Disability program closures forcing some parents to quit jobs

CLIFTON PARK — A staffing crisis that is crippling care programs for individuals with disabilities is forcing Saratoga County’s largest nonprofit human services agency to temporarily “pause” a day habilitation program in Clifton Park.

For some of the roughly two dozen families affected, the looming decisions include whether a parent might have to quit their job to care for their loved one during the day.

“At that particular site we felt that it’s not safe to do the day program with as many individuals, with the staffing shortages that we have,” said Jane Mastaitis, chief executive officer at Saratoga Bridges, one of 36 chapters of The Arc New York, the state’s largest nonprofit organization serving people with intellectual and developmental disabilities. “We’re just so short of staff; it’s just a decision that we made as as team … for the safety of the individuals.”

Read on at https://www.timesunion.com/state/article/Closure-of-day-hab-centers-may-force-some-parents-17357378.php#photo-22784340.

DAD Note: It is happening all over the country including here impacting some of our deaf patients too.  It is not known yet how the states or governments will fix this as it also impacts an Olmstead Supreme Court ruling.

A school counselor once told deaf woman she couldn’t be a hairstylist. Now, she manages a salon in Forsyth County.

Susan Perdue, Great Clips salon manager - photo by Sabrina Kerns

A school counselor once told Susan Perdue that she “could never be a hairstylist” because she is deaf.

But the now wife and mother of two decided to follow her dream anyway. Today, she is the salon manager of the Great Clips on Freedom Parkway in Cumming, working as the sole deaf leader for a company employing more than 40,000 stylists across the United States.

Perdue said she has always loved the company. She and her family always went to a Great Clips salon to get haircuts when she was a child, and she remembers how much she loved talking with the staff and the joy of walking away with a fresh hairdo.

“That was what really made me want to become a hairstylist,” Perdue said.

Read on at https://www.forsythnews.com/life/people/a-school-counselor-once-told-deaf-woman-she-couldnt-be-a-hairstylist-now-she-manages-a-salon-in-forsyth-county.