Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Presentable

Imagine!'s SmartHomes guru Greg Wellems and other members of the SmartHome team have been traveling across the state and the country giving presentations about Imagine!’s SmartHomes project to audiences at a wide variety of conferences and events. The desire of so many organizations to learn about this project serves as another reminder of how Imagine!'s SmartHomes continue to be recognized nationally as an innovative way to improve the efficiency and quality of services in the developmental disability field.

Greg is travelling to Ohio today and will be presenting tomorrow at the Ohio Association of County Boards Serving People with Developmental Disabilities Annual Convention. Greg will discuss the use of technology in the future considering the amendments to Ohio's waivers to allow for assistive technology becoming reality in 2011.

Good luck, Greg!

See more on upcoming, and previous, presentations by clicking here.

Monday, November 29, 2010

Mandy's Poetry

Mandy lives at the Bob and Judy Charles SmartHome in Boulder, and is using some of the technology in the SmartHome to write articles for the Imagine! employee newsletter. Here’s her latest contribution, an original poem:

The circle is round.
It was as round as a ball.
You can throw it on the beach,
Or you can put frosting on it.

A ball bounces on the ground.
It makes a very loud sound.
It makes a boom,
But the thread goes on a loom.

So, that’s the ball
That will fall
On the ground
And make a sound.

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Who's Touring The SmartHome?

Last week, a delegation of health care professionals from Russia visited facilities across the Front Range, including a tour of the Charles Family SmartHome in Longmont on Friday.

The delegates were selected to participate in the Open World program, an exchange program funded by the Open World Leadership Center at the Library of Congress.

An article about the Russians’ SmartHome tour ran on the front page of the Longmont Times-Call the following Saturday. Check out the article by clicking here.

And yesterday, Tom Darcy, Senior Consultant with IBM, toured the Bob and Judy Charles SmartHome in Boulder.

Monday, November 22, 2010

Gerald's Vegas Adventure

Check out these pictures from Bob and Judy Charles SmartHome resident Gerald’s big Vegas trip! Many thanks to SmartHome staff member Jessica Brennen, who did so much to make this trip a reality. The best quote of the trip is from Gerald’s Facebook page: “did not win big, but the best prize is waiting for me at home tomorrow! A big hug from my wife.”











Friday, November 19, 2010

The Russians Are Coming (To The SmartHome)

A group of Russian physicians are touring the Charles Family SmartHome in Longmont today. Here’s hoping tour guide extraordinaire Sterling Wind will bust out his best Yakov Smirnoff impersonation: “In Russia, people take care of house. At SmartHome, house take care of people.”

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Who's Touring The SmartHome?

Touring the Bob and Judy Charles SmartHome in Boulder on Tuesday: Benjamin Smith from the University of New Hampshire’s UNH Foundation. Pictured below, l to r: SmartHome resident Donna, Imagine! CEO Mark Emery, Benjamin Smith, and SmartHome resident Gerald.

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Anthony Gets Social

Imagine! and members of the SmartHomes team believe that Social Media provides individuals with developmental disabilities opportunities to engage in community without barriers and without judgment. Check out this picture of Charles Family SmartHome resident Anthony as he updates his Facebook status.



Want more information on why we encourage our residents to use Social Media? Well, many different organizations serving individuals with developmental disabilities here in Colorado who use the word “community” in either their mission statement or even as part of their name. It is in Imagine!’s mission statement.

Social Media is all about community. There are groups out there on the internet for every interest, hobby, or pastime you can think of, and a lot more you probably never thought of. And technology has made accessing those communities relatively easy, even for those with significant disabilities. So it doesn’t make a whole lot of sense for organizations with a stated mission of providing community access and opportunities for people with disabilities to not at least explore this new avenue of access to communities.

Is having consumers engage in Social Media is a risk-free endeavor? Of course not. But neither is taking a consumer to the recreation center, or to a baseball game, or even to work. We all accept those risks as part of what we do because we think it is important to provide opportunities for community interaction, and we take steps to mitigate those risks. Why can’t we do the same for Social Media?

And here’s an even more important consideration, the main reason Imagine! encourages consumers to use social media. In the virtual world, a person’s disability is invisible. Say, for example, a consumer joins a Facebook group dedicated to the Denver Broncos. All the other people in the group just see the consumer as a fellow fanatic – someone just like them. The consumer can engage in these online communities and conversations without barriers and without judgment. That meets Imagine!’s mission and goals in an incredible powerful, and empowering, way.

Monday, November 15, 2010

Who’s Touring the SmartHome Today?

Touring the Bob and Judy Charles SmartHome in Boulder today will be Kris Gibson from the Boulder Police Department. Kris heads the BPD’s Safety First Classes, which teach decision-making skills, street-smart safety, home security, fire prevention, and safety while riding public transportation.

In the past 15 years, more than 200 Imagine! consumers have attended and graduated from the class. The class was developed through a collaborative effort between the Boulder Police Department and the Association for Community Living (ACL) serving Boulder and Broomfield Counties, and is free of charge. Classes are offered to both adults and teens.

Welcome Kris, and thanks for all you do for the people we serve at Imagine!.

If you’d like to take a tour, just click here.

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Mandy's Short Story

SmartHome resident Mandy has been using the technology available to her at the Bob and Judy Charles SmartHome to write her own original stories for the Imagine! employee newsletter. Check out her latest work below!* Great job, Mandy!



Charlie is a very young boy. He really wanted a dog. The dog he wanted was a beagle. The dog was all white, and he had a black nose and long, black, floppy ears. Charlie found out that his friend Lucy had a dog, and it was going to have puppies. The dog had the babies, and Charlie wanted a dog so bad that his friend Lucy just gave him a puppy. Charlie decided to name his dog Snoopy, and Snoopy was very talented. He had a lot of talents. Even though he was a dog, he acted like he was a human. He and Charlie walked to a pumpkin patch, and then they took the pumpkins home and carved them. His dog did everything humans did. The dog was very cuddly. They baked cookies and went trick-or-treating. Snoopy and Charlie found an old building, and they made it into a haunted house.

Everyone found out about Charlie’s dog, and they wanted to see him because he was so talented. Charlie got him a red collar, and he engraved Charlie’s address and Snoopy’s name in it. Snoopy refused to wear it. Snoopy tried to hide it, but Charlie always found it.

When Charlie went to school, Snoopy would climb the fence. They bought Halloween costumes. Snoopy even ate human food even though it’s really bad for dogs. Charlie couldn’t stop him. Snoopy was even allowed to get in the swimming pool. Charlie even built him a doghouse. He wanted to be in school. He would wait on the lawn until Charlie got out of school.

Peppermint Patty took a sewing class and made outfits for Snoopy. They all had a Halloween party after that.


*Mandy wishes to thank Charles Schultz for providing the inspiration for this story.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

CORE/Labor Source Art Show and Performance

On Friday, Nov. 5, approximately 250 people crowded into the Dairy Center for the Arts in Boulder for an art show opening and performance by artists and performers in Imagine!'s CORE/Labor Source classes. Several SmartHome residents took part. Check out the pictures!

















Tuesday, November 9, 2010

International Campaign Update

Longtime SmartHome supporters may be aware that last year Imagine! received a grant from the Charles Evans Hughes Foundation (CEHF).

The purpose of the grant is to allow the Imagine! SmartHomes Project to support an international campaign to educate the international community on how assistive and adaptive energy efficient technologies can provide support for the very neediest individuals with developmental or cognitive disabilities.

We recently presented the CEHF with an annual report on our progress, which has been substantial. Here’s some highlights from the report:



Imagine!’s guiding philosophy is that all individuals, regardless of ability or disability, have talents and strengths that make them vital members of their communities. We believe that our mission and advocacy of the disabled community is universal and is as crucially important to the developing world as it is here in the United States.

The purpose of the grant is to allow the Imagine! SmartHomes Project to support an international campaign to educate the international community on how assistive and adaptive energy efficient technologies can provide support for the very neediest individuals with developmental or cognitive disabilities.

In this Annual Report we present those countries and international organizations that have shown the greatest interest in the SmartHome International Campaign to date and are now continuing to work with Imagine! either in developing a joint project in their country or region, or continuing to support Imagine! by their advocacy of this very important endeavor.

European Union: In April 2010, we began the formal process of discussing with the Colorado European Union Center of Excellence (CEUCE) at the University of Colorado at Boulder, how to address the possibility of bringing representatives from the EU to tour the Boulder SmartHome. Through a series of meetings and emails with Dr. Joseph Jupille, Director of CEUCE and the Assistant Director Felicia Naranjo-Martinez, information regarding our campaign was presented to the European Union Delegation to the United States in Washington, DC. The benefits of this exchange culminated in the formal tour of the Boulder SmartHome on May 4 th, 2010, by Angelos Pangratis, Chargé d’ Affaires and Acting Head of Delegation of the European Union to the United States. This very high level tour by the leading diplomat of the European Union to the United States highlighted the relevance of our campaign to the 27 member countries of the EU. Ambassador Pangratis wrote about his tour of the SmartHome in his weekly newsletter on May 7 th, 2010: “I visited a sustainable housing project featuring innovative assistive technology to serve individuals with developmental disabilities or in need of assistance in their daily lives. The Imagine SmartHome is a great example of Colorado's important growth industries of medical technology and medical supplies, which I believe will be extremely relevant, among others, for the large generations of seniors who in the coming years will want to stay in their homes as long as possible but might need assistance to perform certain tasks.” The Imagine! SmartHome was now acknowledged formally, by the European Union Delegation to the United States.

Belgium: On April 7 th, 2010 we were informed by CEUCE Director Dr. Joseph Jupille of a possible tour of the SmartHome by the Ambassador of Belgium. On April 28th, 2010 it was confirmed by CEUCE Assistant Director Felicia Naranjo-Martinez, of a Boulder SmartHome tour request by the Office of Jan Matthysen, Belgium Ambassador to the United States. On May 27th, Ambassador and Mrs. Matthysen, Frank Schuchat the Honorary Belgian Counsel to Colorado, and other Belgian representatives toured the Imagine! Boulder SmartHome and engaged in an interesting discussion on assisted living cost comparisons between Europe and the US, with SmartHome creator and Imagine! Business Development Director, Greg Wellems.

France: On April 1, 2010, we contacted the office of Madame Nadine Morano, Secretary of State for the Government of France. We were able to have the assistance of a respected French businessman, Philippe Lepercq who also provided excellent translation services and valuable French Government contact information and facilitated the introduction of the Imagine! SmartHome international campaign to the Government of France. At the time, it appeared we would be able to travel to France to meet with Ms. Morano’s team, as her office had expressed interest in having us meet with her Disability Chief, Madame Canuet, personally to discuss our campaign in Paris in May. Regretfully, because of budgetary constraints regarding a unilateral trip to Paris, we requested a video conference with Madame Canuet’s Office, but were told that scheduling would need to be approached later in the year.

United States: Support from the US Department of Commerce continues. We applied to be a part of a trade delegation from the US to Saudi Arabia and Qatar after an invitation by the Department of Commerce. After a thorough review of our application by the trade specialists assigned to the delegation, it appeared our project would be too progressive for any public disability programs within those countries, and we were recommended to focus on countries with existing and advanced social programs for the disabled community. The US Department of Commerce’s Director for Colorado and Wyoming, Paul Bergman and his office have continued to express interest in supporting the international campaign, which is greatly appreciated. A further, positive development has been with the US Government Department of Health and Human Services Director of the Office on Disability, Henry Claypool. Mr. Claypool is very knowledgeable about Imagine! and its programs from the late 80s, when he was a student at the University of Colorado at Boulder. He has been gracious with his time through email from his staff and personal phone conversations and has expressed interest on reviewing data on the SmartHome and its potential to cut Medicare costs in the future, by its use of energy efficient assistive and adaptive technologies.

Israel: In early June, we sent an email to Mr. Lawrence Normie, Executive Director of Geron Tech, the Israeli Center for Assistive Technology and Aging and received this very positive reply:

“Thank you for your mail; the information on Imagine! certainly is of topical interest. I am a member of a nongovernmental task group currently examining the strategic and functional requirements for deployment of smart home technologies for national aging-in-place programs here in Israel. I will distribute the information you have provided to my colleagues in the task group.”

Serbia:
As indicated in the Interim Report, we have been in productive discussions with the Beneficiaries Center in Belgrade since March of this year. Through contacts made by SmartHome creator Greg Wellems based on an assistance mission to Belgrade in the early 00’s, Greg was able to propose the SmartHome international campaign to Rachel Chanin, the Director of the Beneficiaries Center. The Beneficiaries Center is in the process of securing a housing grant from the US Department of Defense (DoD) to help develop an assisted living facility. Imagine! submitted in September a proposal for an assistive and adaptive technology pilot project for the Beneficiaries Center. The project seeks to improve communications and motility, and overall greater independence for 16 Serbian participants. Here are quotes from page one of the proposal, beginning with paragraph 3:

“The project is to be conducted to educate members of the local Serbian community while being an example to the wider international community, on how to implement a project of this merit and scale. The project’s implementation is within the context of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (“UNCRPD”) in regards to knowledge and technology information sharing. According to the United Nations, the estimated disabled population in the developing world alone is 520 million people. Assistive and adaptive technologies can provide a cost-effective alternative to traditional services for people that are most in need.”


And paragraphs 8 and 9 of the same page:

“Imagine! is proposing a unique partnership with the Beneficiaries Center. The partnership is designed to combine Imagine!’s expertise of supporting and providing assistive and adaptive technical support systems for individuals with developmental and cognitive disabilities, with the Beneficiaries Center’s knowledge and desire of improving the lives of individuals with developmental and cognitive disabilities in Belgrade.

The proposal is to have these two organizations working together, to implement technological devices that are designed to promote independence for individuals with developmental and cognitive disabilities. Most devices are relatively low cost, mobile and can be programmed into the individual’s native language. The assistive devices are an important tool to assist individuals with disabilities to learn and develop new skills to live productive lives within their communities”.

Germany: We received an email in April from Stephan Meyer, Christian Democratic Union Party (CDU) Member of Saxony State Parliament and CDU Spokesperson for Environmental Issues, who replied to our email from February on companies that would be interested in the technologies in the SmartHome. We sent him a thank you email, but because of the costs presently associated with travel to Germany in our campaign, we will await formal follow-up with the German companies once we receive additional funding.

Bulgaria: We met last February with Mr. Genady Kondarev, Consultant for Sustainable Energy Solutions, after which we also followed up with an email. He said he will look into the possibilities of our project in Bulgaria, but he felt that getting government support may be challenging. He has since sent a few emails of strong support for our project stating that he felt that we would have more positive outcomes in European countries that are already mentioned in this report.

AAATE, The Association for the Advancement of Assistive Technology in Europe: From June through August, 2010, we have been in extensive contact (phone and email) with Board Members of AAATE, representing some 30 countries. AAATE’s mission is "to stimulate the advancement of assistive technology for the benefit of people with disabilities, including elderly people".

The World Bank: We continue to be in contact with the Disability Team of the World Bank to offer helpful information on the international campaign and request assistance for aspects of our program. We encourage the World Bank’s participation in the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UNCRPD). The UN and the World Bank met within the context of the UNCRPD in the United Nations Expert Group Meeting on Accessibility, World Bank Headquarters, Washington, DC, 28 - 30 June 2010. A summary of the meeting is as follows:

The Expert meeting provided a forum for intensive exchanges of knowledge and experience relating to norms and standards, institutional arrangements, governance, technologies and actual practice related to accessibility and reasonable accommodation in the physical environments as well as in the fields of information and communication technologies(ICT). Special attention was directed to environmental and ICT accessibility and advancement of persons with disabilities in the context of developing countries. Universal design accorded special attention in the review and analysis of issues, trends and priorities for action in promoting accessibility as a means and goal of development.

Meeting objectives pursued by means of select presentations and round-table discussions of issues, trends, key concepts and practical methods of planning, design and evaluation of accessible environments in countries. Group work focused on examination and identification of (1) strategic frameworks to promote inclusive development and environmental accessibility with reasonable accommodation for all, and (2) priorities for action to strengthen national capacities and institutions and (3) empowerment of persons with disabilities and their communities to participate as agents and beneficiaries in analysis, planning and design, implementation and evaluation of accessible environments in urban and rural areas.

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Partnership Success

So much of our success with our SmartHomes project is dependent on partnering with like-minded organizations in both the for-profit and not-for-profit fields to develop and improve technologies that make our service provision more efficient.

Here's a great example:

SmartHome partners CaraSolva and PDC Pharmacy have finished the initial testing of MedSupport's integration with the PDC Pharmacy software. The new application improves the efficiency of scheduling and delivering medications and, because it directly links to the pharmacy, it will greatly reduce transcription errors.


Congratulations to CaraSolva and PDC Pharmacy!

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Donna's Diary - October 2010

How did the residents of the Charles SmartHome in Boulder celebrate Halloween? Check out Donna’s latest online diary entry below to find out.

And see all of Donna's diary entries here.



The life of Mrs. Stopa (me) has been a very busy one. We’ve had plenty of activities to go to, and when we’re not on the go, we’ve enjoyed some fun times at the SmartHome watching DVDs and enjoying each others’ company. Little House on the Prairie was one of the movies we watched.

We’ve got the front door of the house decorated with Halloween stickers. My friend Chloe, who I met when she wanted to volunteer for Imagine! two years ago, helped me put some stickers on the door.

I really appreciate and enjoy my time with Chloe. When we get together, we often play cards (Go Fish, War, and Uno), and we sometimes play the game Sorry. We have two editions, the regular one and the Disney one.

My job at In Clover is going well. On Wednesday, we packed 144 bags of dog treats, which is a very productive day. I love my job there, the owners are really nice.

I still enjoy the SmartHome a lot, and I do mean a lot. That’s because some of my best friends live here. I remember when we had our first meeting when we got together to talk about the SmartHome. At the time, I didn’t realize that some of my longtime friends would be living here, like Mandy. What a bonus.

We have plenty of Halloween activities planned. Today, Friday, we are having a Halloween party at the CORE/Labor Source office in Boulder, and we are planning to go to Foothills Group Home in north Boulder Sunday afternoon to hang out with our friends there. Then we will come back home to hand out treats to the neighborhood kids, then go out trick or treating ourselves. I called the Chamber of Commerce and found out that little kids will be trick or treating from 5 o’clock until 6 o’clock, and then the bigger kids and adults will be going out from 7 until 8 o’clock. It sure looks like it will be another exciting day at the SmartHome.

Happy Halloween to you all.