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TABLE OF CONTENTSScope and Contents of the Records Minutes and agenda, 1932-2003, Press releases and pamphlets, 1970, 1976, 1979-1981, 1986, 1991, 1993, undated, Reports and audits, 1933-1982, |
Texas Commission for the Blind:An Inventory of Commission for the Blind Records at the Texas State Archives, 1932-2003, undated
Agency HistoryThe State Commission for the Blind was created in 1931 (House Bill 844, 42nd Texas Legislature, Regular Session) to provide vocational rehabilitation and other services to blind Texas residents not receiving such services from other sources, to help prevent blindness, and to maintain a registry of the blind. Since the legislature assumed that the program would be funded by donations from civic groups across the state, the founding bill did not carry an appropriation. The 43rd Texas Legislature, in 1933, however, found that the donations were insufficient and appropriated $8,250 for the Commission. The Commission then went to work with a staff of 15, only one of whom was a full-time regular employee, to serve the entire state. The Vocational Rehabilitation Division was created by House Bill 347, 49th Texas Legislature, Regular Session, 1945, in order to administer newly available federal funds available through the 1943 federal Public Law 113, which broadened the scope of rehabilitative services for the physically impaired. The Commission's authority was further expanded in 1965 (Senate Bill 34, 59th Texas Legislature, Regular Session) through its designation as the state agency with primary responsibility to provide all services, except those related to the education of school-aged children or those purely welfare in nature, to all visually impaired Texans. Provisions of the federal Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and subsequent amendments set the Commission's first priority to serve the most severely disabled blind with emphasis on client participation in planning individualized programs and thorough evaluation and diagnostic studies to determine the client's potential. The name of the agency was changed to the Texas Commission for the Blind (TCB) in 1985 (Senate Bill 195, 69th Texas Legislature, Regular Session, 1985). In 1991, TCB was one of 11 agencies placed under the oversight of the new Health and Human Services Commission with the intention that the umbrella organization would result in an integrated system of health and human services delivery and in a more efficient use of funds. The Commission was authorized to negotiate interagency agreements with other state agencies and may enter into agreements with the federal government to implement federal legislation concerning services to the visually handicapped. The Commission was governed by V.T.C.A., Human Resources Code, Chapter 91. The Commission was originally composed of three members, one of whom had to be legally blind, appointed by the governor with senate approval for overlapping six year terms. The number of members was increased to six in 1943 (House Bill 352, 48th Texas Legislature, Regular Session, 1943) and then again to nine in 1979 (Senate Bill 1243, 66th Texas Legislature, Regular Session, 1979). The 1943 legislation also raised the number of members who had to be legally blind to two. Until 1957 (House Bill 400, 55th Texas Legislature, Regular Session, 1957), the blind commissioner(s) had to be graduates of the Texas School for the Blind. The governor appointed the chair of the Commission and the positions were non-salaried. The Commission appointed an executive director to administer and supervise its activities. Although not required by statute, the Commission voted in 1996 to meet at least each quarter, and did so in fiscal years 1996 and 1997. The Commission also had five subcommittees for functions relating to administration, auditing, budgeting, legislative matters, and planning. The agency's primary focus was to provide services to persons with visual impairments to ensure they could actively and independently participate in society. It served as an information center and referral resource for visually impaired Texans and developed mechanisms and procedures to help the visually impaired bridge gaps among services (educational, institutional, rehabilitative, vocational, etc.) operated by public and private non-profit organizations. TCB provided a variety of services, including counseling and guidance, independent living skills, vocational training, physical restoration and adaptive technology devices. The Commission was the designated state licensing agency under the federal Randolph-Sheppard Act of 1936 to provide opportunities for qualified blind persons to manage food service vending facilities. TCB programs used the following stages to assist clients -- intake, application, assessment, eligibility determination, individual plan development, service delivery, case closure, and follow-up services. Depending on agency funding levels and clients resources, TCB provided or paid for all or part of medical services, skills training, adaptive technologies, and other services. Clients entered the TCB system by referral from many sources including self-referral, family members, physicians, employers, and other state agencies. Limited agency resources during the 1980s prompted a move toward prioritizing the populations served by TCB. As a result, TCB established an order of selection for persons wishing to access agency programs, placing an emphasis on serving more legally blind clients. The federal 1992 Rehabilitation Act amendments, however, emphasized both serving a greater percentage of Texans with the most severe disabilities and having employment as the preferred outcome whenever possible. As a result, the agency revised its order of selection by eliminating the high priority given to persons in imminent danger of becoming totally or legally blind in order to work with more blind clients. TCB operated district offices throughout Texas to serve both as local points of contact for individuals seeking the services of the agency and as bases of operation for the agency's programs. The agency also operated the Criss Cole Rehabilitation Center, a 24-hour a day residential program in Austin that provided a comprehensive array of services and training in vocational and independent living skills to blind clients. TCB counselors worked one-on-one with clients to assess their needs and abilities, develop goals, and devise a plan of services to achieve successful outcomes. The Commission provided citizen involvement through several advisory committees, namely: the Consumer Advisory Committee, providing the blind/visually impaired a way to comment on the Commission's service delivery system and policies; the Medical Advisory Council, comprised of ophthalmologists who advised the Commission on medical services, and promoted dialogue regarding prevention of blindness and eye-care standards (discontinued after 1996?); the Optometric Advisory Council, composed of optometrists who advise on vision care standards and optometric issues (discontinued after 1996?); and the State Independent Living Council, appointed by the governor, which helped develop the agency's state independent living program. At the local level, by 1999, the Regional Advisory Committee involved clients and the public in planning and service innovation. An Elected Committee of Operators/Managers for the Business Enterprises Program (ECO/BEP) also existed to advise the Executive Director on policy decisions affecting the Business Enterprises Program. TCB was funded by several sources of revenue including Federal Title I Basic Support (95 percent of federal funds), State General Revenue, fees and commissions from the Business Enterprise Program, and smaller sources of revenue such as an endowment fund. In fiscal year 1997, TCB had 628 employees, served about 21,500 individuals in its programs, and received $8.6 million of General Revenue and $31.1 million in federal funds. House Bill 2292 (78th Texas Legislature, Regular Session, 2003) merged twelve state health and human services agencies into five, officially abolishing the Texas Commission for the Blind and creating the new Texas Department of Assistive and Rehabilitative Services (DARS). This new agency combined the duties of the Commission for the Blind, Commission for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing, Texas Rehabilitation Commission and the Interagency Council on Early Childhood Intervention. It began its new functions on March 1, 2004. The Texas Assistive and Rehabilitative Services Council assists the agency in developing rules and policies. The council is made up of nine members appointed by the governor with the consent of the Texas Senate. To be eligible for appointment to the council, a person must have knowledge in programs and issues related to early childhood intervention services, services for people with disabilities or services for people who are blind, deaf or hard of hearing. Functions of the former Texas Commission for the Blind are now conducted by DARS, Division for Blind Services (DBS). (Sources include: Guide to Texas State Agencies, 11th edition (2001); the article on Texas Commission for the Blind by John G. Johnson, in The Handbook of Texas Online; the DARS agency web site (http://www.dars.state.tx.us/dbs/index.shtml), both accessed October 2006; and the enabling legislation, 1931, 1943, 1945, 1957, 1965, 1979, 1985, and 2003.) Major Divisions/Offices:Home Teachers/Lighthouses for the Blind, 1934-about 1947 These closely intertwined programs began functioning in 1934, and were the first programs administered by the Commission. The purpose of the program was to train the blind to become self-sufficient, self-reliant, independent, and capable of fulfilling their duties as citizens of their communities. Home Teachers, themselves either totally blind or with impaired vision, taught Braille reading and writing and handicrafts in classes and to individuals at the "Lighthouses," workshops for the blind, and in private homes. Handicrafts made by the blind individuals, (mats, rugs, baskets, toys, brooms, mops, sewing, knitting, reed furniture, etc.), were sold by sighted volunteers with the profit going to the blind worker. Other blind individuals were placed in vending stands, or given other vocational assistance. The Home Teachers and Lighthouses were also involved in coordinating donations of medical services, eye-glasses, and clothing. Due to lack of staff and funds, the Commission was forced to rely upon the generosity of local communities and organizations in order to operate the programs. Wherever a lighthouse teacher or a home teacher was placed, the Commission either sought an already-existing organization to sponsor it, or it created a new sponsoring organization. Funding and materials were wholly supplied by donations from the communities; only the salaries of the Home Teachers, tools, and some equipment were supplied by the State. By 1944-1946, this program was known as Industries and Home Teachers, with the sections: Lighthouses, seen as sheltered places for vocational training of the newly blind, the blind of limited employability, and the blind with other handicaps, with the goal of eventual outside employment; and Home Teachers, some of whom worked in the Lighthouses, who focused on training the newly blind to carry out daily activities and teaching them communication skills. By 1946-1948, the program was referred to as Home Industries, with the same functions and elements as before, though with a new Pre-Vocational Training Center, in Austin. Officially opened in May 1948, the Center was set up in conjunction with the Austin Workshop for the Blind as a live-in residence for trainees, for a minimum of three months, to teach personal hygiene, etiquette, handicrafts, and simple industrial skills to enable the home-bound to eventually work in one of the Lighthouses, and to ultimately compete with sighted workers in industry. By 1948-50 the program seems to have been split into three separate programs: Home Teacher Service, Home Industry, and Sheltered Workshops. Sheltered Workshops, 1947-ongoing (For predecessor functions see Home Teachers/Lighthouses for the Blind.) By August 31, 1950, 300 people were employed in nine workshops. The shops were still products of local organizations, with the Commission paying only for supervisor's salaries, tools, and equipment, in addition to advising in the production and sale of Lighthouse merchandise. Mention of these facilities becomes less frequent with the 1954-1956 Biennial Report, though the number of facilities had increased to 12 by 1972-1974. TCB contracted with the Lighthouses, which were administered as community cooperative programs. Home Industry Division (or Home Industries), 1947-about 1965 (For predecessor functions see Home Teachers/Lighthouses for the Blind.) This Division was meant to aid the home-bound blind scattered throughout rural areas and small towns with assistance in obtaining employment. Individuals were trained and taught at the Pre-Vocational Training Center in Austin, provided equipment, given assistance in obtaining raw materials, given immediate receipt of payment for all manufactured materials, and occasionally supervised. The Hexter Memorial Lighthouse for the Blind in Dallas was dedicated in April 1952 to provide personal adjustment and vocational training facilities for adult African-Americans, expanding facilities already in operation in Houston. Rural operations appear to have been phased out of this program beginning in 1955. Mention of this division ceases after the 1962-1964 Biennial Report, probably due to the 1965 reorganization, and elements of its services appear to have been combined with Home Teacher Service. Home Teacher Service/Program, about 1947-about 1965 (For predecessor functions see Home Teachers/Lighthouses for the Blind.) This service specialized in meeting the individual social, psychological, and economic needs of the home-bound, newly blind in the larger cities, including instruction in Braille, basic crafts, and home-making skills. The Home Teachers were all either blind or partially sighted. By 1954-1955, the program was serving 1,000 people a year. Following the Commission's 1965 reorganization, surviving elements of Home Industries seem to have been incorporated into this division. During the 1966-1968 biennium the service was renamed the Rehabilitation Teacher Program (see below). Rehabilitation Teacher Program, about 1966-about 1975 Formerly the Home Teacher Program, the new rehabilitation teachers were to be "walking adjustment centers" bringing a condensed version of the programs offered at formal adjustment centers into an individual's home. Teachers assisted the newly blind to develop special skills in communication, homemaking activities, personal grooming, and the use of leisure time. Teachers were stationed in 15 cities around Texas, but were unable to meet many rural needs. By 1974-1976, these services seem to have been incorporated into the Vocational Rehabilitation Program. Talking Book Machines, 1932-ongoing The Commission began distributing Talking Book Machines about 1932. The machines were received through the Library of Congress and then lent to the blind throughout the state. Program costs were funded entirely by private and civic donations and repair services were provided by the American Foundation for the Blind. In early 1963, the Telephone Pioneers of America volunteered their services in the repair of the machines. The talking books themselves are distributed through the Texas State Library and Archives Commission's Talking Book Program. Eye Medical Social Work, 1944-1965 The 48th Texas Legislature, in 1944, made an appropriation of $1,800 for Eye Medical Social Work in a program to prevent blindness and conserve sight by providing medical and hospital care for children and other individuals not provided for by the Vocational Rehabilitation Division. The initial appropriation was too low to have much effect, but the program rapidly expanded. By 1946-1948, the division had become exclusively devoted to the prevention of blindness and the restoration of sight among children--the only service administered by the commission for this age group of the visually handicapped. Eligible recipients had to be no more than 16 years of age, a resident of Texas, of normal mentality, have some sort of visual impairment, and have a family who otherwise would be unable to pay for treatment. By 1952-1954, the division had become known as Eye Medical Social Service. Following a major reorganization in 1965, this program was placed in Services for Visually Impaired Children (see the Blind and Visually Impaired Children's Program). Pre School Counseling, 1953-1965 Officially instituted on September 1, 1953, the program made available to parents counseling and guidance to help them determine and meet the needs of the pre-school blind child and to help them promote the development of the child's capacities. The service was also available to groups or schools. Initial funding came from funds appropriated for the Home Teacher Services. The counselors also met with voluntary agencies regarding training programs for blind pre-schoolers and initiated new activities/coordinated existing activities to meet local needs. Following a major reorganization in 1965, this program was placed in Services for Visually Impaired Children (see the Blind and Visually Impaired Children's Program). Blind and Visually Impaired Children's Program (later called Children's Program; then called as of January 2007), 1965-ongoing This program began by taking over the Pre-School Counseling program and the Eye Medical Social Work program following a 1965 reorganization. The new division, through these two programs, offered services to help prevent blindness in children, restore sight where possible, reduce dependency, and prepare children for vocational success as adults to ensure that blind and visually impaired children could develop their individual potential for independent living and financial self-sufficiency. Counseling was and is available through home visits and correspondence. Receipt of its services was contingent upon Texas residency and the written recommendation of an examining ophthalmologist. By 1968-1970, the program was called the Visually Handicapped Children's Program and was financed entirely by state funds. The Program's stated purpose, at that time, was to diminish future needs by providing preventative medical service and counseling to children. During the 1974-1976 biennium, the Commission initiated a pilot program for visually screening Texas public school children. Information derived from the project was given to the 65th Texas Legislature to provide it with definitive information on the potential options for diagnosing and treating visual impairments among children. Through the Cooperative School Program, a mainstreaming project first experimented with during the 1972-1974 biennium, the Commission worked with the educational system to provide services to blind and visually disabled school aged students, ages 1-21, through counseling and liaison assistance between school and student, and vocational rehabilitation services. In 1990, the Visually Handicapped Children's Program's name was changed to the Children's Program. As of January 2007, it is called the Blind Children’s Vocational Discovery and Development Program. Currently, program caseworker duties include ensuring that parents understand their child's eye condition, and how vision loss impacts the child's ability to function. Caseworkers also educate the family on routine eye care, sight conservation, facilitate independent living skills and career awareness, and provide referral to other services. Effective September 1998, the Children's Program implemented a four-stage service delivery process including assessment, services, outcome, and post-outcome. The Program is funded by state dollars and is not subject to federal policy requirements. The program served approximately 1000 children in FY 1966, 8,780 in FY 1993, and 7,265 children in FY 1997. Business Enterprises Program (current title), 1936-ongoing The federal Randolph-Sheppard Act was passed in 1936, giving preference to blind persons to operate vending stands in federal buildings. In December of that year, the Commission was appointed the licensing agency for the Business Enterprises Program in Texas. Though no federal funds were allocated to implement the program, the first stand was set up in the lobby of the Amarillo Post Office in the summer of 1938. The first state plan for the program was adopted in 1946. The program made it possible for blind individuals to operate small businesses under the supervision of the agency. The program trains and licenses vendors, selects business locations, and provides equipment and initial stock; for a monthly fee the operator can receive continued supervision, guidance, and managerial assistance. In 1970, the division became known as the Small Business Enterprise Program. As of 1972-1974, the agency was assisted in administering the program by an operators advisory committee, which blind operators themselves elect. The committee assisted staff in formulating policies and providing assistance on narrower and more specific matters, such as the adjustment of individual grievances, establishment of pricing systems, evaluation of blind licensees. and agency staff, and evaluation of training activities. The committee later became known as the Elected Committee of Operators. TCB clients interested in BEP can be referred by their counselor in the Vocational Rehabilitation program. To be eligible for BEP a client must be 18 years of age, legally blind, a high-school graduate (or possess a GED), and be a U.S. citizen. The clients are assessed on their ability to work in BEP, undergo a math and skills test, and must complete evaluation, application, and training processes. Currently, most businesses are concession stands, vending facilities, and vending machines in rest areas along the interstate highways in Texas, though they have included grocery stores, wash-a-terias, and mop shops. By 1946 there were 20 vending stands in operation, by June 1969 there were 125 coffee shops and vending stands, and by May 1976 there were 181 shops and vending facilities. For fiscal year 1997, BEP managers operated 111 facilities on 48 federal, 51 state, and 12 private sites. The different types of operations include 10 convenience stores, 41 snack bars, 36 cafeterias, and 24 vending machine sites. Vocational Rehabilitation Program (current title), 1945-ongoing Vocational rehabilitation had been available to the blind in Texas since 1929, when legislation was passed enabling the Texas State Department of Education to establish a Vocational Rehabilitation Division. Following the enactment of 1943 federal legislation known as Public Law 113 (broadening the scope of rehabilitative services for the physically impaired), on February 7, 1944 the State Board for Vocational Education delegated to the State Commission for the Blind the authority to administer Federal Vocational Rehabilitation Services, giving it the right to administer federal funds for vocational and educational training, physical restoration, and the purchase of prosthetic appliances. The Commission began administering these funds on March 1, 1944, in advance of House Bill 347, 49th Legislature, Regular Session, 1945, which officially authorized the new Vocational Rehabilitation Division. The new division provided individualized, specialized vocational rehabilitative services to eligible visually impaired Texans. Vocational rehabilitation services were and are tailored to each person by developing an Individualized Written Rehabilitation Plan, as required by federal law. Services included diagnosis and evaluation, counseling and medical services, vocational training, employment assistance, and post-employment services. The program's purpose was to enable each individual to live as independently and productively as possible and help each individual secure/maintain employment in careers consistent with their skills, abilities, and interests. Initially the division had four sections: the Physical Restoration Section, providing medical or surgical care for those otherwise unable to pay for care which renders the individual more employable; the Professional and Clerical Section to select, train, and place persons qualified for professional and clerical employment; the Rural Rehabilitation Section, to train and place blind persons in agricultural work; and the Industrial Section to industrial training and placement. Currently the division still administers activities in all of the original sections, but only the physical restoration section still seems to stand out as a separate area. The division, financed through state and federal funds, makes no monetary payments to clients but provides most services free of charge. Eligible individuals must have a visual impairment which constitutes a vocational handicap and there must be an expectation that they would benefit from the services (legal or total blindness has never been required). By 1974-1976, the services offered by the Rehabilitation Teacher Program had been incorporated into this division. The Commission, possibly through this division, cooperated with other state agencies/departments to assist visually impaired Texans, such as the Department of Mental Health and Mental Retardation's visually impaired residents and outpatients. One of its projects with the University of Texas at Austin resulted in the establishment of a facility for blind students at the University and in working relationships with the University's medical schools. In 1972, in addition to the Department of Mental Health and Mental Retardation, the agency also worked with the Texas Education Agency, the Department of Corrections, the Industrial Accident Board, the Department of Public Welfare, and a variety of private, non-profit organizations. Sometime before 1978, however, many of these cooperative functions may have been transferred to the Mental Health/Mental Retardation Cooperative Services Program. The division did continue to cooperate with federal agencies such as the Veterans Administration, the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, and the Civil Service Commission. By 1978 the division's name had changed to the Vocational Rehabilitation Program. Under the provisions of the 1975 Act for the Blind, during 1976 contractual arrangements with educational service centers and independent school districts, the Commission was able to initiate four cooperative school projects to provide services for youth requiring special education, habilitation, or rehabilitation to enhance their development. This project is now the Transition Program which provides services to young persons between the ages of 13 and 22 years of age. Transition services focus on vocational awareness, career planning, and coordination with education. The program helps younger clients make the transition from high school to adult life. When transition services are completed, clients are transferred to the vocational rehabilitation caseload. The Transition Program served 1,167 clients in fiscal year 1997. The Vocational Rehabilitation Program served 12,415 people in FY 1993, and 11,978 people in FY 1997. Mental Health/Mental Retardation Cooperative Services Program, about 1977-unknown date The Commission had been engaged in a contractual cooperative program with the Texas State Department of Mental Health and Mental Retardation since the 1968-1970 biennium, though it is somewhat unclear whether the program occurred under the administration of the Vocational Rehabilitation Division, or as a part of a separate unit. The Program had three major objectives: to serve multiply handicapped people more effectively to try and avoid the need for institutionalization; to generally intensify services to the residents and patients of the state's special schools and hospitals to promote greater independence; and to assist residents and patients to return to their communities and to provide some necessary services locally. Included in this program was a pilot project (Project Sunrise), with the Austin State School to determine the rehabilitation potential of blind retarded children who have previously been determined to be hopeless cases. Students are taught basic communication skills, personal grooming and care, and given some exposure to the outside world. By 1972-1974, outreach activities had been initiated and the Sunrise Project had proven so effective, it was being duplicated around the state. (During these years cooperative projects also occurred between the Commission and the Texas School for the Blind, the Model Cities Program, local universities and state medical schools, the Texas Department of Corrections, the Hermann Low Vision Aid Rehabilitation Clinic, and assorted non-profit organizations, though the hierarchical structure/administration of these programs within the Commission is unclear.) During the next biennium the institutional program at the Austin State School was also being carried out at the Richmond State School (Cole Manor?), and the program became large enough to require a complete overhaul, once finance issues had been resolved. At the same time a community-based pilot project had been started to work with multiply handicapped individuals with the purpose of: identifying visually and mentally handicapped individuals; training and placing those who have vocational potential; heightening community awareness; working with their families; helping them develop a greater degree of independence; and developing necessary community resources. By the 1976-1978 biennium, the cooperative program with the Texas State Department of Mental Health and Mental Retardation became formalized in the Mental Health/Mental Retardation Cooperative Services Program. The Program had a diagnostic and evaluation unit, an assessment-placement-training system, community facilities, and independent living rehabilitation. The community based pilot-project grew, and services were initiated for 1,869 individuals. An appropriation by the 66th Texas Legislature, 1979, ensured the survival of the project. By 1980-1982, the program had been renamed Special Rehabilitation Services. Criss Cole Rehabilitation Center (current title), 1971-ongoing The Criss Cole Rehabilitation Center (CCRC) was built, staffed, and opened in two stages during the 1970-1972 and 1973-1974 bienniums as the first residential rehabilitation program owned by the State Commission for the Blind. The Center was developed to assist individuals who lose their sight after completing educational programs offered by the state's public schools. The Center offers intensive vocational and independent living training to adult Texans who are blind, the majority newly blinded. Located in Austin, the center provides intensive, comprehensive training in areas such as orientation and mobility, Braille, communication skills, home and personal management, technology and career guidance. Other services include medical, social, psychological, and vocational evaluations. The average trainee completes the program in 3 to 4 months. To participate in Center activities, clients must be eligible for VR or IL programs, legally blind, able to move independently, willing to attend classes, and be able to demonstrate progress in training activities. Approximately 60 percent of the Center's clients have secondary disabilities in addition to being blind. By the 1973-1974 biennium, a special training program to prepare clients for post-secondary academic or vocational training began to be offered each summer. Each year 500 to 600 clients participate in CCRC activities. The Center supports all aspects of the Blind Commission's programs by delivering services, training clients for the Business Enterprises Program, and training agency staff. The Center and the School for the Blind have a close working relationship, sharing certain resources and working jointly with the multiply handicapped. Through grant money from the Helen Keller National Center for Deaf-Blind Youths and Adults, a deaf-blind project has also been established at the Center. In fiscal year 1997, CCRC had a staff of 108 and budget of $4.3 million, of which $580,000 was General Revenue. Career Development Unit, 1980-unknown date The Career Development Unit was established in 1980 to further assist the agencies employment placement efforts and expand upon the number of fields in which the blind could be employed. The program's goal is to increase employment opportunities and enhance the quality of that employment. Older Blind American Project, about 1975-unknown date The Older Blind American Project was started in 1974-1976, as a demonstration program to serve blind Texans over the age of 60. Individuals were provided with orientation and mobility skills, homemaking and personal management skills, social activities, resource utilization training, evaluations and counseling in order to help them maintain their self-sufficiency and independence. The original funds were scheduled to run out on June 30, 1977, but an interagency contract allowed the use of Title XX funds, continuing the program and serving 1,584 people in 1976-1978. This program may eventually have merged with others to become incorporated into Independent Living (IL) Services. Independent Living (IL) Services, unknown date-ongoing Services included in the Independent Living Services program were first allowed in the 1978 amendments to the federal 1973 Rehabilitation Act. The program provides services for the elderly and for those with disabilities so severe that they do not have employment potential, teaching them to live as independently as possible within their families and communities, eliminating or reducing their need for alternative and dependent care (such as nursing homes, in-home chore services, etc.), and preventing accidents and hospitalizations. Counselors and caseworkers in local district offices consult with potential clients and determine the appropriate programs. Independent Living clients average approximately one year in the program to achieve a successful outcome. The program was called Independent Living Rehabilitation in 1990, and then Independent Living (IL) Services in ca. 1996. The program served 2,253 people in FY 1997. Administrative Divisions (have included, among others): Staff Services Division Handled accounting, reproduction, and records management functions. Program Evaluation and Program Development Division Supervised child guidance counselors working with visually handicapped children in several school districts. Technical and Consultative Services Division Provided consultants for caseworkers and field service personnel in the client-contact divisions, and managed staff development for the commission generally. General Client Services Division Responsible for the major programs carried out by district offices throughout the state. TCB Contracted Services In 1957, the Texas Lions League for Crippled Children, Inc., and the Texas Commission for the Blind established a cooperative agreement to have the commission purchase diagnostic evaluation and adjustment training services offered by a Lion's League owned center at Kerrville, Texas. In the 1960's, the Commission had to send individuals out of state to receive adjustment training. TCB expanded its contracts for specialized services for clients. The agency contracted with local Lighthouse facilities and other providers for rehabilitation services. For fiscal year 1997, the agency had 63 contracts totaling $2.1 million. Most TCB contractors were paid fees for service that are bid each year using a Request for Proposal process. Return to the Table of Contents Scope and Contents of the RecordsThe Texas Commission for the Blind was created to provide vocational rehabilitation and other services to blind Texas residents not receiving such services from other sources, to help prevent blindness, and to maintain a registry of the blind. In 1965, it was designated as the state agency with primary responsibility to provide all services, except those related to the education of school-aged children or those purely welfare in nature, to all visually impaired Texans. The records consist of agenda, minutes, attachments or discussion materials for meetings, reports, correspondence, memoranda, publications, printed materials, press releases, distribution lists, a scrapbook, and a videotape of the Texas Commission for the Blind, dating 1932-2003 and undated. The minutes document the work discussed at Commission meetings and at meetings of the Elected Committee of Operators (ECO) under the Business Enterprises Program (BEP). Policy and procedure manuals and manual updates, published from 1990 to 1998 for the Vocational Rehabilitation, Independent Living Rehabilitation, Business Enterprises, and Blind and Visually Impaired Children's programs, document the functions of these programs. Press releases and a few pamphlets, from 1970 to 1993 and undated, provide notice of events planned for anniversary receptions, announcements of grants and awards, list the services of the Cooperative School Program, announce a moratorium on Title XX expenditures; and mention the election of board members. Reports and audits, and Administrative files and public relations files, record the development of the agency and its functions at a considerable degree of detail. Finally, a scrapbook records the earliest decades of the Commission's existence, and a videotape commemorates its 60th anniversary. To prepare this inventory, the described materials were cursorily reviewed to delineate series, to confirm the accuracy of contents lists, to provide an estimate of dates covered, and to determine record types. Return to the Table of Contents
Return to the Table of Contents RestrictionsRestrictions on AccessBecause of the possibility that portions of these records (specifically, the series Reports and audits) fall under Public Information Act exceptions including, but not limited to, names of persons receiving state assistance (V.T.C.A., Government Code, Section 552.101: V.T.C.A., Human Resources Code, Section 12.003), an archivist must review these records before they can be accessed for research. The records may be requested for research under the provisions of the Public Information Act (V.T.C.A., Government Code, Chapter 552). The researcher may request an interview with an archivist or submit a request by mail (Texas State Library and Archives Commission, P. O. Box 12927, Austin, TX 78711), fax (512-463-5436), email (Dir_Lib@tsl.state.tx.us), or see our web page (http://www.tsl.state.tx.us/agency/customer/pia.html). Include enough description and detail about the information requested to enable the archivist to accurately identify and locate the information. If our review reveals information that may be excepted by the Public Information Act, we are obligated to seek an open records decision from the Attorney General on whether the records can be released. The Public Information Act allows the Archives ten working days after receiving a request to make this determination. The Attorney General has 45 working days to render a decision. Alternately, the Archives can inform you of the nature of the potentially excepted information and if you agree, that information can be redacted or removed and you can access the remainder of the records. Materials do not circulate, but may be used in the State Archives search room (Room 100). Materials will be retrieved from and returned to storage areas by staff members. Restrictions on UseMost records created by Texas state agencies are not copyrighted and may be freely used in any way. State records also include materials received by, not created by, state agencies. Copyright remains with the creator. The researcher is responsible for complying with U.S. Copyright Law (Title 17 U.S.C.). Technical RequirementsResearchers are required to wear gloves provided by the Archives when reviewing photographic materials. Researchers wishing to access the videotape must contact the Archives' Preservation Officer to obtain the necessary equipment. Return to the Table of Contents
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Return to the Table of Contents Administrative InformationPreferred Citation(Identify the item and cite the series), Texas Commission for the Blind records. Archives and Information Services Division, Texas State Library and Archives Commission. Accession InformationAccession numbers: unassigned, 1983/123, 1984/011, 1986/093, 1987/026, 1991/050, 1991/167, 1992/025, 1993/012, 1994/024, 1995/021, 1996/005, 1997/024, 1998/002, 1998/004, 1999/038, 1999/112, 2000/015, 2001/033, 2002/061, 2002/152, 2003/013, 2004/004, 2005/161, 2006/143, 2006/345 These records were transferred to the Archives and Information Services Division of the Texas State Library and Archives Commission by the Texas Commission for the Blind on January 1, 1943; March 21, 1983; May 2, 1983; September 2, 1983; February 16, 1986; October 26, 1986; January 2, 1991; May 15, 1991; October 30, 1991; September 28, 1992; October 26, 1993; October 27, 1994; September 24, 1995; October 23, 1996; September 3, 8, and 22, 1997; September 30, 1998; October 30, 1998; September 16, 1999; October 16, 2000; November 5, 2001; July 26, 2002; September 23, 2002; and September 3, 2003; by the Texas Department of Assistive and Rehabilitative Services on June 9, 2005; and by the Texas Legislative Reference Library on January 26, 2006. Processing InformationTony Black, September 1991 Tonia Carlisle, May 1992 Paul Beck, October 1994 Lisa M. Hendricks, October 1995, October 1996, September 1997 Tony Black, September 1997, October 1998 Nancy Enneking, April 1999, September 1999, October 2000, August 2001, July 2002 Tony Black, December 2006 Location of OriginalsThe record copies of minutes and agenda of the former Texas Commission for the Blind are maintained by the Texas Department of Assistive and Rehabilitative Services. Return to the Table of Contents Detailed Description of the Records
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