I'm Dr. Gillian Friedman, managing health
editor of Ability Magazine, a leading
publication addressing health, disability
and human potential.
And I'm Max Gail, a subscriber and
sometimes contributor to Ability Magazine.
I also volunteer as a director for Ability
Awareness, a non-profit organisation that
is partnered with Habit for Humanity to
build accessible homes and to build
awareness of the value of volunteering for
people with disabilities.
And I've been a volunteer on the Ability
House project a number of times, going
back to the first one in Birmingham,
Alabama back in 1999.
Today there are 56 million people with
mental or physical disabilities in America
The Department of Housing and Urban
Development has identified people with
disabilities, one of the principle
populations experiencing worst-case
housing needs. Ability Awareness and
Habitat for Humanity address this need
through the Ability House project.
Now there are two features that make the
Ability House project really unique, the
first is that the program endorses
universal design - that's the strategy for
building environments that can be visited
by people of all ages and all abilities.
And the second, it specifically involves
volunteers with disabilities in all phases
of construction. You know, to see or work
with people with disabilities actually
building a house, well that'll wipe out
all the stereotypes and myths you might
have about people with disabilities.
And it helps those volunteers to explore
and to demonstrate their abilities.
The adage "it's better to give than to
receive" is born out in health studies,
showing that emotional wellbeing, physical
health and mental sharpness improve when
people join activities where they can give
and receive encouragement and learn new
skills.
I'll test to that. Anyway, the following
presentation was shot at an Ability house
built in Baltimore, Mariyln. This was
documented by the Good Life television
network for an episode of their series
'Volunteers for the Sake of Others'.
I think you'll enjoy it.
So many people wonder how a blind person
can build a house or how a person who uses
a wheelchair can come and build a house.
Volunteers, many with disabilities and
little knowledge of construction have set
out to try and build a house in just
8 days.
Most of them have never done any kind of
construction.
NARRATOR: Will wet weather dampen their
spirits?
We would rather have better weather but
we've got a schedule to keep.
NARRATOR: It will take all of the
volunteers working together to complete
this house in time.
Everyone can come out and pick up a hammer
and we're all on equal ground.
Welcome to Good Life TV Network's
'Volunteers for the Sake of Others'.
I'm Doris McMillan.
People with disabilities are often
marginalised by society. An impairment is
often seen as a major obstacle to living a
normal life. Ability Awareness, a
non-profit organisation combats this
misconception by recruiting people who
have disabilities to help construct homes,
often for people who themselves have a
disability.
This time-honoured tradition of
volunteering allows those with
disabilities to help someone in need.
The Ability house project is a hallmark
program of Ability Awareness and was
basically started to increase awareness
around the issues surrounding people with
disabilities, to really bring people with
disabilities out and show the community
their true skills and their talents, and
their potential as volunteers, as mentors
and as employees.
Volunteering benefits the provider of
service, perhaps as much as it does the
recipient of service, and so when you have
someone who is commonly thought of as in
need, there is a therapeutic benefit to
be derived when those individuals can in
fact be the providers of service.
Here, Ability teams with the local chapter
of Habitat for Humanity to build a house
with a few special features.
The Ability House is accessibly designed
home, built for someone with a disability
by volunteers, many of whom also have
disabilities.
VOLUNTEER: Ready? One, two, three!
The concept of universal design which
means people who have physical impairments
are able to get in and out of it with no
barriers and so I think this is a
worthwhile project.
It's a big stigma that blind people have
to sit and they can't do things and we see
a lot of people that come through our
program that have had people take care of
them their whole lives and there's no
reason for that really.
So often people with disabilities, they
aren't looked to as volunteers and every
single person has his or her individual
level of ability, and so it's just really
a matter of finding out what that is and
utilising them to their fullest potential.
MAN: Here now, feel that, see what we're
gonna do?
Red hats, experienced volunteers, work on
securing the roof while a group of blind
volunteers help with the house's exterior.
I was given four individuals, and I took
them aside, gave them a quick lesson on
how to operate a screw gun, all I had to
do was point to where the screw needed to
go in, I'd say "follow my finger", they'd
find my fingertip, put the screw there and
screw it in.
Something really clicked with Fred. He was
there working with the volunteers
patiently working with each one. He was
giving of himself and he really sensed
what this is all about.
I was totally amazed and impressed.
To call them disabled is no longer
adequate. They are definitely able-bodied
with a minor inconvenience.
Tom Owens has been blind since the age of
11, but involved in carpentry all his life.
Technically I've been doing this stuff
since I was about 3. I started working
with my father when I was 3 years old,
everybody in my family has some kind of
trade type skill. And Romney's a great
partner. (Laughs) She likes high places.
I think these guys are doing a great job,