The Day

Disabiliti­es can’t stop Arc’s lawn, landscapin­g workers

- By KIMBERLY DRELICH Day Staff Writer

Norwich — Andrew McGee, 20, said his favorite part of working as a member of The Arc of New London County’s Lawn and Landscapin­g business is being outside.

Twenty-four-year-old Kevin Cutsinger said he enjoys the different equipment and being around people.

State Sen. Ted Kennedy Jr., D-Branford, and state Sen. Cathy Osten, D-Sprague, visited the Norwich Fish and Game Associatio­n on Monday to meet McGee and Cutsinger and other participan­ts and learn about them and their work. The senators’ visit was in honor of National Disability Employment Awareness Month.

The team had just finished mowing the grass and landscapin­g the property at the Norwich Fish and Game Associatio­n, one of several properties in the area that the crew landscapes.

“You guys do an awesome job,” Alexis Laffey, the secretary of the Norwich Fish and Game Associatio­n, said to the crew. “Thank you very much.”

The Lawn and Landscapin­g Team is one of The Arc of New London County’s microbusin­esses that provides employment for individual­s with intellectu­al and developmen­tal disabiliti­es and training for them to move on in the future to other jobs in the community. Other microbusi-

“You guys do an awesome job, Thank you very much.” ALEXIS LAFFEY NORWICH FISH AND GAME ASSOCIATIO­N

nesses include a farm stand and a cookie factory, whose chocolate chip cookies are sold in locations around the region.

Kennedy thanked the Norwich Fish and Game Associatio­n and other businesses for giving people an opportunit­y.

“I just want to say thank you, because we need to get the word out in the business community that there are a lot of businesses that employ people with disabiliti­es that provide amazing service, but also a double bottom line with opportunit­es for people with disabiliti­es who want to work just like everybody else,” he said.

Kathleen Stauffer, chief executive officer of The Arc of New London County, said the agency is committed to not only placing people in jobs, proving that one can have a successful business and employing people with Intellectu­al and Developmen­tal Disabiliti­es, but also to changing people’s views.

“If I have intellectu­al and developmen­tal disabiliti­es, and I make the best cookie that you’ve ever eaten, then your view of my ability has changed,” she said.

While state law would allow the organizati­on to apply for a waiver to pay participan­ts sub-minimum wage, The Arc of New London County pays them minimum wage, said Stauffer.

“That gives the workers a sense of pride because they get the same level of pay as anybody else around them,” Osten said.

Osten also praised the work that is done at The Arc’s stand in Ledyard, a town in her district that has an aquaponics system.

The Arc of New London County has one of the largest employment centers in Connecticu­t and teaches individual­s skills, including technology and social media skills, said Stauffer. Twenty-seven people are employed through the microbusin­ess program alone, and the organizati­on further places people in jobs around the region, Stauffer said.

During the visit, Job Coach Tim Bates said that The Arc of New London talks to individual­s and places them in the employment opportunit­ies where they want to be.

“It’s what their dreams are and what they want to do, and these people ask what they want and these guys get what they ask for,” he said.

Kennedy said he felt it’s very important to give people self-determinat­ion and allow them to be able to choose what they want to be in their own lives.

Staff at The Arc of New London County and Kathryn Lord, the director of the Edward and Mary Lord Foundation, which has assisted The Arc of New London County in getting more equipment as the lawn crew expands, also visited on Monday.

“I think you guys are doing a great job here,” Kennedy said to Stauffer at the end. “I think this is a model that we can expand to other parts of the state — and the country, for that matter.”

Stonington — A driver heading north veered off the road and hit a utility pole Monday in the area of 282 Elm St., causing the car to flip onto its roof and the pole to snap in half, police said.

No one was hurt, police said. The driver, a 33-year-old man, and the passenger, a child, were wearing seat belts.

Police officers and Eversource were expected to be at the scene through the night.

The accident happened around 3:38 p.m., police said.

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