October 2016 Edition - Access Press

Page 1

Arc awards, Pg 11

Volume 27, Number 10

www.accesspress.org

See you November 4

Access Press gala celebrates community

The pick-a-prize raffle is always popular. File photo

by Access Press staff

Want to attend the Access Press Charlie Smith Award banquet? Thinking about donating a great prize to the silent auction or pick-a-prize raffle? The time to act is now. This year’s event is set for 5:30 p.m. Friday, November 4 at the DoubleTree by Hilton, 7800 Normandale Blvd, Bloomington. It’s a great new location with ample parking, great menu offerings and accommodations for guests. Join Minnesotans with disabilities and their allies as the 2016 award winner, Cliff Poetz, is honored for his decades of groundbreaking activism and leadership for Minnesotans with developmental disabilities. Poetz is eager to see friends and celebrate his decades of accomplishments with them. “It’s always a fun evening, so we invite everyone to come and join us as we celebrate the remarkable career of Cliff Poetz and honor the legacy of Charlie Smith,” said Access Press Executive Director Tim Benjamin. Tickets for the event are $50 or $350 for an eight-person table. Three menu choices are available. Guests will dine on beef pot roast, slow-cooked, with pan gravy and whipped potatoes. Or they can choose Minnesota Chicken Roulade, a wild rice-stuffed breast of chicken with sage cream and roasted potato. The third

choice is lemon and tomato-tossed tagliatelle, a vegan, dairy and gluten-free pasta tossed with garlic-infused oil, roma tomatoes, olives, lemon zest and basil, served with a gluten-free breadstick. Dinners also include dessert and beverages. Guests can register in several ways. Go online to www.access press.org/the-charlie-smith-award/ and register via the newspaper website. Or mail a check or checks to: Access Press, Attn: Dawn, 161 St. Anthony Ave Suite 910, St. Paul, MN 55103. A third option is to call the newspaper office at 651-644-2133 and register by phone. But don’t hesitate as time is needed to order dinners and do other planning for the event. The evening starts at 5:30 p.m. with the silent auction/raffle and social hour. Enjoy punch or a cash bar and get a chance to catch up with friends old and new. The dinner and award winner speeches start at 7 p.m. The banquet sponsorship deadline has passed. ADA Minnesota, AXIS, In Home Personal Care, Minnesota Center for Independent Living (MCIL) and National Handicap Housing Institute and UCare are the 2016 Editor-in-Chief level. Keyliner sponsors are Tamarack Habilitation Technologies, Medica, Gillette Children’s Specialty Healthcare and United Cerebral Palsy of Minnesota, AccraCare and True Friends are Proofreader sponsors. Saturday, October 15 is the deadline to request ASL interpretation. It is also the deadline for silent auction and pick-a-prize raffle donations. Bidding starts during the dinner’s social hour and continues as the meal is served. It can be fun as friends make spirited bids and vie for some wonderful prizes. In the pick-a-prize raffle, items are lined up, with jars for raffle tickets. Buy a ticket for 50 cents and put it in the corresponding jar. For just a little money, the winner can take home a nice prize. Donations are still coming in but items include handmade sweaters, original art and photography, theater tickets, a movie night basket, jewelry, sports memorabilia, a salsa set, mosaic class and much more. Donations of all kinds are sought for the silent auction and raffle. Donations are a great way to spotlight a business or organization. Contact Dawn at 651-644-2133 or dawn@accesspress.org to donate items. ■

Minnesota Security Hospital must pay penalty For failing to protect workers from violence, the Minnesota Security Hospital at St. Peter must pay a $20,000 fine to the state’s Occupational Health and Safety Administration (OSHA). The fine is one of the largest ever levied against a state agency. The facility is the state’s largest for psychiatric patients. It currently houses about 360 people. Workers have alleged that they were repeatedly put at risk of serious injury or even death, due to violent assaults by patients. The fine covered 10 separate violations that occurred in 2014 and 2015. The settlement agreement leading to the fine was signed in mid-September. It also requires state officials to spend $35,980 over the next year to improve safety training or to purchase safety equipment at the hospital. This is required to be spent above and beyond what the hospital would have already spent on safety measures. Patient-on-staff and patient-on-patient assaults have been an issue at the facility in recent years. The Minnesota Department of Human Services has taken a number of steps to quell the problems including more staff training on claiming and de-escalation techniques, more physical changes to segregate violent and non-violent patients, more staff rounds, increased security cameras and other measures. As of August 2016 there had been 32 injuries linked to aggressive patient behavior, down from 100 in 2016 and 71 in 2014. Overall workplace injuries had reached 52 by summer’s end

and could be on pace to be lower than the number of 142 reached for all of 2015. State officials have made many changes at the hospital in recent years in operations and administration, as well as physical changes. But Gov. Mark Dayton’s $90 million plan to further improve hospital safety failed to pass during the Gov. Mark Dayton 2016 legislative session. In May 2014 the hospital was founded responsible after a patient was fatally injured by another patient. That tragedy prompted state officials to extend the conditional status of the hospital’s license, to year’s end. There have also been incident of serious staff injuries. One staff member who was slammed against a brick wall last year has been unable to return to work due to a traumatic brain injury. ■

September 10, 2016 Nonprofit Org. U.S. Postage PAID Twin Cities. MN Permit No. 4766 Address Service Requested

“If you live long enough, you’ll make mistakes. But if you learn from them, you’ll be a better person. It’s how you handle adversity, not how it affects you. The main thing is never quit, never quit, never quit. ” — William J. Clinton

NEWS DIGEST

Tonya knows the value of meaningful work. Page 3

Interact Center for the Arts marks two decades of service to community. Page 2

What about the commensurate wage? Page 5

Use our Directory of Organizations to find the services and agencies you need. Pages 7-10

Motivational speaker, author Mike Patrick was ‘not done yet’. Page 15

INSIDE Enjoy!, pg 12 Events, pg 13 People & Places, pg 11 Radio Talking Book, pg 14 Regional News, pg 6


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