Loveland Reporter-Herald

Ablelight to take over day programs

Wisconsin-based company set to oversee operations

- By Ken Amundson Bizwest / Prairie Mountain Media

FORT COLLINS >> For decades, Northern Colorado nonprofit Foothills Gateway has offered day programs for people with developmen­tal disabiliti­es. Some have attended programs offered through Foothills for 40 years.

Until now.

Foothills Gateway is now the case-management agency and community-centered board for Larimer County and, as such, is no longer able to provide both case-management and day-program services.

Enter Ablelight, a Wisconsinb­ased nonprofit that for 120 years has provided services for people with developmen­tal disabiliti­es. It will take over Foothills’ day programs and will hold a grand opening Tuesday for a center offering day programs in Fort Collins.

“We’re a faith-based organizati­on serving people with developmen­tal disabiliti­es,” Keith Jones, president and CEO of Ablelight, told Bizwest. “Most of our work is in Colorado, Kansas, Missouri, Washington…,” he said. Colorado is home to the organizati­on’s largest grouping of programs among the 12 states where it operates, he said.

“When we heard Foothills Gateway was closing day services due to case management laws, we started to talk,” Jones said.

“This is very much driven by our mission, to honor and continue the work of a fine organizati­on,” he said.

Jones said that Ablelight offers residentia­l programs in other locations, and it has thrift stores in Wisconsin where 30% of store staff have developmen­tal disabiliti­es. “We’d like to expand thrift stores to Colorado,” he said. Ablelight is based in Watertown, Wis., just outside of Milwaukee.

Ablelight will operate its programs in Larimer County from familiar space at 301 W. Skyway Drive, Suite 101, in a location that housed Foothills Gateway’s former day program. It will offer continuity of service to participan­ts from that program as well as enrollment for new participan­ts.

Jones said the day programs like those it will offer “are indispensa­ble for individual­s with disabiliti­es; they serve as a vital link to the community, an extension of their support network, and often provide a lifeline against isolation and loneliness. We thank Foothills Gateway for its thoughtful and proactive approach in making this change and leasing the space for our program to begin.”

Several of the former Foothills staff have been retained and will continue to operate the new program. Services will begin with about nine staff members, said Michelle Olsen, communicat­ions officer for the organizati­on.

The program will have about

30 participan­ts to start; at one time, Foothills had about 200. Olsen said the organizati­on plans to rebuild participat­ion.

Ablelight also has Colorado operations in Colorado Springs, Englewood, Grand Junction, Denver and Littleton with 151 staff members in the state. It offers residentia­l homes, host homes, employment support, community connection­s and other services in those locations.

Throughout the 12-state region where it operates it has 1,300 employees serving 914 people.

Day programs play a role in addressing social isolation and loneliness

experience­d by people with developmen­tal disabiliti­es. Research in a 2014 review published in the “Journal of Policy and Practice in Intellectu­al Disabiliti­es” suggested that up to half of people with developmen­tal disabiliti­es experience chronic loneliness.

A peer-reviewed report released in 2022 by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineerin­g and Medicine highlighte­d the consequenc­es of social isolation and loneliness, revealing links to depression, poor sleep, impaired immunity and increased risks of premature death as well as various health conditions, including dementia by 50%, stroke by 32% and coronary heart disease by 29%.

“Our programs serve as a gateway to the community, offering individual­s with developmen­tal disabiliti­es opportunit­ies to acquire new skills, forge meaningful connection­s and enjoy a positive and engaging atmosphere tailored to their individual­ized support plans,” Andrea Aldinger, area vice president for Ablelight’s operations in Colorado, said in a written statement. “Through excursions, recreation­al activities, volunteer opportunit­ies, cultural experience­s and a diverse range of social activities, participan­ts are empowered to explore their interests and embrace life to the fullest.”

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