By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Thirty-seven Mississippians are still in their
ag-related occupations through efforts of the Mississippi
AgrAbility Project which prevented a disability from keeping
them from their work. AgrAbility,
a partnership in Mississippi between the Mississippi State
University Extension Service and Easter Seals Mississippi,
offers farmers, ranchers and foresters with disabilities
expertise on agriculture and overcoming the disability. This
expertise ranges from assistive devices to counseling and
business development. AgrAbility, available in Mississippi
since 1997, was established nationally in 1991 and is active
in 18 states. Lamar
Forsyth is a poultry farmer in Hernando who suffers from a
degenerative vision disease that has blurred his sight and
given him tunnel vision and night blindness. His Mississippi
Department of Rehabilitation Services counselor helped him
with home improvements and put him in contact with
AgrAbility. AgrAbility determined what carpentry tools he
needs to maintain his poultry production despite vision
problems. "I raise
chickens and build pens, nests and roost poles," Forsyth
said. "I'm not a carpenter by any means, but what I build
serves my purposes." Through
MDRS, Forsyth is getting a special table for woodwork, a
handsaw and slide rule designed to allow him to measure. He
already had bump dots installed in his house on appliances
such as the stove, washer and dryer to make it easier for
him to do housework while his wife holds a job. With
AgrAbility assistance, he has applied for MDRS funding to
establish his business more effectively. He is also getting
advice from DeSoto County Extension Agent Art Smith on
poultry marketing. Emily
Knight, Extension AgrAbility program assistant, said the
program is a good resource as it brings together
agricultural clients needing help with the people and
agencies providing the help. "Farmers
are used to being independent and getting along on their
own, yet there are many services available that we're trying
to bring them," Knight said. "While AgrAbility doesn't have
money to give clients, we can help find funding sources and
assistance for their ag enterprises." AgrAbility
clients in Mississippi have an average age of 43, and while
most are working-age, they have ranged from 5 to 85 years
old. The Mississippi AgrAbility Project has served clients
with arthritis, amputation, strokes, diabetes, cancer,
cardiac disease and degenerative joint disease, among other
disabilities. Dana
Foster, AgrAbility case manager with Easter Seals
Mississippi, said every AgrAbility client is unique and each
case is different. "The
process of disability adjustment includes things economic,
physical, psychological, mental and spiritual," Foster
said. AgrAbility's
mission is to provide the vocational counseling and
assistance people need to begin or continue agricultural
occupations. "Some
clients are able to continue in their profession with
technological assistance that allows them to perform their
usual tasks," Foster said. "Others restructure their roles
to get the work accomplished, while some no longer work on
farms. "The
Mississippi AgrAbility Project makes its services available
to clients at any point in the adjustment process so they
know all their alternatives and can make appropriate
decisions." Released:
Oct. 25, 1999
Mississippi
Agricultural News:
AgrAbility
Continues To Aid State Farmers
Contact: Emily Knight, (662) 325-1781
Visit: DAFVM
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