Wednesday, March 31, 2021

WE ARE LEAVING MIAMI!

NO MORE TRAFFIC, NOISE AND BOONDOGGLES


We’ve found this fixer upper on the Tamiami Trail.

We’re trading arroz y frijoles for gator bites and blue crab.

We’ll still be right on Route 41, but in Ochopee instead of Miami. 


Nah, April Fools — we’re staying in Little Havana.

Tuesday, March 30, 2021

ACCESSIBLE HOUSING (9)

PLANNING BEST PRACTICES CAN ACCOMMODATE MORE WHEELCHAIR USERS


Disability Options Network (DON) works with the Lawrence County Land Bank to turn abandoned homes and vacant lots into scattered site housing with roll-in showers, accessible kitchens, and barrier-free entrances. 

DON has gutted and rebuilt existing abandoned houses (rendering above) and constructed new accessible homes on vacant lots in and around New Castle, Pennsylvania.


Monday, March 29, 2021

ACCESSIBLE HOUSING (8)

PLANNING BEST PRACTICES CAN ACCOMMODATE MORE WHEELCHAIR USERS

Land banks acquire, maintain, and return vacant and blighted property to productive use.

Operating as nonprofits, they leverage public and private resources to transform problem properties into community-oriented uses. 

In this role, land banks serve as the intermediary between local governments, which assist in land acquisition, and community organizations, which need land to advance their missions. 

The mission often is rehabbing houses or apartments for use as affordable housing. 

In western Pennsylvania, a disability advocacy nonprofit is using land banks to create more affordable and accessible housing.

Sunday, March 28, 2021

ACCESSIBLE HOUSING (7)

PLANNING BEST PRACTICES CAN ACCOMMODATE MORE WHEELCHAIR USERS

http://idea.ap.buffalo.edu/


Steinfeld said:

"Even fire codes play a role ... overly restrictive interpretation of fire prevention codes can make it impossible for people to add chair lifts to stairways serving second-floor apartments."

To create age- and disability-friendly communities, planners need to ensure that master plans and zoning allow for construction of more affordable accessible housing — and develop better and more accessible transportation options, too

Saturday, March 27, 2021

EASTERSEALS DISABILITY FILM CHALLENGE

CHECK OUT AND SUPPORT ANNA PAKMAN’S

“SOCIAL FITNESS” MOCKUMENTARY


Social Fitness

Anna Pakman, my new friend and a disabled filmmaker, has released a very short film about pandemic life. The film, created for Easterseals Disability Film Challenge, features a cast that includes 70% performers with disabilities.

“SOCIAL FITNESS” is a mockumentary on the shared experience of quarantine, finding humor in the commonalities of pandemic life culture. The cast and crew behind the film represent diverse communities with disabilities, including Cerebral Palsy, Multiple Sclerosis, Autism, Mental Illness, Epilepsy, PTSD, Limb Difference, ADHD, traumatic brain injury, and Osteogenesis Imperfecta (OI), alongside committed non-disabled allies.

I checked out an advance media screening. I love the skewed sense of humor, because quirky appeals to me. The inclusion of people who are both talented on-screen and diverse, gets huge bonus points.

The material that follows is taken from the press release about the short and the Easterseals support of disability and diversity.

With COVID-19 restrictions limiting in-person filmmaking, the team took advantage of advanced editing technology and the Zoom video conferencing platform to bring together talent from New York, New Jersey, California, and Florida in one seamless remote production.

The Easterseals Disability Film Challenge is a filmmaking contest that challenges filmmakers to produce original films in just five days (March 16-21, 2021) and gives new voices within the industry an opportunity to write and produce short films that challenge the limited representation of disabilities in the media by telling stories to showcase disability in its many forms.

Although people with disabilities are 20% of the U.S. population, a Ruderman Family Foundation study found that only 2% of characters on Primetime TV have disabilities, with only 5% of those authentically cast with disabled actors. The team behind Annatated Productions shares Easterseals’ goal to elevate this through high-quality entertaining content and create a better pipeline for disabled artists to showcase their talent to the industry.

The film’s producer, writer and director, Anna Pakman said, “Growing up with a physical disability, I rarely saw myself represented in front of or behind the camera. Making my own content has allowed me to rewrite that narrative by creating roles that defy the typical disability tropes used by Hollywood. I am grateful to Easterseals for giving us this platform to show audiences around the world what we can do.”

Pakman, who uses a wheelchair for mobility, added “People with disabilities tend to be masters of adaptability from years spent learning how to navigate inaccessible spaces, so it felt especially poignant to look back at a time when the whole world had to learn how to adapt to an unexpected situation that changed the course of everyone’s daily lives and find the humor in the ‘new normal.’”

Pakman will be joined by a powerhouse cast featuring internationally renowned comedienne Maysoon Zayid (General Hospital, You Don’t Mess With the Zohan), Bree Klauser (Audible Original Phreaks, Apple TV’s SEE), Anita Hollander (National Chair, SAG-AFTRA Performers with Disabilities Committee, Law & Order, FBI: Most Wanted), Liz Simons (Broad City), Eric Stafford (The Blacklist, Alpha House), BJ Lange (Jimmy Kimmel LIVE!), Shashi Bangera (Sesame Street, Kelly & Cal), Mary von Aue, Josey Miller, and Sylvia Longmire.

The production team also includes editor Liz Pritchard (A&E’s The Employables, ADA30 Lead on Celebration of Disability Arts, Culture, Education and Pride), advertising industry veteran Jd Michaels of Michaels.Adams, and Stefanie Parish. 

Here’s the link:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=awnB9jUGOig

Anna Pakman

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=awnB9jUGOig

Friday, March 26, 2021

ACCESSIBLE HOUSING (6)

PLANNING BEST PRACTICES CAN ACCOMMODATE MORE WHEELCHAIR USERS

Providing density bonuses and fast-tracking permitting can be incentives to build more accessible units than those required by federal laws, Steinfeld says.

"Policies that provide incentives to build accessory dwellings or convert single-family homes to two or more apartments can help homeowners extract value from their homes and enable them to remain living independently," he says.

Thursday, March 25, 2021

ACCESSIBLE HOUSING (5)

PLANNING BEST PRACTICES CAN ACCOMMODATE MORE WHEELCHAIR USERS

Edward Steinfeld, AIA

Even though single-family housing accounts for more than 70 percent of dwellings in the U.S. 

Except in a few localities that require visitability and for a small proportion of units built with public funding, very few accessible single family homes are being built. 

Given the aging of the population and the almost universal desire to “age in place,” this means that government policy is not matching demand, says Edward Steinfeld, AIA, director of the IDeA Center at the School of Architecture and Planning University at Buffalo, SUNY.


Wednesday, March 24, 2021

ACCESSIBLE HOUSING (4)

PLANNING BEST PRACTICES CAN ACCOMMODATE MORE WHEELCHAIR USERS


Federal Fair Housing minimum access also requires:

*Light switches, electrical outlets, thermostats, and other environmental controls in locations that can be reached by a wheelchair user

*Reinforced walls for grab bars

*Usable bathrooms and kitchens, with no island blocking a wheelchair user. 


Tuesday, March 23, 2021

ACCESSIBLE HOUSING (3)

PLANNING BEST PRACTICES CAN ACCOMMODATE MORE WHEELCHAIR USERS

The federal Fair Housing Act requires that all residential (ownership and rental) buildings with four or more attached units have minimum access. 

In buildings with stairs, all ground floor units must be accessible, and in elevator buildings, all units must have minimum access. In the case of these requirements, "minimum access" means:

*An accessible building entrance on an accessible route

*Accessible and usable public and common use areas

*Usable (wide enough and with lever handles) doors

*An accessible route into and through (no steps or split levels) the covered unit


Monday, March 22, 2021

ACCESSIBLE HOUSING (2)

PLANNING BEST PRACTICES CAN ACCOMMODATE MORE WHEELCHAIR USERS

Altogether, these facts point to a desperate and increased need for accessible housing. 

But according to surveys from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, less than one percent of all housing is move-in ready for wheelchair users, and virtually all of that tiny one percent is newly built multifamily housing.

The desire to age in place should drive zoning and building codes that create homes that are more accessible and adaptable for all. 

But currently, few planning department policies and practices support move-in-ready accessible housing. 

The next two weeks of blog posts will share some best practices and tools to help you get started on making a change in your community.

Sunday, March 21, 2021

ACCESSIBLE HOUSING (1)

PLANNING BEST PRACTICES CAN ACCOMMODATE MORE WHEELCHAIR USERS

At least 25 percent of U.S. residents will experience a disability that impacts their daily life. 

How can we better prepare America's housing stock?

More than three million people currently use a wheelchair full time in the U.S., according to the last census. 

And America is aging at a larger scale than ever before: fewer than eight percent of Americans were 65 or older in 1950, but by 2030, AARP predicts that population will increase to 20 percent. 

Due to age or other factors, the Centers for Disease Control estimates that one in four people experience a disability that impacts their daily routine during their lifetime.


Saturday, March 20, 2021

ABLEISM IS DISCRIMINATION AND SOCIAL PREJUDICE AGAINST PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES

ABLEISM CHARACTERIZES PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES AS INFERIOR TO THE NON-DISABLED

No one says a Toyota driver is "sedan bound."

Nor do the label a Schwinn rider as "confined to a bicycle." 

They are mobility devices. 

Just like a wheelchair. 

Wheels and efficiency. 

Zero difference. 

Yet there are millions of people who know better, yet slip into the hateful, ignorant inaccurate phrases "wheelchair bound, confined to a wheelchair."

To speak pejoratively of wheelchair mobility is toxic ableism.



Friday, March 19, 2021

MERCATO DI PORTA NOLANA (Part 15)

  NAPLES, ITALY

Seafood isn’t the only game in town.

Fresh fruits and vegetables, meats and cheeses, breads and desserts, and grocery items round out the market’s offerings.

--Napoli Unplugged


Thursday, March 18, 2021

Wednesday, March 17, 2021

MERCATO DI PORTA NOLANA (Part 13)

 NAPLES, ITALY

Seafood means: clams, mussels and oysters; shrimp, squid and octopus; sea bass and sword fish; anchovies and sardines; the all-important bacala – salted cod and

captioni – eel for the traditional Neapolitan Christmas Eve dinner, and everything in between, plucked fresh out of the sea.

--Napoli Unplugged

Tuesday, March 16, 2021

MERCATO DI PORTA NOLANA (Part 12)

  NAPLES, ITALY

Rarely frequented by tourists, Porta Nolana Market is where locals go in search of ingredients for their daily meals that are so rich in seafood.

--Napoli Unplugged

Monday, March 15, 2021

Sunday, March 14, 2021

MERCATO DI PORTA NOLANA (Part 10)

     NAPLES, ITALY


I’m pretty certain this beautiful cat didn’t drive the motorcycle to the market.

But who knows?

Naples is a unique place with more than its share of ghosts and mysteries.

Saturday, March 13, 2021

THE VERY LONG ROAD TO REDEMPTION

AND A HEALTHY LIFESTYLE

By the time I escaped my family’s endless descent into more toxicity, by being the first Wright ever to attend college, I knew what a reward was. A reward was a pair of bacon double cheeseburgers.

I also knew what comfort and love were. Those came in the form of downing whole pizzas with 6 toppings, or wolfing down enough giant burritos to feed four starving men.

When I realized my dad was perfectly content to ignore most of my mom’s obsessive compulsive and other damaging behavior, I salved my pain – and 40 work, 40 hours of study weeks – with newly-discovered sub shops and fatty food drive throughs open late night in downtown Akron.

It took me damn near a half century to figure out that I could confront pain and reward achievement – with something other than triple slices of cheesecake with a caloric content exceeding the recommended intake for all five work days.

I’m not all the way there. When even a hint of anxiety or depression enters my life, visions of iced brownies, XL orders of fried catfish and mountains of double buttered whipped potatoes dance in my head.

I’m an orphan now. Have been for nearly a year. Dad died of cancer a few years back and mom died in a nursing home April last year when COVID was ravaging her dementia care ward. They are at rest, maybe, freed from the demons that robbed them of much joy and burdened their two sons with shame, obesity, insecurity and mountains of unresolved issues.

I’m about as imperfect as they come. But I have a dynamite soulmate of a wife. I have a loving, if strained relationship with my only sibling.

And for the first time since I was a tiny boy, I’m eating right and exercising routinely.

 

Friday, March 12, 2021

MERCATO DI PORTA NOLANA (Part 9)

 NAPLES, ITALY

The daily market takes place just a few blocks north of the port in the area around Piazza Nolana, under the watchful eye of the two towers that once stood guard over the ancient port.

--Napoli Unplugged


Thursday, March 11, 2021

MERCATO DI PORTA NOLANA (Part 8)

    NAPLES, ITALY

The market is convenient for Rome day trippers arriving at Stazione Napoli Centrale.

It's an easy stroll through Piazza Garabaldi to the streets where it starts; Via Santa Maria delle Grazie a Loreto and Via Padre Ludovico da Casoria

Wednesday, March 10, 2021

MERCATO DI PORTA NOLANA (Part 7)

    NAPLES, ITALY


For block after block, you see artfully displayed food.

And you hear vendors in rubber boots calling out jokes to each other while selling their wares to passersby. 

Monday, March 8, 2021

MERCATO DI PORTA NOLANA (Part 5)

   NAPLES, ITALY

Dive in for anything from luscious tomatoes and mozzarella to golden-fried street snacks, cheap luggage and bootleg CDs.

-Lonely Planet


Sunday, March 7, 2021

MERCATO DI PORTA NOLANA (Part 4)

 NAPLES, ITALY

Let’s start the week off with a beautiful cat picture.

This sweetheart looks well-fed and much-loved.

The feline friend lives on the street, tempted by the seafood and other delights at the market.

Saturday, March 6, 2021

OVEREATING -- ROOTED IN SADNESS

I WAS TAUGHT TO MAKE FOOD MY DRUG OF CHOICE

I understand the factors that made me overweight from a young age.

My late mother was severely mentally ill and dad unspeakable things to me. A chaotic and terrifying day was a good one.

A day of having everything you loved dearly -- including trinkets your beloved late grandfather gave you on his deathbed when you were nine – torn from your arms, broken then burned in a ceremony of anger and draconian punishment, those were the hard ones. And they sometimes outnumbered the “simply” torturous days of chaos and agony.

When my mom would come out of her fit of fear, anger and rage – she’d run to get her little boy a big pizza.

When she snapped out of it -- and realized she should not have told me I would be an orphan because she was either fated to die within a year or would take her life in front of me – she would bake a pie and feed me half of it.

After a round where my mom, nearly psychotic, would attack me, pummel me – then lie and tell my dad that I raised my hand to her, so he would beat me black and blue when he got home from work – she would order a 4-piece fried chicken dinner with huge breaded jo jo potatoes to some how make up for it.

When I went years without seeing a museum, park, zoo, or play on a school field trip – because her messed up mind felt I would be exposed to imagined death-causing germs for leaving the classroom – she compensated my weeping (because of being left out) with half bags of chips, pretzels and sugary sodas.

When I became isolated from all friends – I was the only kid who never was allowed to host sleep overs, or have visitors, or join a sports team – and considered a leper to be made fun of, mom would feed me a half dozen big donuts from the in-store bakery at the new super market.

From about second grade on, you can see it in my school pictures. As my tummy outgrew its little body, my eyes looked vacant, sad, mournful, hopeless.

Part 4, the final chapter, published in this blog on Sunday March 14


Friday, March 5, 2021

MERCATO DI PORTA NOLANA (Part 3)

  NAPLES, ITALY

The market's namesake is medieval city gate Porta Nolana, which stands at the head of Via Sopramuro.

Its two cylindrical towers, optimistically named Faith and Hope, support an arch decorated with a bas-relief of Ferdinand I of Aragon on horseback.

--Lonely Planet


Thursday, March 4, 2021

MERCATO DI PORTA NOLANA (Part 2)

  NAPLES, ITALY


Naples at its most vociferous and intense, the Mercato di Porta Nolana.

It is a heady, gritty street market where bellowing fishmongers and greengrocers collide with fragrant delis and bakeries, contraband cigarette vendors and Bangladeshi takeaways and grocery stores. 

--Lonely Planet

Wednesday, March 3, 2021

MERCATO DI PORTA NOLANA (Part 1)

 NAPLES, ITALY

Diverse locals meet daily, from morning to mid-afternoon, to stock up on fresh meat and produce at Mercato di Porta Nolana, near the port and within walking distance of the main train station.


Tuesday, March 2, 2021

WHEELS ON CAMPUS -- A GUIDE TO WHEELCHAIR-FRIENDLY HIGHER EDUCATION (part 27)

AUBURN UNIVERSITY

AU also is well-known for its disability studies courses that cover the foundation and history of the disability move­ment. 

The program, along with rehabilitation courses, pre­pares students to become professionals in the fields of dis­ability studies, rehabilitation counseling, case management, human services, as well as allied health fields such as occupa­tional and physical therapy.

Monday, March 1, 2021

WHEELS ON CAMPUS -- A GUIDE TO WHEELCHAIR-FRIENDLY HIGHER EDUCATION (part 26)

AUBURN UNIVERSITY


Robb Taylor, an assistant coach of the gold medal-winning Men’s U.S. Paralympic Basketball Team, was recruited by Donald a decade ago to be the first full-time coach of the coed wheelchair basketball team. 

Taylor and Donald are quick to point out that the team is far from a feel-good program, but rather is a recruiting tool that brings the best and brightest student athletes who are able to meet Auburn’s high academic standards.