Imperial Valley Press

Businesses seek to expand opportunit­ies for disabled workers

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NEW YORK ( AP) — On any weekday morning, Miles Thornback is working on marketing campaigns for real estate agents or dealing with tricky tech issues at the office.

Thornback, who has cerebral palsy, got hired three years ago at the RE/ MAX Prestige real estate agency in Costa Mesa, California, after the owners heard that he’d spent six years applying for jobs at hundreds of companies and finding nothing but negative mindsets.

Many small business owners are open to hiring or specifical­ly recruit people who have disabiliti­es, sometimes because they want to expand the opportunit­ies for people with talent and skills but who can’t find jobs. The unemployme­nt rate for people with disabiliti­es who want to be hired is 8 percent, more than twice the national average.

“I think a lot of people assume that if you’re disabled, you can’t work,” says Thornback, 36, who uses a wheelchair.

While some jobs he applied for would have required him to do errands, which he couldn’t have done, at many places he never got a clear explanatio­n of why he wasn’t considered. In his job, he coordinate­s with real estate agents and data providers to create postcards and letters that advertise properties for sale.

Jay O’Brien, an owner at the RE/MAX office, learned about Thornback through Goodwill Indus- tries, which works with the Regional Center of Orange County, an organizati­on that provides training and services for people with developmen­tal disabiliti­es.

O’Brien has been impressed with Thornback’s technical abilities, as he’s been able to resolve issues that confounded everyone else. O’Brien and his business partner, Sammer Mudawar, wanted to see Thornback flourish in his work.

“We didn’t want it to be seen as a charity move,” O’Brien says, such as, “’You can park your wheelchair here for two hours a day and we’ll pay you and we can feel better about ourselves.’”

The kind of disability a person has can vary, and can be cognitive or physical. So employees may be capable of different types of work.

They do face similar difficulti­es in the workplace that others don’t.

Alyssa and Shawn Cox, who volunteer at a camp for children with Down syndrome, created a store greeter position at one of their three Clothes Mentor locations in North Carolina with the intention of hiring someone with the genetic chromosoma­l disorder.

They hired Julia Cirone in December. The 20-yearold who works three days a week began by welcoming customers and “aced that immediatel­y,” Alyssa Cox says.

Cirone has since started assisting shoppers, helping them pick out clothes. Sales haves increased since she began working at the store, the busiest of the three locations. While the Coxes would like to hire Cirone full time, she wants to do volunteer work the other two days.

There are plenty of people who want to be hired, an “untapped” talent pool, according to Joyce Bender, owner of Bender Consulting Services, a company that recruits workers with disabiliti­es.

 ??  ?? In this May 18 photo, Miles Thornback (right), who has cerebral palsy, works on marketing campaigns for agents works with owner Jay O’Brien at RE/MAX Prestige real estate office in Costa Mesa. AP PHOTO/ CHRIS CARLSON
In this May 18 photo, Miles Thornback (right), who has cerebral palsy, works on marketing campaigns for agents works with owner Jay O’Brien at RE/MAX Prestige real estate office in Costa Mesa. AP PHOTO/ CHRIS CARLSON

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