LOCAL ADVOCACY AT ITS
BEST:
COMMUNITY ADVOCATES FROM BALTIMORE'S RONALD MCDONALD HOUSE, ACB REPRESENTATIVES
LEARN FROM ONE ANOTHER
by Gary Norman
If
it's true that all politics is local, then it may be equally true that the most
effective advocacy occurs at the local level, and further, that advocacy that
leads two disparate community groups to learn and care about one another may be
the most satisfying advocacy experience of all. The ACB of Maryland
(ACBM) and Maryland Area Guide Dog Users (MAGDU) recently engaged in some local
advocacy with staff members from Baltimore's Ronald McDonald House. We found the
experience a rewarding one from the perspective of everyone involved, and we
came away reaffirming our belief that advocacy is best suited to developing
local partnerships within our communities.
Pat Sheehan, president of the ACB of Maryland, and Gary C. Norman, Esq., president of Maryland Area Guide Dog Users, met on Aug. 11, 2006 with Marianne Rowan-Braun, the executive director of the Ronald McDonald House of Baltimore. While we met to introduce our non-profit organizations to her and her staff and to engage in follow-up relative to an alleged access denial to a guide dog team which later turned out not to have occurred, we left with a greater understanding of the constituencies which Ronald McDonald House serves and the processes through which a family gains admittance to its array of social services. Rowan-Braun emerged from our meeting with a "hands-on" understanding of our guide dogs and the ways in which they help us negotiate our world, and a commitment to help us educate the public and share information about our concerns.
We decided to write this article to share with members of ACB our newfound knowledge about Ronald McDonald House and the important services the organization provides to families.
Ronald McDonald House is located in what is known as Lexington Market, which comprised the shopping district in Baltimore during the 1940s and 1950s. The land on which the house is located was once owned by the University of Maryland and was purchased 24 years ago for the purpose of constructing a house for Ronald McDonald Foundation. Because the facility is a non-profit with limited resources, there is a referral process in place to screen and accept families to the house. We learned that as a non-profit dedicated to public service and compassion, Ronald McDonald House welcomes all families, including those who utilize assistance dogs.
When
we arrived at the house, Rowan-Braun gave us a tour of the facilities, which
include 30 or more apartments, a library, an accessible playground and a number
of rooms where children of all ages can play videos and games. We had an
opportunity to meet the staff, which includes dedicated and talented
professionals such as a licensed graduate social worker who lives in an
apartment located onsite and serves as 24-hour counselor to the families whose
children are facing serious and life-threatening illnesses in local hospitals
and medical facilities. We met several family members who were coming or
going from the facility and taking advantage of the services available at the
house. It was all one parent could do to contain her enthusiasm while she talked
to us about how important Ronald McDonald House is to the community of
Baltimore. She managed to restrain her impulse to hug everyone in sight while
she was telling us about the invaluable services the facility provides to
families in crisis, instead transferring her exuberance to the enthusiastic pets
she gave to Langer, my yellow Labrador guide dog.
We learned that the Ronald McDonald House in Baltimore needs to raise $1 million each year just to keep the lights on and ensure that the doors of the house are open to the public. After having the chance to meet the dynamic and energetic Rowan-Braun, we could understand why Ronald McDonald House's board appointed her as the full-time executive director back in the early 1990s. She calls herself the facilitator of community partnerships and compassion.
As
representatives of ACB and Guide Dog Users, Inc., we were very favorably
impressed by the staff's compassion and their eagerness to reach out into the
community and embrace opportunities to assist children in medical crisis and
their families. As a result of our meeting and our mutual desire to know more
about one another and to share information about our divergent needs and goals,
ACB of Maryland and MAGDU agreed to host a guide dog partnership evening at
Ronald McDonald House. MAGDU representatives, including Gary Norman and Jane and
Patrick Sheehan, plan to talk about the American Council of the Blind and the
guide dog movement with 34 families, including their children, and to answer
questions about how guide dogs can assist people who are blind to
navigate their surroundings. Rowan-Braun has agreed to give the event the kind
of attention and publicity that will highlight the work of the American Council
of the Blind of Maryland and the principles of MAGDU and GDUI. ACBM has agreed
to participate in several additional Ronald McDonald House programs throughout
the coming year and considers it an honor and a privilege to meet and interact
with such courageous children and their families.
We are grateful to have had the opportunity to learn about the important work Ronald McDonald House is doing for sick children and their families and pleased to have had a chance to educate such a receptive and welcoming audience about the issues that are important to people who are blind, and the work of our two organizations. We encourage other ACB affiliates to reach out to the non-profit groups in your communities, where local advocacy can lead to mutual understanding and a shared commitment to educate, inform, work together, and engage in activities that may lead to improved understanding and shared goals that can make the world a better place for all of us.