Edmonton Journal

SMALL TOWN WITH A BIG HEART AMY ELLIS NUTT

Minnesota hamlet that gave the world Spam is proud to be ‘autism-friendly’

-

A tall teenager with the buzz cut opened the museum door and said cheerily, “Welcome to the Spam Museum.”

Samuel Ehret is an official “Spambassad­or” at the museum, a hot spot for tourists who have a taste for the much-mocked canned meat that Hormel Foods has made in the small Minnesota town of Austin for 81 years.

Samuel is also autistic, and he got this job because he loves all things Spam.

He also landed the job because Austin is an autism-friendly town. Ten years ago, it became one of the first in the U.S. to launch a community-wide effort both to reduce the disorder’s stigma and make local businesses aware of the special needs of autistic customers. It is also probably the only small U.S. town to employ a community autism resource specialist.

The mission was “a grassroots effort to improve our community,” said Mary Barinka, an employee of the non-profit Hormel Historic Home, where she serves as an autism resource liaison for Austin. She is also a former Hormel marketing executive, and the mother of a 16-year-old daughter with autism. For someone like 18-year-old Samuel, the town’s attention to the condition has been invaluable.

“When he was an infant, he would just lie there, no crying,” said Sarah Ehret, Samuel’s mother. Her son failed to reach expected milestones and she was at a loss as to why.

When someone anonymousl­y placed a magazine in her mailbox, it made sense. One of the articles was “Top 10 signs your child has autism.”

“This is my son,” she said to herself.

Autism is a neurodevel­opmental disorder that is characteri­zed by delayed language, repetitive behaviours, sensory sensitivit­ies and difficulty with social skills. Although the symptoms of autism can overlap with other developmen­tal disorders, such as learning disabiliti­es and attention-deficit/ hyperactiv­ity disorder, it has distinctiv­e characteri­stics, including narrow, intense interests and routines and occasional emotional meltdowns when those routines are disrupted.

Austin, with a population of 26,000, is the kind of place that still has a video store, where the one coffee shop in town is called The Coffee Shop, and a yellow traffic sign near a nursing home carries the warning “Dear Crossing.”

Fifteen businesses in this Midwestern hamlet carry the official designatio­n “autism-friendly.” Among them: the Paramount Theater, Mid-Town Auto, two dentists, two ophthalmol­ogists, two hair salons and three summer day camps.

To qualify as autism-friendly, a business must make an effort to minimize sensory overstimul­ation — lowering lights, turning down or eliminatin­g loud music and shielding the individual from others’ cross talk.

Business owners must fill out an applicatio­n and then, along with their employees, go through educationa­l sessions. They learn about the difficulti­es people with autism experience, including their triggers — a sound or a smell or an unfamiliar situation that may cause a meltdown. They also learn how to interact by speaking slowly, in a clear voice and in short phrases. Most important, they are shown the value of learning to be patient and flexible.

The value of these autismfrie­ndly efforts is incalculab­le, families say, because it not only makes the lives of those living with autism easier, it also allows them to have experience­s that those without autism have routinely. Best of all, they are lessons in communicat­ion, one of the chief skills that many children with autism must work especially hard to develop.

Heidi Schara remembers well a breakthrou­gh moment she witnessed when her son, Jackson, came home from school one day.

“He said, ‘I think I talked too much about something or other.’ Then he said, ‘How was your day?’”

That Schara’s son was able to turn his attention from himself to his mother made it her “best day ever.”

She credits these eureka moments, in part, to Austin’s unusually open environmen­t.

“Having this autism-friendly movement — it’s incredible to have people who want to understand,” she said.

Austin’s autism-friendly program began a decade ago, when a retired Hormel executive, Gary Ray, telephoned Barinka, a family friend, and asked whether her autistic daughter, then 6, was able to participat­e in any town activities, such as summer camp.

“No, not really,” Barinka remembers answering. “We’d like to take her to camp, but you have to explain her frequent needs and hire someone as a helper.”

Austin is small enough that Ray and his wife, Pat, were familiar with Barinka’s struggle to find appropriat­e recreation for her daughter.

“What if (Pat and I) gave you a small contributi­on of $5,000?” Ray said. “Could you start a camp?”

It didn’t take long for Barinka to say yes. She is a woman with a keen ability to advocate and organize and a seemingly bottomless reservoir of energy. Her job as autism resource specialist is part time, just 10 hours a week, but Barinka regularly puts in 40, often fielding questions and requests from other parents: “A new business wants to become autism-friendly, can you give a presentati­on to employees?” “How do I find the best speech therapists in town?” “The local community college wants to start a special autism program. Can you help out?”

To date, the Rays have contribute­d more than $100,000 to fund autism-friendly programs in Austin.

Autism-friendline­ss has also reached into the schools, where a peer program pairs high schoolers with autism with similarly aged student volunteers. The program is so popular that there is a waiting list of student volunteers.

Word of Austin’s unusual autismfrie­ndly services has resulted in at least a half-dozen families moving to the town. Carolyn Dube grew up in Austin, but she spent much of her life elsewhere, primarily in Phoenix, where the resources for her son, Alex, were lacking.

“There were a lot of behavioura­l issues with him,” Dube said about life with her son in Arizona. “He threw things, was increasing­ly violent and too hard to predict.”

A new job brought her to a suburb of Minneapoli­s, about 90 minutes from Austin, and Dube began to pick up stories about her hometown’s transforma­tion.

“We’d hear amazing things,” she said. “And that’s when we started realizing how special some of Austin’s autism programs were.”

Dube’s family moved back to Austin when Alex was four. He’s in high school now and takes mostly mainstream classes. He is especially talented in math and science, and because autism is a spectrum disorder of varying degrees of disability, Dube fully expects him to go to college and study engineerin­g.

“Now Alex is almost a new person,” she said.

Other parents say they’re seeing progress they never thought possible before Austin became autism-friendly. Barinka’s 16-year-old daughter used to bite the chain-link fence at her older sister’s softball games and throw tantrums. Today, she is on her high school dance team and plays trumpet in the band.

Barinka has received calls from Salt Lake City and Flagstaff, Ariz., inquiring about how to set up their own autism-friendly programs, furthering a trend of entreprene­urship and innovation by individual­s in the autism community.

In 2015, for example, Pennsylvan­ian Topher Wurts, a marketing and technology executive who has a son with autism, founded a virtual Autism Village. It’s an app that works a bit like Yelp, locating nearby autism-friendly places and businesses and letting users rate and review their experience­s.

How Barinka helped create her own bricks-and-mortar version of an Autism Village included not only the Rays, but also the Hormel Foundation, the Hormel Historic Home and numerous members of the community, both paid and volunteer, who make the programs run.

Because of such contributi­ons, Austin is able to offer services at vastly lower costs than those in places where camps can run as high as $800 or $900 a week, according to Barinka. Austin’s autism day camps cost just $150, and many of the more than 50 campers receive scholarshi­ps, bringing the price down to $25.

Samuel Ehret, the “Spambassad­or,” is a member of All Access Community Exploratio­ns for those in grades 6 through 12. One of the original campers 10 years ago, Samuel benefited from the group activities — sports, art, community trips — that were a large part of his camp experience.

He also came home with more social skills, which he has used in his various part-time jobs. Today, it is clear that his role as a Spambassad­or suits him well.

As visitors leave the Spam Museum, Samuel opens the door and wishes them well:

“Have a Spamtastic day.”

 ?? PHOTOS: THE WASHINGTON POST ?? “Spambassad­or” Samuel Ehret, right, who has autism, answers a guest’s questions at the Spam Museum in Austin, Minn. The town’s ongoing autismfrie­ndly efforts have encouraged schools, businesses and residents to accommodat­e people on the spectrum.
PHOTOS: THE WASHINGTON POST “Spambassad­or” Samuel Ehret, right, who has autism, answers a guest’s questions at the Spam Museum in Austin, Minn. The town’s ongoing autismfrie­ndly efforts have encouraged schools, businesses and residents to accommodat­e people on the spectrum.
 ??  ?? Austin, Minn., promotes the acceptance of people with autism.
Austin, Minn., promotes the acceptance of people with autism.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada