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Rogers TV United Way Ottawa Community Builder Awards 2013

Video archive of the live television broadcast, provided with permission from Rogers TV, June 7, 2013.

TRANSCRIPT

LiveWorkPlay is the recipient of the United Way Ottawa Community Builder of the Year Award for Belonging To Community!

The Community Builder Award for Belonging to Community recognizes a person or organization that is focused on helping people who want to play a more active role in our community — but who need a bit of help to get there.

This year’s winner is an organization that is working toward their vision of a community where everyone belongs.

By partnering with government, business and community agencies they are not only helping people with intellectual disabilities overcome barriers, but are helping the community understand their role in ending exclusion and giving them the chance to put their skills to work.

How do they do this?

By being a voice for change when it comes to programs and supports for people with disabilities. They welcome a future where we don’t keep people with disabilities on the sidelines, but give them a chance to get in the game — to find a job, to make friends to have what everyone wants – a good life.

Tonight’s recipient works to create opportunities and experiences that ensure that people with disabilities in our community are living life to the fullest by helping them get access to many things that we take for granted […]

Thank you so much for this honour. I want to quickly thank Innovapost, the award sponsor, our nominator Felice Miranda, here with us tonight, as well as two of our long-serving past-presidents, David Kingstone and Wendy Mitchell and of course Vaughn and Jeremy. And a huge thank you to the 250 LiveWorkPlay supporters who are listening in via Skype — volunteers, family members, community partners, the staff team, and of course the 100 or so individuals that trust us to be a part of their lives.

Julie and I started LiveWorkPlay 18 years ago because we had our eyes opened to an injustice in our community and we were driven to do something about it. It is thanks to countless allies from all walks of life, that we are here to accept this wonderful award.

There are many marginalized populations in our community, and people with developmental and intellectual disabilities are among those who are the least included in community life. Sadly, the divide these individuals and their families experience is mostly one that we have created by thinking and practices that often reinforce the separation of people with intellectual disabilities from other citizens.

For example, we have created many specialized disability-only environments — for learning, living, working, and even recreation. These are well-intentioned endeavours intended to solve the problems that occur when people are not experiencing a welcoming community. But we believe the citizens of Ottawa are more than ready to move beyond this way of thinking. We can and will find ways to learn, live, work, and play together.

Our mission at LiveWorkPlay is all about Belonging to Community and we are thrilled to accept an award that so precisely calls attention to the change we are trying to create. So what does this change really mean? What does it look like? How does it happen?

With your help, I think we can explain this in less than a minute. Please welcome Julie to help lead the exercise.
Thank you everyone, and please don’t be shy, I am just looking for a response to three simple requests. Ready, here we go!

Request #1: Please raise a hand if you have ever received help or offered help to a neighbour. If you have ever received help or offered help to a neighbour, please raise a hand, and keep that hand up.

Request #2: Raise a hand if you have ever received help or helped a friend, colleague, or family member to get a job or to get a better job. Please keep that hand up too. If you have both hands up, that’s OK, please keep them up.

Request #3: If you are now out of hands because you’ve already answered yes twice, then please stand up — of if you need to remain seated, raise a glass — if you have ever made a friend by joining a team, club, course, or other community activity.

Please stand and remain standing if you have answered yes to all three of my requests.

Thank you ladies and gentlemen! You have just helped prove that the citizens of Ottawa have all the skills and experience needed to be a welcoming community.
If we collectively extend that welcoming spirit to marginalized citizens, including people with intellectual disabilities, the resulting growth in the diversity of our neighbourhoods and workplaces will make our great city all the more stronger.

In conclusion, we thank United Way Ottawa for this opportunity, and we thank all of you for your support of a city where we share in our similarities, celebrate our differences, and together build and Ottawa community where truly, everyone belongs. Thank you.