Going "above and beyond" for an RFB&D
institutional member earned Carol Fontenot, the member services
assistant and office manager in RFB&D's Arizona Unit,
a welcomed floral surprise.
Last year, right around the holidays, someone
from the Phoenix, AZ, campus of Ottawa University called Carol
seeking fast delivery of a textbook desperately needed by
a student. "The student was really in need," Carol
recalls. "I worked closely with Alise Spataro, member
services supervisor at RFB&D headquarters in Princeton,
to get the book to the school before class began."
Carol,
a former RFB&D volunteer who had been on staff for only
two months at the time, was aware that the university was
grateful, but was surprised when its representative sent her
a bouquet of beautiful flowers in recognition of
her prompt assistance.
"I've been in customer service pretty much
my whole life, and it's not often that people go out of their
way to express appreciation," she says. "Honestly,
this is really 'all in a days work' for us and for the member
service representatives at RFB&D headquarters. But the
recognition was super," she says.
June Wiley, Ottawa University's dean of instruction
and the person who initially introduced the school to RFB&D's
services, states, "RFB&D is invaluable to our school
and to our students with print disabilities. The service we
receive is always quick and courteous. As a former RFB&D
volunteer myself, I'm pleased to know it's still a superior
organization with great people."
Betsy O'Connell, executive director of RFB&D's
Metropolitan Washington Unit, was pleasantly surprised when
she received an unordered shipment of pens one day. She rightly
suspected that RFB&D volunteer Bill Ritchie had arranged
for the delivery. Bill, a recording volunteer in the evening
program for 10 years, has showered the Washington Unit with
other donations - from calendars and pens to office cabinets.
In fact, Bill founded the much appreciated "cookie of
the month club," an automatic shipment of fresh cookies
for the enjoyment of evening volunteers.
"Bill's contributions boost volunteer morale
tremendously. He is always thinking of RFB&D and comes
up with creative ways to make everyone's day," Betsy
says. "It gives him pleasure to make life more interesting
to volunteers and staff alike."
Bill, a generous contributor to RFB&D himself,
also helps with RFB&D's fundraising efforts. He recently
underwrote costs of an advertisement in a neighborhood newspaper
to promote the Unit's benefit sale days at Borders. He has
also arranged for RFB&D to be the beneficiary of proceeds
from the Georgetown Chorale's spring concerts - raising $19,000
- for two years in a row.
"One of the great motivating factors to
me is that you are helping people who are really working hard
to obtain an education. You really feel the work is appreciated,"
says Bill. "It is all worthwhile and rewarding, and I
am glad to be of service to the Metropolitan Washington Unit
and all of RFB&D's members."
Although separated by nearly a 30-year age gap,
Annemarie Cooke, RFB&D's senior external relations officer,
and RFB&D member Kristen Witucki are dear friends who
share many of the same qualities. Both are intelligent, articulate
and witty. Both are passionate about RFB&D. Both are blind.
And both love to sing the praises of the other.
"Kristen has been amazing me since she
was 13 years old," states Annemarie.
"Annemarie was the first blind adult I
ever met," recalls Kristen. "The fact that she was
so professional and confident gave me great hope for my own
future."
The two were introduced in 1994, when Annemarie
was searching for an accomplished young student who was blind
and willing to testify before the Joint Budget and Appropriations
Subcommittee of the New Jersey State Legislature on behalf
of funding for RFB&D. Associates kept referring her to
a young girl named Kristen from Pine Hill, NJ. It only took
one phone call for her to discover why.
"Here was a seventh grader who was just
so confident and poised," Annemarie recalls of their
first conversation. "When I later took her to Trenton
to testify, she just blew people away."
Since then, Kristen, a 2004 RFB&D Scholastic
Achievement Award winner, has done much for RFB&D. Having
testified for six years to the New Jersey Joint Budget and
Appropriations Subcommittee, Kristen also helped RFB&D
win a grant of $400,000 from Reader's Digest Partners for
Sight Foundation. While still in junior high, she served as
the youngest member of RFB&D's Consumer Advisory Council,
and she has undertaken research, writing and public speaking
on behalf of RFB&D. After graduating from Vassar College
last year with a 3.58 grade point average and New York State
certification to teach English, Kristen interned in RFB&D's
marketing department this past summer. She now attends Columbia
University's Teacher's College, where she is pursuing a master's
degree in special education as a research fellow.
"Annemarie and RFB&D have provided
me with wonderful growth experiences and networking opportunities,"
states Kristen. "I feel such a bond."
Annemarie
helped Kristen learn about new products and technologies in
the disability field by taking her to various conferences,
and each laughs as they recall travel adventures. Last summer,
Annemarie was proud to sit among close friends and family
at Kristen's college graduation; and, this past September,
Kristen attended Annemarie's wedding, a testament to the strong
relationship the two have formed over
the years.
"One of the benefits of my job at RFB&D
is that I meet some incredible people," states Annemarie.
"I can honestly say I've learned as much from Kristen
as she has from me."
After RFB&D's transition to digital recording
equipment, RFB&D volunteer Jim Hulbert noticed the readers
in RFB&D's Lois C. Klein Studio (Orland Park, IL) struggling
with tight quarters. So, he immediately designed and built
new work stations with updated features, such as pull out
drawers for keyboards.
Jim, a retired Illinois Bell technician who
also built an airplane in his garage, has gone out of his
way to help RFB&D for the past 33 years. He has not only
been a reader and generous supporter, but he has repeatedly
traveled all over the state (sometimes driving over 200 miles!)
to handle technical problems with telephones, faxes, recording
equipment, studio furniture and other general maintenance
issues.
Assistant Studio Director Shirley Watson says
with a laugh, "Give Jim a piece of wood, and he'll build
something amazing with it." Jim's other contributions
to the unit have included carved reindeer and exquisitely
hand-made clocks for its annual fundraiser. "RFB&D
is really blessed to have him as a volunteer, donor and friend.
He is generous, creative and considerate. He cares deeply
about recording and our studio."
For Jim, the matter is simple. "RFB&D
is a good outfit serving members who amaze me with their ambition
and accomplishments. When I see a need for something to be
done, I simply design a way to fix the problem. There is great
satisfaction in it."
Volunteering for RFB&D recently became ultra-convenient
for employees of the Charlottesville, VA, office of LexisNexis,
a leading web-based research service and publisher. A $10,000
grant from the company's parent company, Reed Elsevier Group
plc, is being used for the set up and operation of an employee-run,
on-site RFB&D recording studio.
"Part of our mission is to promote literacy
and give aid to disadvantaged young people, so this project
was ideal," says Ed Gould, site lead for the LexisNexis
Charlottesville location. "We wanted to find an activity
that the majority of our employees could participate in, and
this is a perfect partnership."
LexisNexis encourages its employees to do volunteer
work and even provides them two paid days off per year to
do so. The company and RFB&D have worked side by side
on several past projects, and it is a regular RFB&D supporter.
To introduce the on-site studio to employees, LexisNexis set
a goal to record 10 textbooks with 1,000 volunteer hours in
120 days. According to Lisa Roberson, volunteer coordinator
and production assistant at RFB&D's Regional Unit of the
Virginias and Carolinas, local staff and volunteers have already
trained close to 250 LexisNexis employees.
"Since LexisNexis is a renowned leader
in legal, news and business information and applications,
its employees are especially well-versed in many legal and
technical subjects," says Morgan Roth, RFB&D vice
president for strategic communications. "This extraordinary
and thoughtful effort will help RFB&D meet our demand
for textbooks in those areas."
RFB&D volunteer Rita Burns never recorded
a single book for RFB&D, nor spent a single minute in
any of our studios. Yet, Rita has donated more than 1,200
hours helping the development staff at RFB&D headquarters.
As an added benefit, those hours translated to close to $20,000
in grants from her former employer, ExxonMobil.
Rita is part of ExxonMobil Foundation's Retiree
Volunteer Program, which encourages Mobil retirees, spouses
and dependent children to volunteer for worthwhile community
service projects. Under the program terms, ExxonMobil Foundation
awards $500 to a nonprofit for every 40 hours of time an eligible
person donates in a calendar year.
"We all look forward to Thursdays, when
Rita comes in," says JoAnn Rygiel, RFB&D's development
director of direct response fundraising, who smiles as she
describes how Rita leaves butterscotch candies for her officemates
before leaving each week. "She's been doing this for
eight years now, and she is so dedicated and caring. Her assistance
with filing, mailing and typing duties saves RFB&D much
time and money too - money that can be applied toward our
services to members."
Having worked at, what was then, Mobil for 31
years, Rita retired in 1986 and makes it a point to volunteer
for many worthwhile causes, including the AARP and a local
NJ school, where she reads to 26 third graders. "RFB&D
is a wonderful organization, and I talk about it all the time,"
she says. "It's the super people that keep me coming
back. I have absolutely no plans to stop."
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