30 Kasım 2012 Cuma

Mail Order Zombie: Episode 179 - Blood Splatter, Pretty Dead, The Hunger Games, Corman's World & The Americans

To contact us Click HERE
Download Mail Order Zombie #179 here!

Mail Order Zombie . . . now with TIMECODES! The dust has finally settled after the Dead Letter Awards and we finally washed the vampire smell out of the carpet from last week's Mail Order Vampire fun, it's time to get back to business here at Mail Order Zombie. In Episode #179, we're packing in the reviews when Brother D takes a look at Blood Splatter: A Guide to Cinematic Zombie Violence, Gore and Special Effects by Craig W. Chenery while Silent Death reviews Jake Bible's Dead Letter Award-nominated novel The Americans. On the movie-front, Miss Bren gets dystopian on Brother D with some talk about The Hunger Games (dir. Gary Ross), D reviews the upcoming zombie film Pretty Dead (dir. Benjamin Wilkins), and we use the documentary Corman's World: Exploits of a Hollywood Rebel (dir. Alex Stapleton) as a palate cleanser. There are two (count 'em - TWO) contests running right now at Mail Order Zombie, and you'll have to listen to the Feedback Discussion to find out how you can win . . . stuff!

INTRO (00:00)
BLOOD SPLATTER REVIEW (03:24)
CORMAN'S WORLD REVIEW (12:06)
THE HUNGER GAMES DISCUSSION (27:49)
THE AMERICANS REVIEW (1:01:52)
PRETTY DEAD REVIEW (1:09:53)
FEEDBACK (1:30:01)

Mail Order Zombie Facebook Group - http://tinyurl.com/facebookmoz
Mail Order Zombie Twitter - http://www.mailorderzombie.com/twitter

Email us at MailOrderZombie@gmail.com or call us at 206-202-2505!

Blood Splatter: A Guide to Cinematic Zombie Violence, Gore and Special Effects - http://www.zombiebloodsplatter.com/
Corman's World: Exploits of a Hollywood Rebel - http://www.cormansworld.com/
Jake Bible's Brain Squeezin's - http://jakebible.com/
Pretty Dead - http://www.prettydead.com/

heiDESIGN: Marketing and Communications - http://www.heidesign.com.au/

Family Movie Night - http://blog.fmnpodcast.com/
The Takedown MMA Radio - http://www.wix.com/takedownshow/takedown
Ball & Chain - http://show6403.podomatic.com/

BoneBat Film Fest! - http://bonehand.com/bonebatff.html

An Oasis in the Desert - http://www.facebook.com/AnOasisInTheDesert

Parsec Awards - http://www.parsecawards.com/

(Various production music produced by Kevin MacLeod.)

Mail Order Zombie #181 - The Terror Experiment, Feed, Telltale's The Walking Dead, The Collective Volume 3

To contact us Click HERE
Download Mail Order Zombie #181 here!

Brother D is on pins and non-Euclidean needles as he looks forward to this weekend's H. P. Lovecraft Film Festival & Cthulhu Con, but he's not so distracted that he can't put together Episode 181 of Mail Order Zombie! This time around, he takes a look at the 2012 zombie movie release The Terror Experiment (dir. George Mendeluk). This episode also features Part One of a two-part review of JABB pictures' latest anthology release The Collective, Volume 3. The Mail Order Zombie offers up some reviews of their own when Silent Death reviews the videogame The Walking Dead from Telltale Games, and a review of the Mira Grant's novel Feed comes from Eradication H. In addition to the Lovecraft Film Festival, Brother D will also be attending Crypticon Seattle this month where he'll be a panelist, so he talks about that as well before Miss Bren joins him for this episode's Feedback Discussion. (Brother D would like to formally apologize to the Lifetime television network. He's not entirely sure why, but he feels that he must.)

INTRO (00:00)
FEED (02:15)
THE TERROR EXPERIMENT (08:17)
THE WALKING DEAD (25:52)
THE COLLECTIVE, VOLUME 3  (29:18)
CONVENTION ANNOUNCEMENTS (45:05)
FEEDBACK DISCUSSION (48:37)

Mail Order Zombie Facebook Group - http://tinyurl.com/facebookmoz
Mail Order Zombie Twitter - http://www.twitter.com/mailorderzombie
Email us at MailOrderZombie@gmail.com or call us at 206-202-2505!

JABB pictures

Simple Studies - Bandcamp

(Various production music produced by Kevin MacLeod.)

Jacksonville Developmental Center is CLOSED - NOV 29, 2012

To contact us Click HERE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE- November 29, 2012

Governor Quinn Announces Successful Community Transition
for Jacksonville Developmental Center Residents Historic Milestone for Improving the Lives of Individuals with Developmental Disabilities and Mental health Challenges in Illinois

SPRINGFIELD, IL. – November 29, 2012. Governor Pat Quinn today announced that the remaining residents at the Jacksonville Developmental Center (JDC) have transitioned to community care. The moves are part of the governor’s rebalancing initiative to increase community care options for people with developmental disabilities and mental health challenges while reducing the number of outdated institutions in Illinois.

“Today is a historic step forward in our effort to improve the quality of life for citizens with developmental disabilities and mental health challenges in Illinois," Governor Quinn said. "I thank all of the family members and committed advocates who worked together to make this transition safe and responsible. I am committed to strengthening community care in Illinois and helping to ensure that all people have an opportunity to reach their full potential."

“Numerous studies show that individuals living in the community have a better quality of life than those living in institutions,” said Illinois Department of Human Services (IDHS) Secretary Michelle R.B. Saddler. “The closure of JDC is major progress for Illinois and how our state cares for people with developmental disabilities. I would like to commend the governor for his extraordinary leadership and thank our many advocates for their continued support on this important issue."

Each JDC resident went through a thorough, person-centered planning process, including assessment, consultation with families and guardians, and planning sessions with providers to determine needs and ensure safe transitions. Community settings allow individuals to receive the care they need, including 24-hour care. Community care is also significantly less costly than institution-based care. The average cost for JDC was $200,000 per year per resident while the average cost for a JDC resident living in the community is $84,000 per year.

JDC currently costs the state approximately $27.9 million per year to run. After accounting for state costs under community care, Illinois will realize approximately $11.7 million per year in savings, after $16.2 million in community investment. All AFSCME employees were offered other positions within state government. Of the 310 AFSCME employees at JDC, 130 filled positions at IDHS and other state agencies, eight decided to retire and 172 employees chose the layoff option.

In 2011, Governor Quinn announced his commitment to rebalance Illinois’ use of institutionalization for the care of people with developmental disabilities and provide more community care options. Illinois has lagged behind the rest of the nation in the utilization of person-centered, community-based care. Community-based care has been proven to empower people with developmental disabilities to lead more active, dynamic lives. The governor's Rebalancing Initiative dovetails with the administration’s recent settlement of a series of court cases related to the Americans with Disabilities Act, requiring the expansion of community care settings.

http://www3.illinois.gov/PressReleases/ShowPressRelease.cfm?SubjectID=2&RecNum=10744

U.S. Access Board Webinar on Accessible Medical Diagnostic Equipment (December 6) - Pre-register

To contact us Click HERE
The next webinar in the Board's monthly series will take place December 6, 2012 from 2:30 – 4:00 (ET) and provide an update on the Board’s development of new accessibility standards for medical diagnostic equipment. These standards will address access to examination tables and chairs, weight scales, mammography equipment, and other equipment used for diagnostic purposes.

To register for this free webinar, visit www.accessibilityonline.org.
Questions for the webinar can be submitted in advance through this website.

For the U.S. Access Board: http://www.access-board.gov/

White House World AIDS Day Event Nov 29, 2012 - Secratary Kathleen Sebelius

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White House World AIDS Day Event

November 29, 2012
Washington DC


Secratary Kathleen Sebelius
U.S. Department of Health & Human Services;

Thank you for that kind introduction.

Valerie just described a historic shift in our fight against HIV/AIDS.

Our National Strategy has given a new sense of direction and purpose to our domestic response. And we have made it a priority to intensify our efforts in the communities that have been hardest hit by this disease.

Approximately half a million people living with HIV are being served through our Ryan White Programs. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report that in the first three years of their expanded HIV-testing initiative, they provided nearly 2.8 million HIV tests and diagnosed more than 18,000 people unaware of their infection. As a result, an estimated 3,300 new infections were prevented among their partners.

We’re also taking steps to improve how we evaluate our programs. I have asked our department’s senior leaders to identify and implement a set of seven common core program indicators. This data will allow us to make sure our HIV programs are reaching the right people with the right services.

Our department has also used new media to build a cutting-edge response, targeting HIV prevention and testing messages to the people who need them most. We are reaching out through channels like AIDS.gov to meet people where they are, educate Americans about HIV, and reduce stigma and discrimination.

That’s more important than ever at a time when we know youth accounted for nearly 26% of all new HIV infections diagnosed in 2010. The majority of these infections were diagnosed among young black and Hispanic men who have sex with men. And it is another reminder of just how important it is make sure we continue getting young men and women tested – while improving their access to prevention, treatment, and care.

The good news is that today more Americans have better access to these life-saving interventions than ever before.

For years, we had a health insurance market in which insurers made profits by trying to avoid sick people. This was great for insurance companies, but it was terrible for the people with the greatest health needs, including those living with HIV/AIDS. In effect, the people who needed health insurance the most were the ones shut out of the market.

This wasn’t right, and the Affordable Care Act is bringing these days to an end.

Starting in 2014, the law bans insurance companies from turning anyone away because of their health status. Already the law provides protection from some of the worst insurance company abuses. For example, it is now illegal for insurance companies to deny coverage to children living with HIV/AIDS. And your insurance company can no longer put a lifetime dollar cap on your benefits, or cut your coverage when you get sick because of an error on a form.

In the past, we had reports about an insurance company that was using a computer program to search the applications of anyone recently diagnosed with HIV, looking for any excuse to cancel their coverage. Now, that practice is gone for good.

In the years to come, the Affordable Care Act will expand Medicaid so that it will be available to many more Americans with HIV/AIDS, including adults without children. As a result, many people living with HIV will no longer have to wait for an AIDS diagnosis to become eligible for Medicaid. And the law is investing in community health centers, and increasing access to testing, treatment, and care -- especially in underserved areas.

What these reforms mean is that far more Americans with HIV/AIDS will be able to get coverage they can count on through Medicaid or the private insurance market. But we have also begun to see another change taking place thanks to the health care law. And that is a new focus on the quality of care people receive once they’re covered.

That starts by making prevention a priority. The law helps eliminate barriers to HIV testing by requiring most private plans to cover HIV testing for women and individuals at high risk at no cost to the patient out-of pocket. They are also now required to cover with no co-pay many other recommended services, like flu shots or mammograms, that will help people living with HIV stay healthy.

In addition, the health care law provides long overdue relief from prescription drug costs for Medicare beneficiaries. Beneficiaries with HIV/AIDS often quickly hit the prescription drug coverage gap known as the donut hole. Now, when they do, they get a 50 percent discount on their brand-name drugs. And if the AIDS Drug Assistance Program covers their medicines, those payments will count toward moving beneficiaries through the donut hole -- so they don’t get stuck there.

Finally, the Affordable Care Act has made a series of investments to help providers support patients with chronic diseases like HIV/AIDS.

For example, under the law, states can receive extra federal funding -- an enhanced 90% federal match in the first two years -- to support coordinated care through “health homes” for Medicaid beneficiaries with chronic health needs. The goal of a Health Home is to treat the whole person, coordinating all their care from primary and acute care to behavioral health and long-term services.

With our guidance, New York and Oregon have already established health homes specifically to serve individuals living with HIV/AIDS. And we continue to work with other states on their proposals. Today, I am proud to announce that we will be issuing a rule to explicitly include HIV/AIDS on the list of chronic conditions that every state may target in designing effective Health Homes. This will help more states adopt the kind of innovations that we know can improve the care and health of people living with HIV/AIDS.

These are all big steps forward. But we will continue to need the Ryan White program to fill in the gaps of our health insurance system. And we will keep reaching out to providers and community leaders on the frontlines to make sure those programs remain strong.

When President Obama took office four years ago, our nation’s fight against HIV/AIDS had nearly stalled. The number of new infections had plateaued while the general public’s concern about the disease continued to fade.

But we are here today because we refused to accept those trends. Over the last four years, we looked closely at how and where we were using our resources. And together, we made a commitment to help the best approaches reach those most in need.

Out of that collaboration came a powerful national strategy. And today, it provides a roadmap for the months and years ahead. But in order to achieve these goals we will need your continued leadership.

So today, I want to ask you to keep your foot on the accelerator. If we are going to reach our ultimate goal of an AIDS-free generation, we must all challenge ourselves to do more. We need your expertise, your best practices, and your collaboration to make the most of the Affordable Care Act and to realize the goals of the National HIV/AIDS Strategy.

Together, we can raise awareness to new heights and make our programs even more effective. We can push the boundaries of science even further. And we can help even more people get the support, treatment, and care they need to live long and healthy lives.

###
http://www.hhs.gov/secretary/about/speeches/sp20121129.html

29 Kasım 2012 Perşembe

Mail Order Zombie #181 - The Terror Experiment, Feed, Telltale's The Walking Dead, The Collective Volume 3

To contact us Click HERE
Download Mail Order Zombie #181 here!

Brother D is on pins and non-Euclidean needles as he looks forward to this weekend's H. P. Lovecraft Film Festival & Cthulhu Con, but he's not so distracted that he can't put together Episode 181 of Mail Order Zombie! This time around, he takes a look at the 2012 zombie movie release The Terror Experiment (dir. George Mendeluk). This episode also features Part One of a two-part review of JABB pictures' latest anthology release The Collective, Volume 3. The Mail Order Zombie offers up some reviews of their own when Silent Death reviews the videogame The Walking Dead from Telltale Games, and a review of the Mira Grant's novel Feed comes from Eradication H. In addition to the Lovecraft Film Festival, Brother D will also be attending Crypticon Seattle this month where he'll be a panelist, so he talks about that as well before Miss Bren joins him for this episode's Feedback Discussion. (Brother D would like to formally apologize to the Lifetime television network. He's not entirely sure why, but he feels that he must.)

INTRO (00:00)
FEED (02:15)
THE TERROR EXPERIMENT (08:17)
THE WALKING DEAD (25:52)
THE COLLECTIVE, VOLUME 3  (29:18)
CONVENTION ANNOUNCEMENTS (45:05)
FEEDBACK DISCUSSION (48:37)

Mail Order Zombie Facebook Group - http://tinyurl.com/facebookmoz
Mail Order Zombie Twitter - http://www.twitter.com/mailorderzombie
Email us at MailOrderZombie@gmail.com or call us at 206-202-2505!

JABB pictures

Simple Studies - Bandcamp

(Various production music produced by Kevin MacLeod.)

Equip for Equality Victory Allows Kindergartner with Autism to Remain in Her Neighborhood School | Nov 2012

To contact us Click HERE


Equip for Equality recently achieved a due process victory on behalf of Angela, a six year old girl with Autism, allowing her to remain in her neighborhood kindergarten classroom in Lanark Illinois, located in Northwestern Illinois. Eastland school district wanted to transfer Angela to a segregated school 30 miles away from her home. Concerned that Angela would be forever segregated from her community peers, Angela's mother wanted her daughter to learn alongside other children from her town, to make friends with children who could be communication role models, to play with classmates who did not share her socialization difficulties and, most importantly, to continue to be a part of her school community.

Equip for Equality represented Angela at a five-day due process hearing and obtained an order that will allow Angela to become a full member of the kindergarten class at her town's elementary school. In addition, Angela will receive needed supports and services to foster her success in the general education setting.

To enable Equip for Equality to help more students with disabilities, please support the Equality for Kids Campaign:
https://www.z2systems.com/np/clients/efe/donation.jsp?campaign=1935626429&test=true

For Equip for Equality: http://www.equipforequality.org/

Illinois Legislature delays vote on legalizing medical marijuana | Nov 28, 2012

To contact us Click HERE
(Reuters) - The Illinois General Assembly on Wednesday put off a vote to legalize marijuana use for medical purposes because the measure lacked the support for approval, its chief sponsor said.

Democratic Representative Lou Lang did not request a vote on his proposal because he did not want it to fail.

"He didn't call it because he was short of the votes," said Lang's spokeswoman, Beth Hamilton. Lang had earlier predicted the measure would pass if a few undecided members shifted to support.

The proposal for a three-year pilot program would make Illinois the second most populous state in the nation after California to allow medical marijuana. Nineteen states and the District of Columbia have legalized medical marijuana. Colorado and Washington state voters decided on November 6 to allow recreational use of cannabis.

Lang said he could try again to pass the proposal when the Illinois legislature meets in early December.

The Illinois bill would be the most restrictive in the country, according to Lang.

Some Republicans in the Illinois House said they opposed legalizing medical marijuana because it could be a "gateway drug" to abuse of other illegal substances. Others said they were not convinced that the benefits of smoking marijuana for certain medical conditions outweighed the potential negative consequences.

Under the Illinois bill, patients would have to be diagnosed with one of 30 debilitating medical conditions, register with the Department of Public Health and have written certification from their physician. Patients would be limited to no more than 2.5 ounces (70 grams) of marijuana every two weeks.

Under U.S. federal law, marijuana is considered an addictive substance and distribution is a federal offense. Federal law prohibits physicians from writing prescriptions, so many have issued "referrals" or "recommendations." The administration of President Barack Obama has discouraged federal prosecutors from pursuing people who distribute marijuana for medical purposes under state laws.

By Renita Young
SPRINGFIELD, Illinois | Wed Nov 28, 2012
(Editing by Greg McCune, Mohammad Zargham and Leslie Adler)

Marc D. Guthrie Appointed to the U.S. Access Board | Nov 2012

To contact us Click HERE
President Barack Obama has named Marc D. Guthrie of Newark, Ohio to the U.S. Access Board. Guthrie is the Director of Development and Advocacy for the American Council of the Blind of Ohio and an at-large member of the Newark City Council. He previously served as a member of the Access Board from 1996 to 2005 and as Executive Director of United Cerebral Palsy of Central Ohio from 1995 to 2001. Elected offices in Ohio previously held by Guthrie include President of the Newark City Council, Heath City Councilman, County Commissioner in Licking County, and State Representative from the 77th House District for six terms. As a state legislator, Guthrie authored Ohio’s early intervention law for pre-school age children with disabilities. He also was appointed Administrator of Business and Human Resources for District Five of the Ohio Department of Transportation by Governor Ted Strickland in 2009.

The U.S. Access Board is an independent Federal agency that provides leadership in accessible design under the ADA and other laws. Its governing Board is structured to function as a coordinating body among Federal agencies and to directly represent the public, particularly people with disabilities. The Board is comprised of 13 members from the public appointed by the President and representatives from 12 Federal departments.

Hiring a Personal Care Assistant - article

To contact us Click HERE
By Guest Blogger Ruth Harrigan, Esq.

I jokingly tell friends that when I hire a personal care assistant, I’m hiring an arm and a leg. This is because I have quadriplegia, paralysis in all four limbs, as the result of a spinal cord injury. When I hire an assistant, I seek someone who can help me with everything from meal preparation and personal care to paperwork assistance relative to my own employment.

Having a good personal care assistant – someone who is reliable, caring and flexible – has a real impact on my quality of life. Finding someone like this involves a process that includes placing ads, sorting through applications, completing several interviews and making the best choice I can from among those who apply. Because my career as an attorney requires time and attention, I’ve learned how to streamline this process without losing sight of the fact that spending a little extra time during the hiring process can save me a lot of aggravation later on.

I begin the process by drafting an ad in which I list what the job pays per hour, which is higher on weekends, and work shifts I need to fill. I always emphasize how the applicant must have reliable transportation to get to the job and to run errands, and that a criminal background check and references are mandatory.

Describing what my assistant will be doing helps eliminate applicants who aren’t going to be flexible. For example, I‘ve received responses from people who will do meal preparation, but no light housekeeping. This helpful information helps me screen people out, because I need those who are willing to do both since I can’t do either. Your situation might be different. Perhaps you have a relative who can bring meals over or do the tasks a personal care assistant doesn’t want to do. Still, I strongly advise caution when hiring anyone who wants to do only certain tasks. Be sure to find out if that prospective aide is willing to set aside preferences during emergency situations.

After several decades of hiring personal care assistants, I’ve learned ways to assess whether a person will be flexible and responsible. I set up an initial phone call with qualified applicants I’ve chosen from the ad response and explain job duties in more detail. I ask about other jobs and responsibilities that would affect their availability, and if they have related experience working with someone with a disability. These questions often elicit answers that eliminate people. For example, if someone already has three other jobs and I know I’ll need occasional backup, it’s unlikely they’ll be available to meet that need. Applicants have rarely thought all this through and my questions help them do that.

After the initial phone interview, I call back at a random time to set up a personal interview rather than setting one up during our first conversation. I’ve discovered all kinds of things from doing it this way. Some people don’t check voice messages or respond for days, which tells me they aren’t as available as they claim. Once in a while someone will question why I expect them to do “another interview.” Of course, I never hire anyone who will not meet with me in person and neither should you!

By this time, I’m getting a feel for whether I’d be comfortable working with this person. Each personal care assistant I hire requires a different approach. Some need to be micromanaged, while others can work well from a written list. Every now and then, I’m fortunate enough to find someone who cannot only work independently, but also follow written and verbal instructions. These are important qualities for me, since I have to delegate tasks while I’m busy working.

Much of the interaction during our in-person interview reveals the applicant’s personality style. I ask for assistance to discover if he or she follows my directions or becomes frustrated at having to do it according to my preferences and needs. Does the person remain pleasant while assisting me? Inexperience is one thing, but an inability to complete a simple task with a pleasant way helps me decide whom to hire, or not.

All of this may sound overwhelming, but keep in mind that over time you’ll be better able to spot who will meet your needs. Even if you start with a pool of 40 applicants, which isn’t unusual, it will become easier to zone in on five people who are potential hires after going through this process more than once.

Set boundaries from day one. This means not only not being taken advantage of, but also not taking advantage of your assistant. For example, neither should borrow money from each other. Plan your care carefully so emergency calls for help outside their hours are rare. Be clear about how you like things done, but don’t be petty. Don’t be afraid to cut short personal conversations if you hire a chatty person who likes to talk more than work. After all, you’re paying the person to do a job. On the other hand, keep in mind that you’re an employer and if the person comes to you with a personal problem, you’ll need to address it if it affects their job performance.

A personal care assistant may be one of the most important resources available to you as someone with a disability. It may seem obvious, but treat your assistant as you’d like to be treated and then expect the same in return. Both your lives will be enriched if you cultivate an atmosphere of mutual respect from the very beginning.

Ruth Harrigan is an attorney with a B.A. from Rutgers College and a J.D. from Wayne State University. She is a member of the NJ Coalition for Inclusive Ministries and started her blog, Wheelie Catholic, to raise awareness of the need for inclusion of people with disabilities. Ruth also writes poems, essays and fiction about disability issues, which can be read on her other blog, A Different Light. Ruth enjoys skiing and was nationally ranked as a wheelchair tennis player.

As posted at Disability.gov:
http://usodep.blogs.govdelivery.com/2012/11/28/hiring-a-personal-care-assistant/

28 Kasım 2012 Çarşamba

Mail Order Zombie #181 - The Terror Experiment, Feed, Telltale's The Walking Dead, The Collective Volume 3

To contact us Click HERE
Download Mail Order Zombie #181 here!

Brother D is on pins and non-Euclidean needles as he looks forward to this weekend's H. P. Lovecraft Film Festival & Cthulhu Con, but he's not so distracted that he can't put together Episode 181 of Mail Order Zombie! This time around, he takes a look at the 2012 zombie movie release The Terror Experiment (dir. George Mendeluk). This episode also features Part One of a two-part review of JABB pictures' latest anthology release The Collective, Volume 3. The Mail Order Zombie offers up some reviews of their own when Silent Death reviews the videogame The Walking Dead from Telltale Games, and a review of the Mira Grant's novel Feed comes from Eradication H. In addition to the Lovecraft Film Festival, Brother D will also be attending Crypticon Seattle this month where he'll be a panelist, so he talks about that as well before Miss Bren joins him for this episode's Feedback Discussion. (Brother D would like to formally apologize to the Lifetime television network. He's not entirely sure why, but he feels that he must.)

INTRO (00:00)
FEED (02:15)
THE TERROR EXPERIMENT (08:17)
THE WALKING DEAD (25:52)
THE COLLECTIVE, VOLUME 3  (29:18)
CONVENTION ANNOUNCEMENTS (45:05)
FEEDBACK DISCUSSION (48:37)

Mail Order Zombie Facebook Group - http://tinyurl.com/facebookmoz
Mail Order Zombie Twitter - http://www.twitter.com/mailorderzombie
Email us at MailOrderZombie@gmail.com or call us at 206-202-2505!

JABB pictures

Simple Studies - Bandcamp

(Various production music produced by Kevin MacLeod.)

27 Kasım 2012 Salı

Mail Order Zombie: Episode 179 - Blood Splatter, Pretty Dead, The Hunger Games, Corman's World & The Americans

To contact us Click HERE
Download Mail Order Zombie #179 here!

Mail Order Zombie . . . now with TIMECODES! The dust has finally settled after the Dead Letter Awards and we finally washed the vampire smell out of the carpet from last week's Mail Order Vampire fun, it's time to get back to business here at Mail Order Zombie. In Episode #179, we're packing in the reviews when Brother D takes a look at Blood Splatter: A Guide to Cinematic Zombie Violence, Gore and Special Effects by Craig W. Chenery while Silent Death reviews Jake Bible's Dead Letter Award-nominated novel The Americans. On the movie-front, Miss Bren gets dystopian on Brother D with some talk about The Hunger Games (dir. Gary Ross), D reviews the upcoming zombie film Pretty Dead (dir. Benjamin Wilkins), and we use the documentary Corman's World: Exploits of a Hollywood Rebel (dir. Alex Stapleton) as a palate cleanser. There are two (count 'em - TWO) contests running right now at Mail Order Zombie, and you'll have to listen to the Feedback Discussion to find out how you can win . . . stuff!

INTRO (00:00)
BLOOD SPLATTER REVIEW (03:24)
CORMAN'S WORLD REVIEW (12:06)
THE HUNGER GAMES DISCUSSION (27:49)
THE AMERICANS REVIEW (1:01:52)
PRETTY DEAD REVIEW (1:09:53)
FEEDBACK (1:30:01)

Mail Order Zombie Facebook Group - http://tinyurl.com/facebookmoz
Mail Order Zombie Twitter - http://www.mailorderzombie.com/twitter

Email us at MailOrderZombie@gmail.com or call us at 206-202-2505!

Blood Splatter: A Guide to Cinematic Zombie Violence, Gore and Special Effects - http://www.zombiebloodsplatter.com/
Corman's World: Exploits of a Hollywood Rebel - http://www.cormansworld.com/
Jake Bible's Brain Squeezin's - http://jakebible.com/
Pretty Dead - http://www.prettydead.com/

heiDESIGN: Marketing and Communications - http://www.heidesign.com.au/

Family Movie Night - http://blog.fmnpodcast.com/
The Takedown MMA Radio - http://www.wix.com/takedownshow/takedown
Ball & Chain - http://show6403.podomatic.com/

BoneBat Film Fest! - http://bonehand.com/bonebatff.html

An Oasis in the Desert - http://www.facebook.com/AnOasisInTheDesert

Parsec Awards - http://www.parsecawards.com/

(Various production music produced by Kevin MacLeod.)

Mail Order Zombie #181 - The Terror Experiment, Feed, Telltale's The Walking Dead, The Collective Volume 3

To contact us Click HERE
Download Mail Order Zombie #181 here!

Brother D is on pins and non-Euclidean needles as he looks forward to this weekend's H. P. Lovecraft Film Festival & Cthulhu Con, but he's not so distracted that he can't put together Episode 181 of Mail Order Zombie! This time around, he takes a look at the 2012 zombie movie release The Terror Experiment (dir. George Mendeluk). This episode also features Part One of a two-part review of JABB pictures' latest anthology release The Collective, Volume 3. The Mail Order Zombie offers up some reviews of their own when Silent Death reviews the videogame The Walking Dead from Telltale Games, and a review of the Mira Grant's novel Feed comes from Eradication H. In addition to the Lovecraft Film Festival, Brother D will also be attending Crypticon Seattle this month where he'll be a panelist, so he talks about that as well before Miss Bren joins him for this episode's Feedback Discussion. (Brother D would like to formally apologize to the Lifetime television network. He's not entirely sure why, but he feels that he must.)

INTRO (00:00)
FEED (02:15)
THE TERROR EXPERIMENT (08:17)
THE WALKING DEAD (25:52)
THE COLLECTIVE, VOLUME 3  (29:18)
CONVENTION ANNOUNCEMENTS (45:05)
FEEDBACK DISCUSSION (48:37)

Mail Order Zombie Facebook Group - http://tinyurl.com/facebookmoz
Mail Order Zombie Twitter - http://www.twitter.com/mailorderzombie
Email us at MailOrderZombie@gmail.com or call us at 206-202-2505!

JABB pictures

Simple Studies - Bandcamp

(Various production music produced by Kevin MacLeod.)

25 Kasım 2012 Pazar

Mail Order Zombie: Episode 179 - Blood Splatter, Pretty Dead, The Hunger Games, Corman's World & The Americans

To contact us Click HERE
Download Mail Order Zombie #179 here!

Mail Order Zombie . . . now with TIMECODES! The dust has finally settled after the Dead Letter Awards and we finally washed the vampire smell out of the carpet from last week's Mail Order Vampire fun, it's time to get back to business here at Mail Order Zombie. In Episode #179, we're packing in the reviews when Brother D takes a look at Blood Splatter: A Guide to Cinematic Zombie Violence, Gore and Special Effects by Craig W. Chenery while Silent Death reviews Jake Bible's Dead Letter Award-nominated novel The Americans. On the movie-front, Miss Bren gets dystopian on Brother D with some talk about The Hunger Games (dir. Gary Ross), D reviews the upcoming zombie film Pretty Dead (dir. Benjamin Wilkins), and we use the documentary Corman's World: Exploits of a Hollywood Rebel (dir. Alex Stapleton) as a palate cleanser. There are two (count 'em - TWO) contests running right now at Mail Order Zombie, and you'll have to listen to the Feedback Discussion to find out how you can win . . . stuff!

INTRO (00:00)
BLOOD SPLATTER REVIEW (03:24)
CORMAN'S WORLD REVIEW (12:06)
THE HUNGER GAMES DISCUSSION (27:49)
THE AMERICANS REVIEW (1:01:52)
PRETTY DEAD REVIEW (1:09:53)
FEEDBACK (1:30:01)

Mail Order Zombie Facebook Group - http://tinyurl.com/facebookmoz
Mail Order Zombie Twitter - http://www.mailorderzombie.com/twitter

Email us at MailOrderZombie@gmail.com or call us at 206-202-2505!

Blood Splatter: A Guide to Cinematic Zombie Violence, Gore and Special Effects - http://www.zombiebloodsplatter.com/
Corman's World: Exploits of a Hollywood Rebel - http://www.cormansworld.com/
Jake Bible's Brain Squeezin's - http://jakebible.com/
Pretty Dead - http://www.prettydead.com/

heiDESIGN: Marketing and Communications - http://www.heidesign.com.au/

Family Movie Night - http://blog.fmnpodcast.com/
The Takedown MMA Radio - http://www.wix.com/takedownshow/takedown
Ball & Chain - http://show6403.podomatic.com/

BoneBat Film Fest! - http://bonehand.com/bonebatff.html

An Oasis in the Desert - http://www.facebook.com/AnOasisInTheDesert

Parsec Awards - http://www.parsecawards.com/

(Various production music produced by Kevin MacLeod.)

Mail Order Zombie #181 - The Terror Experiment, Feed, Telltale's The Walking Dead, The Collective Volume 3

To contact us Click HERE
Download Mail Order Zombie #181 here!

Brother D is on pins and non-Euclidean needles as he looks forward to this weekend's H. P. Lovecraft Film Festival & Cthulhu Con, but he's not so distracted that he can't put together Episode 181 of Mail Order Zombie! This time around, he takes a look at the 2012 zombie movie release The Terror Experiment (dir. George Mendeluk). This episode also features Part One of a two-part review of JABB pictures' latest anthology release The Collective, Volume 3. The Mail Order Zombie offers up some reviews of their own when Silent Death reviews the videogame The Walking Dead from Telltale Games, and a review of the Mira Grant's novel Feed comes from Eradication H. In addition to the Lovecraft Film Festival, Brother D will also be attending Crypticon Seattle this month where he'll be a panelist, so he talks about that as well before Miss Bren joins him for this episode's Feedback Discussion. (Brother D would like to formally apologize to the Lifetime television network. He's not entirely sure why, but he feels that he must.)

INTRO (00:00)
FEED (02:15)
THE TERROR EXPERIMENT (08:17)
THE WALKING DEAD (25:52)
THE COLLECTIVE, VOLUME 3  (29:18)
CONVENTION ANNOUNCEMENTS (45:05)
FEEDBACK DISCUSSION (48:37)

Mail Order Zombie Facebook Group - http://tinyurl.com/facebookmoz
Mail Order Zombie Twitter - http://www.twitter.com/mailorderzombie
Email us at MailOrderZombie@gmail.com or call us at 206-202-2505!

JABB pictures

Simple Studies - Bandcamp

(Various production music produced by Kevin MacLeod.)

24 Kasım 2012 Cumartesi

Mail Order Zombie: Episode 179 - Blood Splatter, Pretty Dead, The Hunger Games, Corman's World & The Americans

To contact us Click HERE
Download Mail Order Zombie #179 here!

Mail Order Zombie . . . now with TIMECODES! The dust has finally settled after the Dead Letter Awards and we finally washed the vampire smell out of the carpet from last week's Mail Order Vampire fun, it's time to get back to business here at Mail Order Zombie. In Episode #179, we're packing in the reviews when Brother D takes a look at Blood Splatter: A Guide to Cinematic Zombie Violence, Gore and Special Effects by Craig W. Chenery while Silent Death reviews Jake Bible's Dead Letter Award-nominated novel The Americans. On the movie-front, Miss Bren gets dystopian on Brother D with some talk about The Hunger Games (dir. Gary Ross), D reviews the upcoming zombie film Pretty Dead (dir. Benjamin Wilkins), and we use the documentary Corman's World: Exploits of a Hollywood Rebel (dir. Alex Stapleton) as a palate cleanser. There are two (count 'em - TWO) contests running right now at Mail Order Zombie, and you'll have to listen to the Feedback Discussion to find out how you can win . . . stuff!

INTRO (00:00)
BLOOD SPLATTER REVIEW (03:24)
CORMAN'S WORLD REVIEW (12:06)
THE HUNGER GAMES DISCUSSION (27:49)
THE AMERICANS REVIEW (1:01:52)
PRETTY DEAD REVIEW (1:09:53)
FEEDBACK (1:30:01)

Mail Order Zombie Facebook Group - http://tinyurl.com/facebookmoz
Mail Order Zombie Twitter - http://www.mailorderzombie.com/twitter

Email us at MailOrderZombie@gmail.com or call us at 206-202-2505!

Blood Splatter: A Guide to Cinematic Zombie Violence, Gore and Special Effects - http://www.zombiebloodsplatter.com/
Corman's World: Exploits of a Hollywood Rebel - http://www.cormansworld.com/
Jake Bible's Brain Squeezin's - http://jakebible.com/
Pretty Dead - http://www.prettydead.com/

heiDESIGN: Marketing and Communications - http://www.heidesign.com.au/

Family Movie Night - http://blog.fmnpodcast.com/
The Takedown MMA Radio - http://www.wix.com/takedownshow/takedown
Ball & Chain - http://show6403.podomatic.com/

BoneBat Film Fest! - http://bonehand.com/bonebatff.html

An Oasis in the Desert - http://www.facebook.com/AnOasisInTheDesert

Parsec Awards - http://www.parsecawards.com/

(Various production music produced by Kevin MacLeod.)

Mail Order Zombie #181 - The Terror Experiment, Feed, Telltale's The Walking Dead, The Collective Volume 3

To contact us Click HERE
Download Mail Order Zombie #181 here!

Brother D is on pins and non-Euclidean needles as he looks forward to this weekend's H. P. Lovecraft Film Festival & Cthulhu Con, but he's not so distracted that he can't put together Episode 181 of Mail Order Zombie! This time around, he takes a look at the 2012 zombie movie release The Terror Experiment (dir. George Mendeluk). This episode also features Part One of a two-part review of JABB pictures' latest anthology release The Collective, Volume 3. The Mail Order Zombie offers up some reviews of their own when Silent Death reviews the videogame The Walking Dead from Telltale Games, and a review of the Mira Grant's novel Feed comes from Eradication H. In addition to the Lovecraft Film Festival, Brother D will also be attending Crypticon Seattle this month where he'll be a panelist, so he talks about that as well before Miss Bren joins him for this episode's Feedback Discussion. (Brother D would like to formally apologize to the Lifetime television network. He's not entirely sure why, but he feels that he must.)

INTRO (00:00)
FEED (02:15)
THE TERROR EXPERIMENT (08:17)
THE WALKING DEAD (25:52)
THE COLLECTIVE, VOLUME 3  (29:18)
CONVENTION ANNOUNCEMENTS (45:05)
FEEDBACK DISCUSSION (48:37)

Mail Order Zombie Facebook Group - http://tinyurl.com/facebookmoz
Mail Order Zombie Twitter - http://www.twitter.com/mailorderzombie
Email us at MailOrderZombie@gmail.com or call us at 206-202-2505!

JABB pictures

Simple Studies - Bandcamp

(Various production music produced by Kevin MacLeod.)

23 Kasım 2012 Cuma

Mail Order Zombie: Episode 179 - Blood Splatter, Pretty Dead, The Hunger Games, Corman's World & The Americans

To contact us Click HERE
Download Mail Order Zombie #179 here!

Mail Order Zombie . . . now with TIMECODES! The dust has finally settled after the Dead Letter Awards and we finally washed the vampire smell out of the carpet from last week's Mail Order Vampire fun, it's time to get back to business here at Mail Order Zombie. In Episode #179, we're packing in the reviews when Brother D takes a look at Blood Splatter: A Guide to Cinematic Zombie Violence, Gore and Special Effects by Craig W. Chenery while Silent Death reviews Jake Bible's Dead Letter Award-nominated novel The Americans. On the movie-front, Miss Bren gets dystopian on Brother D with some talk about The Hunger Games (dir. Gary Ross), D reviews the upcoming zombie film Pretty Dead (dir. Benjamin Wilkins), and we use the documentary Corman's World: Exploits of a Hollywood Rebel (dir. Alex Stapleton) as a palate cleanser. There are two (count 'em - TWO) contests running right now at Mail Order Zombie, and you'll have to listen to the Feedback Discussion to find out how you can win . . . stuff!

INTRO (00:00)
BLOOD SPLATTER REVIEW (03:24)
CORMAN'S WORLD REVIEW (12:06)
THE HUNGER GAMES DISCUSSION (27:49)
THE AMERICANS REVIEW (1:01:52)
PRETTY DEAD REVIEW (1:09:53)
FEEDBACK (1:30:01)

Mail Order Zombie Facebook Group - http://tinyurl.com/facebookmoz
Mail Order Zombie Twitter - http://www.mailorderzombie.com/twitter

Email us at MailOrderZombie@gmail.com or call us at 206-202-2505!

Blood Splatter: A Guide to Cinematic Zombie Violence, Gore and Special Effects - http://www.zombiebloodsplatter.com/
Corman's World: Exploits of a Hollywood Rebel - http://www.cormansworld.com/
Jake Bible's Brain Squeezin's - http://jakebible.com/
Pretty Dead - http://www.prettydead.com/

heiDESIGN: Marketing and Communications - http://www.heidesign.com.au/

Family Movie Night - http://blog.fmnpodcast.com/
The Takedown MMA Radio - http://www.wix.com/takedownshow/takedown
Ball & Chain - http://show6403.podomatic.com/

BoneBat Film Fest! - http://bonehand.com/bonebatff.html

An Oasis in the Desert - http://www.facebook.com/AnOasisInTheDesert

Parsec Awards - http://www.parsecawards.com/

(Various production music produced by Kevin MacLeod.)

Mail Order Zombie #181 - The Terror Experiment, Feed, Telltale's The Walking Dead, The Collective Volume 3

To contact us Click HERE
Download Mail Order Zombie #181 here!

Brother D is on pins and non-Euclidean needles as he looks forward to this weekend's H. P. Lovecraft Film Festival & Cthulhu Con, but he's not so distracted that he can't put together Episode 181 of Mail Order Zombie! This time around, he takes a look at the 2012 zombie movie release The Terror Experiment (dir. George Mendeluk). This episode also features Part One of a two-part review of JABB pictures' latest anthology release The Collective, Volume 3. The Mail Order Zombie offers up some reviews of their own when Silent Death reviews the videogame The Walking Dead from Telltale Games, and a review of the Mira Grant's novel Feed comes from Eradication H. In addition to the Lovecraft Film Festival, Brother D will also be attending Crypticon Seattle this month where he'll be a panelist, so he talks about that as well before Miss Bren joins him for this episode's Feedback Discussion. (Brother D would like to formally apologize to the Lifetime television network. He's not entirely sure why, but he feels that he must.)

INTRO (00:00)
FEED (02:15)
THE TERROR EXPERIMENT (08:17)
THE WALKING DEAD (25:52)
THE COLLECTIVE, VOLUME 3  (29:18)
CONVENTION ANNOUNCEMENTS (45:05)
FEEDBACK DISCUSSION (48:37)

Mail Order Zombie Facebook Group - http://tinyurl.com/facebookmoz
Mail Order Zombie Twitter - http://www.twitter.com/mailorderzombie
Email us at MailOrderZombie@gmail.com or call us at 206-202-2505!

JABB pictures

Simple Studies - Bandcamp

(Various production music produced by Kevin MacLeod.)

22 Kasım 2012 Perşembe

Mail Order Zombie: Episode 179 - Blood Splatter, Pretty Dead, The Hunger Games, Corman's World & The Americans

To contact us Click HERE
Download Mail Order Zombie #179 here!

Mail Order Zombie . . . now with TIMECODES! The dust has finally settled after the Dead Letter Awards and we finally washed the vampire smell out of the carpet from last week's Mail Order Vampire fun, it's time to get back to business here at Mail Order Zombie. In Episode #179, we're packing in the reviews when Brother D takes a look at Blood Splatter: A Guide to Cinematic Zombie Violence, Gore and Special Effects by Craig W. Chenery while Silent Death reviews Jake Bible's Dead Letter Award-nominated novel The Americans. On the movie-front, Miss Bren gets dystopian on Brother D with some talk about The Hunger Games (dir. Gary Ross), D reviews the upcoming zombie film Pretty Dead (dir. Benjamin Wilkins), and we use the documentary Corman's World: Exploits of a Hollywood Rebel (dir. Alex Stapleton) as a palate cleanser. There are two (count 'em - TWO) contests running right now at Mail Order Zombie, and you'll have to listen to the Feedback Discussion to find out how you can win . . . stuff!

INTRO (00:00)
BLOOD SPLATTER REVIEW (03:24)
CORMAN'S WORLD REVIEW (12:06)
THE HUNGER GAMES DISCUSSION (27:49)
THE AMERICANS REVIEW (1:01:52)
PRETTY DEAD REVIEW (1:09:53)
FEEDBACK (1:30:01)

Mail Order Zombie Facebook Group - http://tinyurl.com/facebookmoz
Mail Order Zombie Twitter - http://www.mailorderzombie.com/twitter

Email us at MailOrderZombie@gmail.com or call us at 206-202-2505!

Blood Splatter: A Guide to Cinematic Zombie Violence, Gore and Special Effects - http://www.zombiebloodsplatter.com/
Corman's World: Exploits of a Hollywood Rebel - http://www.cormansworld.com/
Jake Bible's Brain Squeezin's - http://jakebible.com/
Pretty Dead - http://www.prettydead.com/

heiDESIGN: Marketing and Communications - http://www.heidesign.com.au/

Family Movie Night - http://blog.fmnpodcast.com/
The Takedown MMA Radio - http://www.wix.com/takedownshow/takedown
Ball & Chain - http://show6403.podomatic.com/

BoneBat Film Fest! - http://bonehand.com/bonebatff.html

An Oasis in the Desert - http://www.facebook.com/AnOasisInTheDesert

Parsec Awards - http://www.parsecawards.com/

(Various production music produced by Kevin MacLeod.)

Mail Order Zombie #181 - The Terror Experiment, Feed, Telltale's The Walking Dead, The Collective Volume 3

To contact us Click HERE
Download Mail Order Zombie #181 here!

Brother D is on pins and non-Euclidean needles as he looks forward to this weekend's H. P. Lovecraft Film Festival & Cthulhu Con, but he's not so distracted that he can't put together Episode 181 of Mail Order Zombie! This time around, he takes a look at the 2012 zombie movie release The Terror Experiment (dir. George Mendeluk). This episode also features Part One of a two-part review of JABB pictures' latest anthology release The Collective, Volume 3. The Mail Order Zombie offers up some reviews of their own when Silent Death reviews the videogame The Walking Dead from Telltale Games, and a review of the Mira Grant's novel Feed comes from Eradication H. In addition to the Lovecraft Film Festival, Brother D will also be attending Crypticon Seattle this month where he'll be a panelist, so he talks about that as well before Miss Bren joins him for this episode's Feedback Discussion. (Brother D would like to formally apologize to the Lifetime television network. He's not entirely sure why, but he feels that he must.)

INTRO (00:00)
FEED (02:15)
THE TERROR EXPERIMENT (08:17)
THE WALKING DEAD (25:52)
THE COLLECTIVE, VOLUME 3  (29:18)
CONVENTION ANNOUNCEMENTS (45:05)
FEEDBACK DISCUSSION (48:37)

Mail Order Zombie Facebook Group - http://tinyurl.com/facebookmoz
Mail Order Zombie Twitter - http://www.twitter.com/mailorderzombie
Email us at MailOrderZombie@gmail.com or call us at 206-202-2505!

JABB pictures

Simple Studies - Bandcamp

(Various production music produced by Kevin MacLeod.)

Episode #195 - Operation: Nazi Zombies, The Walking Dead, The Collective, Zombi Mexicano & Metal and Ash

To contact us Click HERE
Download Mail Order Zombie #195 here!

Is it too soon to start looking forward to our 200th episode?  It is when we have so much to get to in Episode 195 of Mail Order Zombie!  This time around, Brother D reviews the feature film release Operation: Nazi Zombies (dir. David B. Stewart III), as well as three more shorts from JABB pictures' The Collective, Vol. 5 (A (gore)aphobic, Consumption of the Heart, and Zombie Soup).  Miss Bren joins him to look at three more episodes of Season Two of The Walking Dead before lending her voice to help D review the zombie movie reference book Zombi Mexicano by Keith J. Rainville.  Silent Death takes us back to his bunker to review Metal and Ash by Jake Bible (when he isn't trying to school Brother D on who Michelle Ryan is or tell us what he continues to think about the television series Revolution), Jimmy and Eric from Galactic Gaming News have a special announcement, and Need-a-Nickname Scott has the news in the Zombie Beat. 

Viva la Twinkie!

INTRO (00:00)
ZOMBIE BEAT (02:08)
THE COLLECTIVE, VOL. 5 (13:37)
OPERATION: NAZI ZOMBIES (22:02)
METAL AND ASH (34:07)
THE WALKING DEAD (37:00)
ZOMBI MEXICANO (1:01:44)
GALACTIC GAMING NEWS (1:14:41)
FEEDBACK (1:17:56)

Mail Order Zombie Facebook Group - http://tinyurl.com/facebookmoz
Mail Order Zombie Twitter - http://www.twitter.com/mailorderzombie
Email us at MailOrderZombie@gmail.com or call us at 206-202-2505!

Galactic Gaming News - http://www.galacticgamingnews.tumblr.com
Galactic Gaming News Facebook - http://www.facebook.com/galacticgamingnews


From Parts Unknown - http://frompartsunknown.net/
JABB pictures - http://www.jabbpictures.com/

Jenna Jameson Ordered to pay over missed Zombie Stripper appearances - http://www.suntimes.com/news/metro/16360277-418/judge-orders-porn-star-jenna-jameson-to-pay-up.html
Scream Factory’s Facebook page - http://www.facebook.com/ScreamFactoryDVD
World War Z trailer - http://www.comingsoon.net/films.php?id=50522
Warm Bodies trailer - http://www.deadline.com/2012/11/warm-bodies-trailer-zombies-nicholas-hoult-teresa-palmer/
How to Train Your Zombie - http://www.kolotv.com/home/headlines/PhD-Student-Uses-Zombies-to-Get-Students-Excited-About-Learning-179898091.html

(Some production music produced by Kevin MacLeod.)

November is National Family Caregivers Month: Because Caregivers Matter

To contact us Click HERE
What began as a celebration of family caregivers during the week of Thanksgiving in 1997 has grown into a month-long acknowledgement and celebration of family caregivers—those extraordinary people who make such a difference in the lives of their loved ones. Family caregivers provide more long-term care in our country than any other group, by far.

Family caregivers’ roles vary greatly, ranging from transportation, meal preparation and housekeeping to more complex help, such as medication management, wound care, and financial planning. What’s more, family caregivers are often the single constant in lives fraught with rapid change and uncertainty. Their commitment may be the only thing preventing the long-term institutional placement of medically fragile people. Supporting family caregivers is essential.

The Administration for Community Living (ACL) is proud to support the innovative Lifespan Respite Care Program, which provides states the opportunity to improve access to respite services for family caregivers, no matter the age of the person they are caring for.

State-based Lifespan Respite Care Programs are coordinated systems of accessible, community-based services for family caregivers of people with special needs, no matter their age.

For the past 12 years, the Administration on Aging, now part of ACL, has funded states to provide support to caregivers of people who are 70 years and older through the National Family Caregiver Support Program (NFCSP).

NFCSP supports state programs that include:

Information and referral to programs in local communities,

Help finding respite care so a caregiver can take care of personal business or just take a break,

High-quality advice and training, to learn how to be an even better caregiver, and

Support groups to discover they are not alone in the challenges they face–and even find a safe place to share a joke and a shoulder to cry on.

By Kathy Greenlee, Administrator, Administration for Community Living and Assistant Secretary for Aging, HHS

Lifespan Respite Care Program :
http://www.aoa.gov/AoARoot/AoA_Programs/HCLTC/LRCP/index.aspx

National Family Caregiver Support Program (OAA Title IIIE):
http://www.aoa.gov/AoARoot/AoA_Programs/HCLTC/Caregiver/index.aspx

Find more resources for family caregivers :
http://www.usa.gov/Citizen/Topics/Health/caregivers.shtml

Paralyzed Vet (former Marine Sgt. Joseph Smith) Files Lawsuit For Mistreatment At Chicago O’Hare Airport | Nov 2012

To contact us Click HERE
CHICAGO (CBS2) – A former U.S. Marine, who was left in a wheelchair following his service in Afghanistan, is filing a lawsuit alleging he was injured and left soaked in his own urine after he was mistreated by airline and airport workers at O’Hare International Airport nearly two years ago.
{Wheelchair file photo (Photo by Chris Hondros/Getty Images)}


WBBM Newsradio’s Terry Keshner reports former Marine Sgt. Joseph Smith was wounded in Afghanistan in 2004, and confined to a wheelchair.

Smith is suing Air Serv Corporation and United Airlines for $300,000 in damages, claiming an Air Serv employee carelessly dumped him out of his wheelchair at O’Hare in November 2010, after ignoring warnings a wheel had become stuck.

At the time, Smith was traveling as part of a Paralympic shooting team, and trying to catch a connecting flight at O’Hare when the worker tipped his chair over while boarding the plane.

“I flew out of my chair, hit my head on the left side of my head. … I landed on my head,” Smith said.

He suffered a concussion, and said he was denied an aisle seat on his United Airlines flight, and was forced to drag himself to his seat without help. His catheter bag spilled in the process, soaking him with urine.

His attorney, Alex Hattimer, said, “the catheter bag ruptures, he ends up with urine spilled all over him. He drags his urine-covered, limb body down the aisle.”

Smith said the lawsuit is about dignity, more than money.

“Apparently some people out there, they just don’t get it. So, I want to make sure this never happens to someone else,” he said. “I just want people out there to know that … people with disabilities, we’re not invisible. We’re people, too.”

Calls to Air Serv and United were not immediately returned.

WBBM Newsradio’s Terry Keshner Reports : November 14, 2012
http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2012/11/14/paralyzed-vet-sues-airport-airline-workers-for-mistreatment-at-ohare/#at_pco=cfd-1.0

21 Kasım 2012 Çarşamba

ADA Requirements: Accessible Pools revised final regulations 2012

To contact us Click HERE
U.S. Department of Justice
Civil Rights Division
Disability Rights Section


ADA Requirements: Accessible Pools - Updated May 24, 2012

Accessible Pools
Means of Entry and Exit
The Department of Justice published revised final regulations implementing the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) for title II (State and local government services) and title III (public accommodations and commercial facilities) on September 15, 2010, in the Federal Register. These requirements, or rules, clarify and refine issues that have arisen over the past 20 years and contain new, and updated, requirements, including the 2010 Standards for Accessible Design ("2010 Standards").

Overview
Providing equal opportunity to people with disabilities is the fundamental principle of the Americans with Disabilities Act. This publication is designed to help title II and title III entities understand how new requirements for swimming pools, especially existing pools, apply to them.

People with disabilities were, for too long, excluded from participating in many recreational activities, including swimming. The revised 2010 Standards change that. For the first time, the 2010 Standards set minimum requirements for making swimming pools, wading pools, and spas (pools) accessible. Newly constructed and altered pools must meet these requirements. Public entities and public accommodations also have obligations with respect to existing pools. State and local governments must make recreational programs and services, including swimming pool programs, accessible to people with disabilities. Public accommodations must bring existing pools into compliance with the 2010 Standards to the extent that it is readily achievable to do so.

The requirements for newly constructed and existing pools will ensure that, going forward, people with disabilities can enjoy the same activities—a community swim meet; private swim lessons; a hotel pool—at the same locations and with the same independence, ease, and convenience as everyone else.

The 2010 Standards establish two categories of pools: large pools with more than 300 linear feet of pool wall and smaller pools with less than 300 linear feet of wall. Large pools must have two accessible means of entry, with at least one being a pool lift or sloped entry; smaller pools are only required to have one accessible means of entry, provided that it is either a pool lift or a sloped entry.

There are a limited number of exceptions to the requirements. One applies to multiple spas provided in a cluster. A second applies to wave pools, lazy rivers, sand bottom pools, and other pools that have only one point of entry. For more information on the specific requirements and exceptions, see sections 242 and 1009 of the 2010 Standards.

Existing Pools

Title II Program Accessibility

Individuals with disabilities cannot be excluded from or denied participation in State and local government programs, services, or activities because a facility is inaccessible or unusable. This means that all programs, services, and activities, when viewed in their entirety, must be accessible to individuals with disabilities unless doing so results in a fundamental alteration in the nature of the program or in an undue financial and administrative burden. This requirement is known as "program accessibility."

Program accessibility applies to all pool-related programs, services, and activities (swimming programs). Program accessibility does not typically require that every pool be made accessible. However, if a public entity has only one existing pool, it must take steps to ensure that its swimming program at that pool is accessible.

A public entity determines which method it will use for meeting its program accessibility obligations. When structural changes are made to existing pools, including installation of a fixed pool lift, the changes must comply with the 2010 Standards. If a public entity chooses to acquire equipment (e.g., a portable lift) to provide program accessibility, the entity should select equipment that includes features required by the 2010 Standards, including independent operation by individuals with disabilities. Sharing accessible equipment between pools is not permitted, unless it would result in undue burdens to provide equipment at each one. Accessible pool features must be available whenever the facility is open to the public. When choosing to purchase equipment or to make structural changes, the public entity should factor in staff and financial resources required to maintain program accessibility.
Over time, a public entity will need to reassess its compliance with program accessibility, and it may become necessary to acquire new accessible equipment or make structural modifications. For more information about program accessibility, see the title II regulations at Section 35.150.

To determine which pools must be made accessible, public entities should consider the following factors:
How to provide swimming programs in the most integrated setting appropriate;
The ways in which people participate in the programs (e.g., individually, in families, in youth groups);
Locations where the programs are offered;
What programs are offered at each pool and to which constituencies (e.g., family swims, children's swimming lessons, older adult exercise classes, high school swim meets);
Which pools are accessible and to what extent; and
Level of dispersion of the accessible locations and convenience to reach them (e.g., one pool in each quadrant of the town, all on accessible mass transit).

Title III Readily Achievable Barrier Removal

Title III of the ADA requires that places of public accommodation (e.g., hotels, resorts, swim clubs, and sites of events open to the public) remove physical barriers in existing pools to the extent that it is readily achievable to do so (i.e., easily accomplishable and able to be carried out without much difficulty or expense).

Determining what is readily achievable will vary from business to business and sometimes from one year to the next. Changing economic conditions can be taken into consideration in determining what is readily achievable.

For an existing pool, removing barriers may involve installation of a fixed pool lift with independent operation by the user or other accessible means of entry that complies with the 2010 Standards to the extent that it is readily achievable to do so. If installation of a fixed lift is not readily achievable, the public accommodation may then consider alternatives such as use of a portable pool lift that complies with the 2010 Standards. It is important to note that the barrier removal obligation is a continuing one, and it is expected that a business will take steps to improve accessibility over time. When selecting equipment, the public accommodation should factor in the staff and financial resources needed to keep the pool equipment available and in working condition at poolside. For more information about barrier removal, see the title III regulations at Section 36.304.

If you have purchased a non-fixed lift before March15 th that otherwise complies with the requirements in the 2010 Standards for pool lifts (such as seat size, etc.), you may use it, as long as you keep it in position for use at the pool and operational during all times that the pool is open to guests. Because of a misunderstanding by some pool owners regarding whether the use of portable pool lifts would comply with barrier removal obligations, the Department, as a matter of prosecutorial discretion, will not enforce the fixed elements of the 2010 Standards against those owners or operators of existing pools who purchased portable lifts prior to March 15, 2012 and who keep the portable lifts in positon for use at the pool and operational during all times that the pool is open to guests so long as those lifts otherwise comply with the requirements of the 2010 Standards. Generally, lifts purchased after March 15, 2012 must be fixed if it is readily achievable to do so.

To determine which pools must be made accessible, public accommodations should consider the following factors:
The nature and cost of the action;
Overall resources of the site or sites involved;
The geographic separateness and relationship of the site(s) to any parent corporation or entity;
The overall resources of any parent corporation or entity, if applicable; and
The type of operation or operations of any parent corporation or entity, if applicable

New Construction and Alterations

New Construction
The 2010 Standards, which set requirements for fixed elements and spaces, require that all new pool facilities built by State and local governments, public accommodations, and commercial facilities must be accessible to and usable by persons with disabilities.

Alterations
A physical change to a swimming pool which affects or could affect the usability of the pool is considered to be an alteration. When pools are altered, the alterations must comply with the 2010 Standards, to the maximum extent feasible. Changes to the mechanical and electrical systems, such as filtration and chlorination systems, are not alterations. Entities must ensure that an alteration does not decrease accessibility below the requirements for new construction. For example, if a hotel installs a fixed pool lift powered by water pressure, it must ensure that the hose connecting to the lift does not create a barrier across the accessible route to the pool.

Compliance Dates

On or after March 15, 2012
All newly constructed or altered facilities of public entities and public accommodations, including pools, must comply with the 2010 Standards.

On or after March 15, 2012
All existing facilities of public entities and public accommodations, except pools, must comply with the 2010 Standards to the extent required under title II program accessibility or title III readily achievable barrier removal requirements.

On or after January 31, 2013
Subject to other provisions of this guidance, all existing pools of public entities and public accommodations must comply with the 2010 Standards to the extent required under title II program accessibility or title III readily achievable barrier removal requirements.

For more information on effective dates, see the Department's publication called ADA 2010 Revised Requirements: Effective Date and Compliance Date and the 2010 Standards for Accessible Design.

Maintenance of Accessible Features

Accessible pool features must be maintained in operable, working condition so that persons with disabilities have access to the pool whenever the pool is open to others. For example, a portable pool lift may be stored when the pool is closed but it must be at poolside and fully operational during all open pool hours.

An entity should recognize that certain types of equipment may require more staff support and maintenance than others (e.g. ensuring there are enough batteries for a pool lift to maintain a continued charge during pool hours). Entities should plan for these issues and modify operational policies as needed to provide accessible means of entry while the pool is open.

Staff Training

Ongoing staff training is essential to ensure that accessible equipment (particularly pool lifts) and pool facilities are available whenever a pool is open. Staff training should include instruction on what accessible features are available, how to operate and maintain them, and any necessary safety considerations.

Tax Credits and Deductions

Title III entities may be able to take advantage of federal tax credits for small businesses (Internal Revenue Code section 44) or deductions (Internal Revenue Code section 190) for barrier removal costs or alterations to improve accessibility regardless of the size of the business. See the IRS website www.irs.gov for more information.

For more information
about the ADA,
ADA Website: www.ADA.gov

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is available in alternate formats.

Duplication of this document
is encouraged.

May 2012

ADA Requirements: Accessible Pools - Updated May 24, 2012
PDF Version of this Document also available
http://www.ada.gov/pools_2010.htm

Chicago: Handicap Accessibility Problems Plague Many Metra Train Stations | Nov 2012

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CHICAGO (CBS2) –Steep ramps, broken concrete and inoperable doors are safety and accessibility problems CBS 2′s Investigators uncovered at various Metra train stations.

CBS 2′s Dave Savini began investigating after being contacted by George Flores, a paralyzed disability-rights advocate, who said riding public transit can be difficult for those with various disabilities.

The 2 investigators and Flores traveled the rails together to identify some troubled spots.

At the Western Avenue stop, Flores tried to maneuver his wheelchair along the ramp, but got stuck on broken concrete. It’s supposed to be a wheelchair-accessible ramp, but it has turned into one of many obstacles Flores says causes problems for people with disabilities trying to use Metra daily.


Another problem — Flores said he got stuck on a train at Union Station, when a Metra worker — who was supposed to lower a lift — forgot about him.

“I have no way to get off this train,” said Flores in video he shot of himself on a Metra train. “He left me on the train and I can’t get off because of my wheelchair.”

Flores said he shouted until someone found a conductor to let him off.

“There you are,” said Flores as he is helped off the train. “Unbelievable.”

He had other safety and accessibility complaints, too, including the lack of hooks or straps on trains to lock in wheelchairs.

“No way to secure myself other than to physically hold on,” Flores said while recording himself on a train. “There is literally nothing holding this 300- to 400-pound wheelchair from rolling backwards into myself.”

Next, at the Cicero Avenue station, Flores would have been stranded, had CBS 2 not been with him. The system that opens the door, leading to the elevator he requires to exit the platform, was not working.

“I’m trapped at this station,” Flores said. “This is horrible.”

After pushing a nearby call button a Metra operator said, “Well, things do break.”

At the Jefferson Park station, the Metra website indicated there would be parking and access for people with disabilities. In reality, the parking was blocks away. To get from there to the station, a wheelchair-bound person had to travel through tunnels, down city streets, past a bus depot, up steep ramps and through difficult doors to catch a train.

Flores said he would not consider this equal access for people with disabilities.

The website for the Irving Park stop also said there is parking for those with disabilities, but again that information was wrong. There is a small loading zone leading to a mountain of ramps that a person in a wheelchair would have to overcome just to get to the platform.

Without designated parking spots or clear paths, Flores was forced into the street to enter platforms at the Irving Park station.

The Cicero Avenue station also was advertised on Metra’s website as having parking for people with disability placards, but there was no parking for them at all at that stop either.

Finally, we did find parking at the Western Avenue station, but a Metra worker was parked in the only other spot reserved for commuters with disabilities.

A Metra official said they will fix their website to correctly indicate parking accessibility. They also said they are going to fix broken concrete and examine the slope on ramps.

The elevator access door at Cicero has been repaired, but they said — by law — they do not have to install wheelchair locking mechanisms on trains, because Metra trains are regulated under heavy rail transportation standards and locking mechanisms are not required.

A Metra official also said Flores was not forgotten on the train. They claimed the conductor was making sure everyone else was off the train before he came back to service Flores.

Flores has, however, now been invited to speak before Metra’s disability-related committee.

2 Investigators:
Reporting Dave Savini (ty Dave) CHICAGO (CBS2) November 20, 2012
http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2012/11/20/2-investigators-handicap-accessibility-problems-plague-many-metra-stations/

The Arc at the Table with President Obama to Discuss Tax Cuts for the Middle Class, Budget and Medicaid Nov 2012

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Posted on November 16, 2012 by The Arc (blog)

Washington, DC-Today, The Arc’s CEO Peter Berns participated in a small meeting with President Barack Obama, Vice President Joe Biden, and senior economic advisors about the President’s goal to stop middle class tax increases and to raise revenues to help invest in the nation and reduce the deficit. The discussion centered on the urgency of passing a plan to avert raising taxes on the middle class and to raise revenues to finance the federal government without allowing drastic cuts to programs that people with intellectual and developmental disabilities (I/DD) and other vulnerable groups rely on, like education, housing and employment. These cuts are scheduled to take place on January 1, 2013, along with the expiration of a variety of tax provisions. Without a deal this year, The Arc is very concerned about the future of Medicaid and Supplemental Security Income, along with Social Security and Medicare.

“I think everyone agrees that raising taxes on the middle class will hurt families, and that it would be particularly troubling to those that have a loved one with I/DD. These families report that they already don’t have the money they need for the care and support their loved ones need to live a decent life in the community. What will they do if they suddenly have a bigger tax bill come January 1st?” Berns said.

“We welcome the President’s framework for generating revenue and protecting low income families,” Berns added. “Medicaid, Medicare, Social Security, and Supplemental Security Income, which are lifeline programs for people with disabilities, should not be at risk in these budget negotiations. This approach from President Obama would help keep our nation’s commitment to people with disabilities.”

The Arc has been on the front lines of the recent budget battles to protect Medicaid, Social Security, Supplemental Security Income, and Medicare from cuts. As the nation faces this January 1 deadline, known as the “fiscal cliff”, The Arc is urging Congress to restore the scheduled cuts in non-defense discretionary programs and find other ways – specifically through increasing revenues as included in President Obama’s plan – to move the nation forward. This effort is critical to protecting the people that rely on Medicaid, Social Security, Supplemental Security Income, and Medicare from losing these critical services and supports.

“We can’t afford to not protect Medicaid. Medicaid is the lifeline keeping people with disabilities from unfathomable alternatives – like being institutionalized and losing their independence – and preserving all that we have worked for as a nation over the last 60 years to bring people with disabilities out of the shadows and into society,” said Berns.

Berns was joined at the White House by Sister Simone Campbell, NETWORK, Chad Griffin, Human Rights Campaign, Wade Henderson, Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, Deepa Iyer, National Council of Asian Pacific Americans, Ben Jealous, NAACP, Marc Morial, National Urban League, Janet Murguia, National Council of La Raza, Barry Rand, AARP, Kristin Rowe-Finkbeiner, MomsRising.org, Rev. Al Sharpton, National Action Network, Aaron Smith, Young Invincibles, and Rev. Jim Wallis, Sojourners.

Please visit The Arc at: http://www.thearc.org/