The Day

Women inmates help themselves and others by learning Braille

Nine at York receive certificat­es after class

- By KAREN FLORIN Day Staff Writer

East Lyme — The nine women inmates chosen for the first Braille class offered at the Janet S. York Correction­al Institutio­n cursed at times, their teacher said, as they tried to master the system of raised dots that allows those who can’t see well, or at all, to take in words and graphics.

Nancy Mothersele from the state Bureau of Education and Services for the Blind, said she also heard the students tearing up sheets of Braille paper in frustratio­n.

Then, it clicked, literally, as the women learned to transcribe printed words into Braille using a traditiona­l Perkins Brailler, which looks like a typewriter but has only six keys.

On Wednesday, the group received certificat­es from the Library of Congress during a ceremony in the prison’s visiting room. It’s an accomplish­ment that enables them to transcribe products for visually impaired children and adults, and if they choose, to start their own home-based business when they are released from prison.

Inmate Michely Rivera said she thought of failure as she struggled to transcribe every page of a required 35-page manuscript. She, and nine out of the 10 inmates who started the course back in 2018, kept going.

“We now have a career, a meaningful purpose, and more impor

tantly, a second chance at life, in and out of prison,” said Rivera, 38, a mother of two who is serving a nine-year sentence for selling narcotics.

Rivera expects to be released in a year or two, but some of her Braille classmates will be doing the work from inside the prison for years to come.

One of the smiling inmates in a cobalt blue graduation gown Wednesday was Beth Ann Carpenter, who is serving life in prison without the possibilit­y of parole for her role in the 1994 murder-forhire of Anson “Buzz” Clinton in East Lyme. Another class member with ties to southeaste­rn Connecticu­t is Tracy Shumaker, who is serving 25 years in prison for shooting her husband, who she said was abusive, in his sleep in their Colchester home in 2007.

Other graduates are Fidarije Nieva, Lashanda Gregory, Beverly Martin, Amanda McGuire, Elisa Ortega and June Seger.

Having gained their Braille literacy certificat­es, the women will move on to learning the Nemeth Braille Code for Mathematic­s. They’ll eventually produce textbooks and graphics for Connecticu­t students who are blind or visually impaired in grades kindergart­en to 12.

Ten more trainees now are learning Braille.

The prison Braille program is a partnershi­p between the American Printing House for the Blind, Department of Correction and the state Department of Rehabilita­tion Services’ Bureau of Education and Services for the Blind. The J. Walton Bissell Foundation of West Hartford awarded APH a $26,000 grant to buy computers and other equipment needed to launch the program, including a Perkins Braille embosser, translatio­n software and Braille paper. The Bissell company subsequent­ly awarded another $20,000 to support the program.

Most Braille is produced from inside prisons, according to James Gaglione, director of correction­al enterprise­s. A Braille program has operated out of the Cheshire Correction­al Institutio­n, a Connecticu­t prison for men, since 1996.

“This partnershi­p enables us to get these women certified into Braille and sell it to the (Bureau of Education and Services for the blind),” Gaglione said. “A lot of folks come out of these programs and work for themselves.”

Gaglione, who oversees other Connecticu­t prison enterprise­s, such as furniture making and producing signs for the state Department of Transporta­tion, said the only money transferre­d out of the general fund for enterprise programs is for employee benefits.

“If we can remain financiall­y viable, and get the women recognized credential­s, it’s a winwin,” he said.

Jayma Hawkins, director of the National Prison Braille program for the American Printing House, traveled from Louisville, Ky. She said there are 43 prison Braille programs in 28 states, some of them operating out of closets, and that there’s something about Braille that’s healing.

“It’s the same conversati­on everywhere I go,” Hawkins said. “They say, ‘I sat in a cell for 20 years, but when I touched my first dot of Braille, it healed me.’”

Upon release, some inmates will have the opportunit­y to travel to Louisville to participat­e in the American Printing House’s apprentice program, Hawkins said. The women will learn the latest skills during the four- to six-month apprentice­ship and return home with a computer, licensed business and tax documents needed to start their own business.

Department of Correction Commission­er Rollin Cook thanked the correction­al staff and other collaborat­ors who made the program possible, saying, “The collaborat­ion in our community is incredible.”

York Warden Sharonda Carlos also spoke to the assembly before the inmates joined their family members for refreshmen­ts.

“Enjoy the day, but remember with accomplish­ment comes responsibi­lity,” Carlos said. “Don’t just put your certificat­e on the shelf. Use it and help others.”

 ?? COURTESY OF STATE PUBLIC INFORMATIO­N OFFICER ANDRIUS BANEVICIUS ?? One of the typewriter-like machines used at the Janet S. York Correction­al Institutio­n in East Lyme to transcribe documents into Braille for the visually impaired.
COURTESY OF STATE PUBLIC INFORMATIO­N OFFICER ANDRIUS BANEVICIUS One of the typewriter-like machines used at the Janet S. York Correction­al Institutio­n in East Lyme to transcribe documents into Braille for the visually impaired.

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