups, VIPS currently hosts one support meeting per month.  In this gathering, all ages are welcome, but we would eventually like to see the groups broken down into brackets of those over 55, those between 18 and 54, and those under 18 years of age.  This is because we believe that different age groups have different issues they would like addressed.  As the center and the population it serves grows, we hope that the support groups will be an activity most students of the center come to look forward to.

You asked: "Do you have many kids" and "Do Modesto schools have resource teachers for the kids and VIPs is an additional help, or is VIPs all there is for them?"  Unfortunately, we only have one individual under 18 taking advantage of VIPS training opportunities.  She will be a senior in high school this coming semester, and plans to begin college next year.  Being a student myself, I cannot stress just how important it is for children to prepare for higher education by improving their computer as well as their social skills: VIPS offers them both.  Prior to my coming to VIPS, the center was making every attempt to partner with Modesto schools as a supplement to the instruction provided by resource teachers, but I do not believe this attempted partnership is still in place.  The reason for this is unknown to me, but we hope to remedy that in the future.

You asked: "Do you do mobility training?"  We do not currently have the resources to hire a certified mobility instructor, so the answer is no.  We would not dream of claiming to be qualified enough to provide instruction in areas where students can be injured, and for this reason, cooking and mobility instruction will have to wait until qualified instructors can be found. 

You asked: "Does VIPs do field trips, sports teams/events, etc?"  Currently no.  Once again, the center is still in the midst of its meager beginnings, but such plans have been discussed.

You asked: "Do you have a parent’s support group or do parents of VI children come to the support group?"  There are future plans to provide support groups for friends and families of blind individuals, but the center has some growing to do before this comes to fruition.

You asked: "Does VIPS help at all with job training or interview training, or is that done by the rehab department?"  This is currently not provided at VIPS but is part of the ambitious plans slated for future implementation.  I know at first glance, VIPS may not sound like much of a community center for the blind, but it must be remembered that it is just getting off the ground.  We are very good at those things we currently offer and hope to add more as staff and funds increase.  It must be understood that the building housing VIPS is probably only about 1100 square feet in size, and everything inside has been, for the most part, donated.  Yet for its small size and limited resources, it provides a lot to the population it serves.  It is a place where blind and visually impaired individuals can learn important skills while feeling completely comfortable with those around them.  It is a sanctuary for those newly diagnosed, and an informational resource to the community at large.  Several times a day phone calls are received from people who have no idea of what services and products are available to make the lives of the visually impaired more bearable.  VIPS provides assistance to all who call and we make every attempt to provide information as well as support for those who request it.

I would also like to add that this center has only one paid instructor, myself, and the phones are manned by volunteers without whom the center could not function properly.  In fact, it is one of our volunteers, Janet Gearhart, who acts as the facilitator during the support meetings.  I have recently asked our other volunteer, Priscilla McDonald, to take over some of the grade 1 instruction responsibilities, a task to which she is more than qualified.  The current roster of VIPS students consists of 16 individuals, most of whom are extremely grateful for the instruction and camaraderie the center provides.  As funds increase, so too will the center's ability to provide better and more complete services to more people.  As I have already stated, in your message, you have outlined all those things VIPS hopes to be, but only time and continued funds can make that dream come true.

If I have not answered your questions to your satisfaction, please do not hesitate to call me at the center.  The number is: (209 522-8477 or (209) 577-3517.

Or you can email me at: mailto:vip-mmolina@sbcglobal.net

Sincerely,

Mauricio

 
Friends indeed share their sunshine
Bus rides part of the fun for two who choose to see the bright side


 
 MARTY BICEK/THE BEE

 


 
 

 

 

 

Alta Morris had never ridden a bus by herself. That is, until she met Louise Myers.

Morris, who has been legally blind for 30 years, had never learned to use a cane, and her new friend, Myers, also visually impaired, came to the rescue.

"It was really 'the blind leading the blind,'" Myers joked.

The two met at Modesto's Visually Impaired Persons Support center in January and have been close friends since.

It's nice for both to have someone who can relate to their challenges.

"I prayed for a friend who would understand what I was going through," said Myers, who has been blind in her left eye for 32years and lost her central vision — the ability to see directly in front of her — last year.

Both are from Turlock and began taking a bus to VIPS meetings on Mondays and Thursdays.

"It was almost like we're sisters," Morris said.

People who encounter the women notice their upbeat attitudes and outgoing personalities.

When they board the bus, they often chat with the driver and passengers, who know them by name. Some days after classes in Modesto, they will go to H Street Cafe, where they get hugs from employees.

"They brighten up my day when they come in here," said Katrina Oates, a waitress at H Street Cafe.

The friends share positive outlooks on life and independent spirits.

Myers, 63, lives by herself. She walks about a mile to the bus stop. If she doesn't have to buy much, she'll walk to the grocery store. She does her own cooking and remains active.

Morris, 71, hasn't let the challenges of blindness hold her back. She teaches Sunday school, cooks for dinner groups and takes care of the house she shares with her husband.

"They're inspirational," said Mauricio Molina, the director of the VIPS center.

Molina became director on May 31. He said Morris and Myers were the first to welcome him and make him feel comfortable.

Morris and Myers take advanced Braille and computer classes. They call each other when they have questions on a lesson and help each other in class.

"They're very, very good students," Molina said.

Although Morris and Myers have learned a lot at the center, the most important thing they've found is true friendship.

"To me, she (Myers) is a blessing from God," Morris said.

Bee staff writer Anna Scianna can be reached at 578-2382 or ascianna@modbee.com.

 

KIDS ARE VIPS

This program provides instruction in daily living skills, Braille, computers and electronic note takers, peer support, advocacy, and career exploration for all individuals under the age of 18. This program will be offered on Friday 12:30 to 3:00 and Saturday 9:00 to 3:00.

 INDEPENDENT LIVING SKILLS

This program educates clients in the alternative techniques that visually impaired persons use in their daily activities. Some of the skills taught include cooking, organization, home management and signature writing. This program is offered by appointment only.

BRAILLE INSTRUCTION

This program provides instruction in Literary, Nemeth, and Computer Braille codes. This program is offered by appointment only.

COMPUTER TRAINING

This program provides instruction in the use of assistive technology. Participants will develop skills in the following areas: JAWS, Microsoft Word, Excel, Power-point, Accessing e-mail, Navigating the internet, Scanning documents.  This program is offered by appointment only.

BRAILLE-NOTE/VOICE-NOTE

This program provides instruction in the use of these electronic note takers. Participants will learn how to use the word processor, address book and planner. Participants must bring their own note takers. This program is offered by appointment only.

SUPPORT GROUPS FOR VISUALLY IMPAIRED, FAMILY AND FRIENDS

This program offers ideas and suggestions for ways to minimize frustrations encountered on a daily basis by those who have lost vision and provide support for both family and friends.

COMMUNITY CONNECTIONS

This service provides information and refers individuals to other appropriate agencies.

 All services provided at the VIPS are free.

Tuesday thru Friday 8:00 – 4:30

Saturday 8:00 3:00 KIDS Day

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Man sees beyond his blindness

Stan State student plans to be a history teacher

 

 

Visually impaired Stanislaus State University history student Mauricio Molina, 44, uses sophisticated computer scanning software and text readers to improve the information access for other disabled students.
TODD E. SWENSON/THE BEE

 

 

 

 

 

Molina uses a machine that magnifies text from a book and projects it onto a screen. He is legally blind and began losing his vision at the age of 39.
TODD E. SWENSON/THE BEE

 

 



 


By LORENA ANDERSON
BEE STAFF WRITER

Last Updated: February 6, 2006, 05:56:08 AM PST

Mauricio Molina is losing his sight, but he has a vision for his future.

More than a decade ago, when he was an award-winning letter carrier in San Jose, he pictured himself retiring from the U.S. Postal Service.

Now, the Modesto man sees himself as a history teacher — a career he said should not be hampered by his impending blindness.

A full-time student at California State University, Stanislaus, Molina is majoring in history and plans to apply for the school's teaching credential program this fall.

He spends days and evenings learning not just what he's taught in the classroom, but how to cope with his increasing visual limitations.

In 1993, Molina was delivering the mail. He began noticing his low-light vision wasn't as good as it should have been.

He already wore glasses for an astigmatism, so he went to his ophthalmologist, who sent him to a specialist, who sent him to Stanford for tests.

There, doctors told him he had retinitis pigmentosa. It's an inherited disease — Molina's older brother also has it. RP means the rods and cones, the retina's photoreceptors that capture and process light, are dying.

There's no cure.

Experts say most people with RP lose peripheral vision first, their sight narrowing gradually, as though looking through a straw, and are legally blind by the time they turn 40.

Molina's disease is atypical — he's losing the center of his sight first. Right now, he said, he can look straight at people and not see their heads or shoulders, but see a door four feet to the left of them.

"I'm way beyond legally blind," he said. "Unless there's a cure, I will lose my vision. All of it."

He knows he faces challenges in the new career he has chosen for himself. Teachers do a lot of reading and grading papers, for example.

But he said he doesn't see obstacles.

Molina said other people who have been blind and taught found ways to do their jobs, and he will, too.

"If I do have a concern, it's getting past people's perceptions that visually impaired people are not capable," he said. "We are."

Molina kept his letter-carrier route after his diagnosis. But he noticed the disease progressing from small slashes through the letter "a" in books he was reading, to a ring-shaped blind spot around the center of his vision.

The ring is slowly closing.

In 1998, when driving wasn't safe anymore, he asked to work in the mailhandling area, where he wasn't required to drive or do much more than move mail around the warehouse area. It wasn't easy, he said, admitting that was the limit of his ability.

He asked his supervisors if they would keep him working as he lost more sight, and they said no.

"Just no," Molina said. "Reasonable accommodation only goes so far."

After 18 years, he retired. He had no job to go to.

Through the state's vocational rehabilitation program, he went for job retraining. He took computer classes and thought he'd study computer science.

His loss of income, though, forced more change on his family. In 2000 he and his wife, Deborah, sold their Morgan Hill house, and early in 2001 moved with their two children to Modesto, where Deborah has family.

It took Deborah time to find work as an instructional aide, and Molina got a job working with a startup company called "Apartment Daddy," which listed rentals.

But the software the company used wasn't designed for people with visual impairments, he said, and "if I can't do a job well, I don't want to do it at all."

The business went under the following year, Molina said, so he'd have been unemployed again anyway.

He kept looking for work, but when he told prospective employers about his visual problems, "the interview just changed," he said.

Molina said he needed a change.

With some vocational classes behind him, in 2002 he enrolled at Modesto Junior College. He participated in disabled student programs that let him practice using computer programs designed for people with vision limitations.

He had more change in mind, though.

After winning the 2004 Disabled Student of the Year award and graduating with an associate degree, he transferred to Stanislaus State.

He's more than proficient with such programs as JAWS, which provides, among other things, a "reader" that tells Molina what he would be seeing on his computer screen.

And he developed a love for teaching while working with other visually impaired students, showing them what's available.

But when he thought about the immediate future and how to get working again relatively quickly, he envisioned a different path.

"I'm a history buff, too," he said.

Now 44, he's close to his bachelor's degree. He's on the waiting list for two required classes. If he can squeeze them in on top of the four courses he signed up for this spring, he'll graduate in May.

He doesn't doubt he can do the work.

Education is part of who he is now.

"I wish I would have done it sooner. I'll probably keep going to school, even after I'm working," Molina said. He's thinking about a master's degree.

He won $5,000 from the Dale M. Schoettler Scholarship for Visually Impaired Students last year, given through the California State University system to several students across the state. The money is much needed because his only job is part time, scanning books page by page for other disabled students to use.

Michelle Sanchez-Stamos, the university's disabled students coordinator, is Molina's work-study boss.

"One of my star students," she said at the mention of Molina's name.

He rides the bus from Modesto to school every day, a trip that takes about an hour and a half with transfers. It gives him time to listen to the class lectures he always records to help him study.

Economics professor Kelvin JasekRysdahl praised Molina for always having his work done early, for being a student leader and for never asking for exceptions because of his impairment.

As for Molina's plan to teach history in grade school or high school, JasekRysdahl said he has no doubt his former student will succeed.

He thought about parts of his own job that might challenge Molina, such as the amount of reading teachers have to do, but said he doesn't foresee problems.

"(Molina) just seems to be able to adapt," the professor said. "I think he'll just find a way."

Molina's brother keeps him up to date on the latest technology for the visually impaired, and Molina volunteers sometimes with the VIPS House in Modesto, a learning center for the visually impaired.

And he continues learning his own increasing limits — a prospect that isn't always easy.

"The blind spot is getting larger, and my peripheral vision isn't as crisp as it used to be," he said. "I get frustrated, and it might last 15 minutes or an hour, or I might laugh it off, depending on my mood."

His life has become about adaptation, from being organized to the nth degree, to having his family give him directions inside stores.

He said he doesn't know how long his remaining sight will last, but he plans to make the most of what he's got left.

"Losing your sight is like part of you dying all the time," he said. "I could sit in my room and mope all day, but that's no fun."

Bee staff writer Lorena Anderson can be reached at 667-1227 or landerson@modbee.com.

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Progress

The VHIP House has been open and operating for almost a year now. with programs that you can take advantage of by calling 522-8477 and making an appointment.  Services for All Ages

The doorways throughout the house have been widened for wheelchair access.  Our director on site Tuesday through Saturday is Therese Gardner.  Call and get acquainted.

 

bullet

Progress - February 2004

The city of Modesto will welcome a new center for the vision impaired. According to new reports, more Americans than ever are facing the threat of blindness for age-related eye disease. It is estimat- ed that currently, there are over 5,000 severely vision impaired people in Stanislaus County alone.

Jim Syvertsen, a graduate of the leadership Modesto class of 2000-2001, has established a 501(c) 3 non-profit corporation: DBA Vision Impaired Persons Support (VIPS).

"leadership Modesto opened my eyes to the tremendous number of causes needing attention and assistance in our community. I watched my father and son lose their sight and endure the many stages of personal devastation, loss of self-esteem, rehabilitation and now working with their disability and growing personally. This devel- oped my passion to create a center to help other vision impaired per- sons," Syvertsen explains.

The center's ultimate mission is to provide a place of compassion, understand- ing, education and personal growth for any person that is vision or hearing impaired.

"We have a strong affiliation with Vision Impaired Persons (VIP). They have over 300 members and hold monthly support groups and information meetings at Doctors Hospital Conference Center. Our facility will allow us to provide instruction in Braille, computers, cooking and crafts. Additional programs will be designed to build self-esteem, enhance living skills and assist vision impaired individuals adjust to living in society with their impairment."

Recently, the Modesto City Council approved the lease of a building for the center at 618 14th Street. "The facility will not allow large groups to meet," claims Syvertsen, "but it will give us a physical presence in the community and a place to establish programs and acquire staff."

Accepting both cash and material donations, the Center is working to make their future location compliant with current American Disabilities Act regulations, as well as funding from state and federal grants. Along with electrical and plumbing work, the facility also requires a variety of necessities including new heating and air conditioning units, new doors, handicap ramps, kitchen utilities and computers.

Currently serving on three other boards, that include the Children's Crisis Center, Modesto 500 lion's Club, and Forester's Stanislaus Branch, Syvertsen is the Executive Vice President of California Mortgage Associates. Continuing his dedication to the community, with each loan that he closes, Syvertsen donates money to VIPS and Habitat for Humanity.

Joining Syvertsen in the effort to support others is a dedicated and experienced group of board members. Former Ambassador for the Chamber of Commerce, Pat Gillum, was named Chief Financial Officer for the center. A Certified Public Accountant, Gillum has volunteered with various organizations such as the Children's Crisis Centers.

In addition to Gillum, John De La Mora was named as the organization's secretary. Currently working in the insurance industry, De La Mora has served as Vice-Chairperson on the Modesto's Housing Rehabilitation Loan Committee and has volunteered his time with the Stanislaus County Alzheimer's organization.

Board member Brian Elliot has been a general partner of the Modesto Optometric Vision Center since 1991. As well as his position with VIPS, Elliot is also a member of the San Joaquin Optometric Society, California Optometric Association, and the American Optometric Association.

Joining Elliot as a board member, Pat Syvertsen has also provided assistance to the center. Pat, who is active in a variety of community projects and organizations, assists Syvertsen in many of his activities and events.

Board member Thom Ingebretson has been chairman of VIP since 1998. Legally blind, Ingebretson travels with his guide dog, Gonzo. He is active in the community and chairs the monthly support group meeting at Doctors Conference Center.

Rounding out the board group is Jerry Moore. Moore, whose experience includes forty years employment involving research and technical projects at Stanford Research Institute, the Ampex Corporation and the Lockheed Corporation, has been General Manager at KTRB and KADV radio stations in Modesto.

In a current growth phase, the VIPS is actively looking for individuals to join their board of directors. Accepting nominations the organization is opening their doors to those individuals who can bring value and commitment, and are willing to be a hands-on director.

"There are thousands of people in our community that need the services we intend to develop," says Syvertsen. "It will not happen overnight, but I am committed to enlist the help of good qualified people in our neighborhoods to team up and make these programs a reality." .

For more information about VIPS, or to make a donation, call 209-499-8804, or write to VIPS 618 14th St., Modesto, CA 95354.

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