General Colorado Center Information

By Dan Burke, 30 March, 2020

Cranmer Abacus - A specially designed abacus that keeps beads in position once they have been set

(Editor's Note: We will soon post a video demonstrating How blind folks can complete the 2020 Census, featuring our own Martin Becerra-Miranda and Dan Burke. It's great YouTube viewing, but we don't have a trailer. In the meantime then, we're posting some of that information here to complement the video.)

So, let's talk about the 2020 Census. We first posted about this on March 11, the week that Census notices started going out to every residence. We're working with our friends and colleagues at the to ensure that all Coloradans with disabilities respond to the 2020 Census. We want every one of us to be counted!

By Dan Burke, 22 December, 2019

Editor’s Note: We introduced you to holly some months ago, when the weather was warmer and she was a relatively new student at the center. She comes from the United Kingdom and her drive to attend the stems in part from the fact that, as she says “there aren’t any training centers where I’m from.” And that means not even bad ones. Holly is a widely-read blogger on disability and blindness (), and we thought her thoughts on this video after completing our program – one of the more rigorous blindness training programs there is – offer us all an important perspective on what we do here, and why.

By Dan Burke, 10 December, 2019

A young woman holding a white cane faces us as she talks to a vendor.

Maura finished high school last spring and plans to go on to college next year. Before she did that, however, she was determined to obtain the skills she needed to be independent as a blind person so that nothing could hold her back in college, or beyond. We’ll let Maura tell you how it’s going in this post she made last month on Face Book. And we hope you will make a donation today, Colorado Gives Day.

These past few days have been so incredible! On Friday, I completed my second CCB graduation requirement by making my mini meal. This meal is to serve 15 guests and you have to cook 3 dishes. I made rolls, potato soup and Oreo pudding pie, and I had a little over 2 days to shop for and prepare the food from scratch. Everything was a hit, especially the Oreo pie, and I felt so much excitement and energy after all was said and done.

By Dan Burke, 8 December, 2019

Executive Director Julie Deden wrote this salute to the final five students graduating from the in 2019.

is this Tuesday, December 10, and as we do each year at this time, we are asking for your financial support for our programs at the . In the next couple of weeks, five students will graduate from our Independence Training program. Each of these students have made tremendous accomplishments that will propel them towards an exciting life. Each of them now realizes that being blind does not need to stop them from doing what they want to do with their lives. By introducing you to these students and their compelling, unique stories, we hope you will be inspired to . As I wrote about each of them, I was inspired myself!

By Dan Burke, 28 November, 2019

There’s a lot to be thankful for at the . As many families like yours will do today as they gather around the table, our staff and students shared what we were thankful for at our CCB family’s Thanksgiving feast one week ago. Not surprisingly, we are all grateful for one another and the .

For our students, they expressed gratitude for the bonds of friendship and support they now share with both their instructors and fellow students, bonds that will last far past the day each student receives his or her Freedom Bell at graduation.

For those of us fortunate enough to teach or serve in some other role at the Center, we frequently shared how lucky we feel to be here, working at a place that has such positive impact on our students. And we can see something new in our students every single day, some new skill or accomplishment that leads to that feeling in each student that they indeed can take charge of their lives with confidence and self-reliance. ness doesn’t have to hold them back. What an extraordinary privilege!

By Dan Burke, 21 November, 2019

Emily with a golden-brown turkey she just took out of the oven

, and it’s the tenth year of this highly successful program to encourage online giving to Colorado nonprofits like the . And we’re proud that we’ve been a part of Colorado Gives Day from the very first!

Sure, we’ll gratefully accept donations any day, any time, but gives all of us some distinct advantages. Let’s mention, um, 10 of them!

By Dan Burke, 21 October, 2019

Early each year, more than 500 blind Americans tap their canes across Capitol Hill in the District of Columbia to keep appointments at the offices of every member of Congress. It is the Washington Seminar of the National Federation of the , and it is how we make our legislative concerns and priorities known to those who have been elected to serve us. It is how we, the blind, make our voices heard, and doing so is the foundation of our democracy.

For the 2020 Washington Seminar, The will assist up to 3 blind Colorado high school students to travel with the National Federation of the of Colorado to the annual Washington Seminar February 10-13, 2019. The scholarships will include the costs of air travel, lodging at the Holiday Inn Capitol and a food allowance. We typically fly on the Sunday before the Washington Seminar begins, returning late on Wednesday.

By Dan Burke, 17 October, 2019

Adama sitting at the table in the travel lobby with her phone and her slate and stylus.

For the past three weeks, we’ve been delighted to have Adama Conteh as a special student at the . Adama is from , a country of about 6 million in West Africa. She has been in the U.S. under the sponsorship of , which has provided Adama with training at their headquarters in Tennessee, and transportation to Colorado to attend the Center for these three weeks.