1W "Mt: V*W0 7. ^W ' ft.W • - \ 41 Clockwise from lower right: Joyce Keller, visiting JARC clients Clay Barbour, Carol Aufieeser, Jonathan Arens and Gerry Tischler. All the clients live at JARC's Berlin Home in Bloomfield Hills except Aufieeser, who lives in Oak Park. totally set a new pace for the organiza- tion, he adds. Joyce is one of the most capable and effective leaders I've seen in the profit or nonprofit world," says Dan Gilbert, chairman of Rock Financial and Quicken Loans in Livonia and current president of JARC's board. "She has a big heart as well. She's truly in it for the people with disabilities." When asked about her early achieve- ments, Keller says that in her first 10 years, she got virtually every Jewish resi- dent with a developmental disability out of a Michigan state institution. "She got JARC out of the closet and into the community," says Jacobs. Keller sees other important changes fostered at JARC through her years. " "What's changed most is the assumption of ability in people with disabilities rather than their inabilities," she says. "People used to focus on deficits and now we look to capitalize on strengths. That's a big change in the field." Carol Aufseeser, 55, came to JARC in 1982 from a New York home for people with disabilities. "I didn't have as good a situation there as with JARC here," says Aufseeser, who lives in her own- JARC apartment in Oak Park. Her group home in New York was a small place and not run well, she says. "Now I have good friends — and JARC helped me find a job." Keller says JARC provides residential support for people with disabilities in a setting of their choice, from group homes for four to six people staffed 24 hours a day, to apartments where people can live alone and get staff support once or twice a week. Aufseeser used to live in a group home and as she built up her skill level, she chose to move on to more independent living, Keller says. "Everyone has gifts and talents," Keller says. "Our job is to find out what they are. She says that "nudging" the rest of the world to be more open and see these possibilities is JARC's next task. "The people we serve are limited by our view, our vision of what they can do, not by their own limitations." Bob Boesky of Farmington Hills and Naples, Fla., says JARC changed his daughter Julie's life as well as his. He eventually became a board member. Before JARC, Julie was in Evangelical Children's Home, a Lutheran family home in Detroit that served 10-12 individuals in one resi- dence rather than six residents, as in JARC homes. Boesky says he got involved with JARC years ago when his wife died and he was left to care for five children. He remembers the first day he brought Julie to the Oak Park JCC to take a bus with the other children to a JARC picnic, but she wouldn't go. "Now my daughter, at 42, is so happy," Boesky says. "Her language skills have improved and she has a FROM THE HEART on page 74 7M 9/19 2003 71