Noozhawk.com Santa Barbara & Goleta Local News

Special Olympics, Partners to ‘Spread the Word to End the Word’

http://www.noozhawk.com/noozhawk/article/030210_special_olympics_partners_to_spread_the_word_to_end_the_word/

By Sara Spataro

Special Olympics athlete Nanette Clark, left, athlete Jessica Simon, Ernesto Paredes of Easy Lift, Kim Olson of the Alpha Resource Center and Sara Spataro of Special Olympics Santa Barbara are part of the local Spread the Word to End the Word campaign to raise awareness about the hurtful effects of the word retard(ed)
Special Olympics athlete Nanette Clark, left, athlete Jessica Simon, Ernesto Paredes of Easy Lift, Kim Olson of the Alpha Resource Center and Sara Spataro of Special Olympics Santa Barbara are part of the local “Spread the Word to End the Word” campaign to raise awareness about the hurtful effects of the word “retard(ed).” (Nicole Leong photo)

Easy Lift and the Alpha Resource Center will participate in Wednesday's awareness campaign

Wednesday will mark the second annual “Spread the Word to End the Word” day of community awareness, a campaign created by youth worldwide in an ongoing effort to engage schools, organizations and the community by raising the consciousness of society about the dehumanizing and hurtful effects of the word “retard(ed)” and encouraging everyone to stop using the R-word.

Special Olympics Santa Barbara Regional Director Sara Spataro has teamed up with Ernesto Paredes, Easy Lift executive director and Special Olympics Leadership Council chairman; Kim Olson, executive director of the Alpha Resource Center; and Special Olympics athletes Jessica Simon and Nanette Clark to bring attention to the positive impact that serving people with intellectual disabilities has on the community.

“As an agency serving those with disabilities, Easy Lift is proud to be part of this campaign and helping bring attention to individuals that can’t readily advocate on their own behalf. In this vein, I believe that respecting our differences is vital and being sensitive to the words we use would be a major step in the right direction,” Paredes said.

Spataro encourages the community at large to become aware of the many gifts Special Olympics athletes have to share. “By making a pledge today, you can change attitudes and make our community a more accepting place for all people,” she said.
 
Olson added, “We received over 50 essays and poems from students in elementary, middle and high schools on the theme of ‘treating everyone with dignity and respect.’ I was inspired by these students and the depth of their understanding of the power of words. We hope the ‘R-word’ is replaced by respect.”

Best Buddies and CODE (UCSB Commmision on Disabilitiy Equality) on Wednesday will activate a student R-word pledge drive in front of the UCSB Associated Students Building on campus. UCSB students and schools across the United States and around the world continue to unite in their challenge for everyone to think before they speak.

Click here for more information about ending the R-word. To volunteer with local nonprofits serving people with intellectual disabilities, contact Spataro at .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address), Melinda Johansson of Easy Lift at .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) or Marisa Bourke of the Alpha Resource Center at .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address).

— Sara Spataro is regional director of Special Olympics Santa Barbara.

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