Changing jobs, Washington State's blind governor
Peter White talks to Cyrus Habib, elected lieutenant governor of Washington State, who is blind. Changing your job can be harder when you are blind, says listener Nick Adamson.
Cyrus Habib lost his sight when he was eight, and in January this year aged 35 took up an elected position as Lieutenant governor of Washington State in America. He talks to Peter White about walking the fine line between sympathy and empathy when campaigning, and how technology is helping him do his job.
Listener Nick Adamson has been working for the same company in the same role for the last 12 years. He has no immediate plans to change jobs, but says contemplating a career move when you're blind throws up many challenges.
He talks to Dave Williams who has recently changed jobs, about his concerns.
Presenter: Peter White
Producer: Lee Kumutat.
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In Touch Transcript - 4th July 2017
Downloaded from www.bbc.co.uk/radio4
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THE ATTACHED TRANSCRIPT WAS TYPED FROM A RECORDING AND NOT COPIED FROM AN ORIGINAL SCRIPT.Ěý BECAUSE OF THE RISK OF MISHEARING AND THE DIFFICULTY IN SOME CASES OF IDENTIFYING INDIVIDUAL SPEAKERS, THE ĂŰŃż´«Ă˝ CANNOT VOUCH FOR ITS COMPLETE ACCURACY.
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IN TOUCH - Changing jobs, Washington State’s blind governor
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TX:Ěý 04.07.2017Ěý 2040-2100
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PRESENTER:Ěý ĚýĚýĚýĚýĚýĚýĚýĚý PETER WHITE
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PRODUCER:Ěý ĚýĚýĚýĚýĚýĚýĚýĚýĚýĚý LEE KUMUTAT
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White
Good evening. ĚýTonight:Ěý He’s been dubbed one of America’s men to watch. Cyrus Habib is already well launched on a political career and he’ll be explaining how a combination of modern technology and Chutzpah is helping his climb. ĚýAnd by way of contrast, we also hear how in the current UK employment climate for visually-impaired people, staying in your comfort zone can hold back your career.
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Clip
The concept of starting at a new office and learning a new office and learning all the new systems, it’s just a daunting prospect.
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White
More about should I stay or should I go, later in the programme.
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But first, blindness and partial sight needn’t be a bar to political success. ĚýDavid Blunkett is the obvious UK example of course and just a few weeks ago, Marsha De Cordova reflected on this programme on her surprise victory in the General Election, and what effect her visual impairment might have on the way she tackles the job of MP. ĚýWell she could do worse than have a chat with Cyrus Habib. ĚýTotally blind and still only 35, he’s just been appointed as Washington State’s Lieutenant Governor – having already spent more than five years, first in the state House of Representatives, then in its Senate. ĚýHe identified himself as a high-flyer when he became editor of the prestigious Yale Law Journal.Ěý But American politics is a cut-throat business.Ěý Well I’ve been talking to Cyrus Habib about his steady rise and about how he tackles the nitty gritty job of campaigning.
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Habib
In my first race in the state of House of Representatives I personally knocked on over 7,000 doors and my campaign, when you factor in staff and volunteers, did about three times that.Ěý So you know I think that that can be a little bit more challenging.Ěý But I would say, as silly as it sounds, the biggest challenge was just making sure that people actually knew that the reason I was wearing sunglasses was because I’m blind and not just because I was trying to look cool.Ěý And it may sound like it wouldn’t be an issue or a problem but when people are just looking at a photo they don’t really understand – why would you be wearing a suit and tie and then wearing sunglasses.Ěý And so the very delicate balance we had to strike was informing people that I’m blind, both so that they wouldn’t draw the wrong conclusion and also so as to connect my lived experience with the values that I hold.Ěý But then not going so far as to reducing me to a stereotype or a disability or even worse seeking to – looking like we’re pandering or trying to get sympathy.
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White
And you have to get them to believe that you can do the best for them don’t you?
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Habib
Yeah I definitely think you want to convey strength and skill and competence and preparedness and all of those things that voters want to see but at the same time you want to demonstrate that you understand struggle.Ěý That’s not everyone’s political message but it’s really important for me because it’s such a critical part of how I came to my political philosophy and my approach towards the role of government.Ěý And so you’re absolutely right that you want to describe – look I understand whether you’re facing economic hardship or a disability or a racial or ethnic barrier, I understand what it’s like to be excluded or counted out or limited by society and I understand what it’s like to fight to be included again.Ěý And so that’s a story that we definitely wanted to tell while also being very clear that there’s no risk of me not being able to do the job.Ěý And so one of the ways in which we did that was by using this slogan in my TV commercial, which I was a little bit uncertain about at first, which was to say that I went from Braille to Yale.Ěý And to me that phrase captures both dynamics, right, because you’re then saying well when you say Braille people understand that you’ve had to learn to do things differently, that you’ve had to be creative and work hard but when you say Yale, because Yale has a brand in our country and globally of excellence and competence, you’ve kind of also set people’s mind at ease that you’re going to be able to do the job.Ěý And I was a little bit wary of doing that because I – you know I didn’t want to take on all the kind of baggage of elitism that might come with the name Yale.Ěý But I was told by advisors, and I think this was very good advice, that in your case it’s important to do that so people don’t think – oh well, okay he’s blind, I feel sorry for him, good for him that he got over that but we really need someone who can be prepared to step in in the event of an emergency and you know I don’t know that sympathy is the metric we want to use, we need to make sure that someone’s really, really qualified.Ěý So that phrase, I think, really gets at that balance.
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White
It’s an interesting one because I mean it’s all very well to take on these challenges but how hard do you think it will actually be for you to do the job?Ěý I mean you were talking about having to actually preside at the Senate, for example, I think you’ve got some pretty flash equipment there to help you do that, haven’t you?
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Habib
What we have installed are touch screens on every senators’ desk, there are 49 senators, and so when they want to speak rather than simply standing up and saying Mr President to be recognised they now stand up and say Mr President and touch this screen on their desk.Ěý That sends their name up to a computer that I have in front of me, with a Braille display on it, and then all the names of the senators who want to speak are displayed in Braille in real time right in front of me so that I can by touch know who it is who’s requested to speak.
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I always knew while I was campaigning that we would find a way to do it but this was really, really impressive, even to me, someone who has a deep faith in the ability of adaptive technology to level the playing field, this was really, really exciting for me and it showed me that when we combine hard work and creativity, and particularly when we put our money where our mouth is and provide resources, we can achieve nearly anything, as people with disabilities, that anyone else can and our society can make nearly anything possible.Ěý What I often do is when I describe that I say look now imagine a world in which every kid in every classroom were given the type of personalised attention and care to accommodate their abilities and disabilities as I was given as Lieutenant Governor, you would see people truly living up to their full potential.
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White
There is another debate that goes on in both our countries which is about the extent to which special provision ought to be made, and that’s certainly true in the area of visual impairment.Ěý I know – and one of the things you did is you led the fight, I think, to try to make US money accessible to blind people because American notes are the same size, which is one of the most obvious ways to make them different.Ěý That’s still the case, isn’t it, it’s not a battle that’s been completely won?
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Habib
Well it has in the sense that we just last year it was announced that the next bill that comes out will be tactile and distinguishable, so they should be from now on.Ěý With the economic challenges that we were having there weren’t new bills authorised until just recently.
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White
But there was some fight, I believe, on the part of some blind people saying we don’t need to be babied in this way, that we can actually cope with it.
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Habib
Yeah but I think that actually had more to do, honestly, with in-fighting among different blind advocacy organisations.Ěý This was not the first time that this had happened that one organisation takes on a particular battle and then the other one will say no, no that’s not really an issue.Ěý My intervention on that particular topic was to talk about and ultimately make a legal argument around the obstacles faced by blind workers.Ěý It’s not just a question of convenience for the blind customer who needs to be able to distinguish a five dollar bill from a 10 dollar bill but think about the challenge to somebody who’s trying to work at an entry level job which often requires the ability to denominate one bill from another.Ěý That then becomes virtually impossible because you have to ask others for help or now there’s software for smartphones that can do it but it’s not practical from an employment perspective.Ěý And so I think that that organisation that took the position you’re describing was being short sighted, for lack of a better term.
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White
Cyrus Habib.Ěý And you’ll be able to hear a longer version of that interview later this year as part of Radio 4’s No Triumph, No Tragedy series.
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And we stay with employment.Ěý Mike Kelly’s at the other end of his career – he generated a big response from you a couple of weeks ago when he owned up to his fears about retirement. He wanted to broaden his horizons when he left work but he wondered if he had the skills and the confidence to try out new things.
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Kelly
In a way I feel that I am going to be starting all over again, having to learn new skills, new ways of doing things.Ěý I do have some things lined up to do.Ěý For instance Wendy, my wife, and I are National Trust members and I’d like to maybe do some work there, perhaps maybe even become a room advisor if that’s possible.Ěý I’d like to learn to cook, if that’s feasible, do the gardening, take up archery.Ěý There’s lots there, you know, it’s an open page really, it’s just knowing what’s possible and what’s not.
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White
Well many of you were keen to help. ĚýDuncan Bell, for example, he’s got some good news on becoming a room guide with the National Trust. ĚýHe says: “I submitted my application to be a room guide at the end of March. ĚýHad an interview in mid-May, and am now reading and learning the facts from the house guidebook prior to starting.”Ěý He says:Ěý “The only rooms I can’t really work in are those that contain small but valuable items which people might be tempted to walk off with.”
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And Glenys Hill, who’s a member of her local University of the 3rd Age spoke for many listeners who suggested Mike did the same thing. She says:
“There’s a book group, Tai chi, cake and bake, bridge, military history, classical music, science and technology – as well as monthly lunches at local pubs. We have members who are partially sighted and I don’t anticipate there being any issues for Mike.”
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Well Mike Kelly’s story also chimed with listener Nick Adamson but for a different reason. Nick is only 35, not thinking about retirement yet, but for him, changing jobs throws up a similar set of challenges to Mike. ĚýRegular contributor Dave Williams found himself in a similar position a couple of years ago, so we brought them together.
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Dave.
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Williams
As a father and husband with a mortgage, I take my responsibilities seriously. Yet, a few years ago I began to think the unthinkable. ĚýWhat if I were to leave the security of my steady nine to five job and strike out on my own? ĚýOr, given the challenges facing blind people seeking employment, should I stay put? ĚýI went for it and I don’t regret it.
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Nick Adamson has been a senior software engineer working in the same company for 12 years. ĚýSuch a long stint on the same job is unusual in his industry but Nick says he’s happy in his comfort zone and isn’t considering leaving. Well not yet.
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Nick is concerned that if he were to move jobs, it would be much more difficult for him as a blind person.
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Adamson
Particularly younger programmers, they move on quite quickly, in fact a lot do something called contracting, which is where you’ll go and do a contract for six months, a year, a year and a half, and then you’ll move on and it’s a great way of getting experience, it’s quite a good way of getting some financial backing behind you because contractors earn quite a bit.Ěý And then once they settle down then quite a lot of them go to permanent roles at that point.Ěý
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The reason I’ve been there is a. because I love the work, what we do is challenging, the work is quite interesting, the people that I work with are interesting, the products that we produce are fascinating, so there’s a huge element of that to it.Ěý But there are days where I think – oh, that was a rough day.Ěý And there are times where I think I’m on LinkedIn and I’m forever getting emails from recruiters going – would you like this job – and I’m going, no I think I’m happy where I am, I’m very comfortable and it’s very much a comfort zone.Ěý The concept of starting at a new office and learning a new office and learning all the new systems – the various intranets and how you put your timecard in and the training systems and new procedures and all that sort of stuff – it’s just a daunting prospect that just I think well I’m comfortable and I’m really happy where I am, why would I put myself through that.Ěý But a lot of that is because the additional things about learning the systems and learning the office is made so much more complicated by the fact of my visual impairment.
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Williams
Why are you on LinkedIn?
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Adamson
Why am I on LinkedIn?Ěý Because it’s a really good way of networking, it’s a really good way of finding out what your colleagues that you used to work with are up to and should the worst happen and that I have to go and find a new job then it’s probably quite a good way of doing it.Ěý There’s quite a pool of jobs that I would be able to apply for, given my current skillset and given the level of experience that I’ve got.Ěý So the bits of getting the new job that I would be concerned about is a. once I get to the interview is making sure that I impress and I kind of hope the attitude that I bring and the experience that I can show would hopefully speak for itself in that sense.Ěý But then it’s the proving to my colleagues, I’ve been where I am for a number of years, I’ve worked with some of the same guys for quite a long time, they’ve worked with me, they know that despite my dodgy eyes that I’m still a pretty good programmer, I can still pull together screens and visual elements, okay they may not be the most beautiful things in the world but they’re certainly functional and they know that I can be just – off you go, here’s this great lump of work, we’ll see you in three months, get it done – they know that that’s something that they can leave with me and I can just get on with it.Ěý I would have to prove that to a whole new team and it’s not just one or two new starters, as it is now every so often that I’d have to prove that I’m just as good as a sighted guy.Ěý And maybe that’s more in my head than it is real but I think it probably is an element of truth that I would have to prove myself to a whole team and that I would have to go through the conversations that if someone’s saying – oh well we can’t give that bit to Nick because he can’t see to do it – or – we’ll have to stick Nick on just doing the bits that work with sound or whatever, whatever it is the thing we’re doing, because that’s the bit he would be good at.Ěý And I’d have to prove myself and that is quite a daunting prospect.
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Williams
Do you feel a bit like some of your colleagues have moved on to bigger and better things and you think maybe you should have made a move at some point?
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Adamson
Absolutely, there’s guys that I’ve seen that are now, you know, principal engineers, that started roughly the same time I did.Ěý There was a girl that I was at uni with, she goes to a number of different places doing conference talks and stuff and it’s all because of the fact that they’ve moved on and they’ve done stuff and they’ve got more experiences, they’ve worked in different environments.Ěý I’ve only ever worked in one industry, I’ve only ever worked in one environment and that I am conscious of and that possibly makes me less desirable as a candidate if I were to go and get a new job.Ěý On the other side of that, I’m clearly someone that will stick at a job, that will stay there for quite a long time and will stick to it.
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Williams
Do you worry that your CV isn’t sufficiently varied?
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Adamson
Oh yeah, yeah, hugely.Ěý Programming and technology moves on at such a pace that the skills that I graduated with uni, the skills that got me the job I would now say I’m pretty good at, I know the languages that I use very well but I don’t know some of the really modern languages.Ěý And maybe that’s something I need to do more in more spare time and I need to maybe get up to speed with them but if I’m not using it at work what’s my impetus to go and learn those languages, to learn that new technology?
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Williams
Do you think there are other blind people perhaps in that situation where they need to move on but it’s actually their blindness that is inhibiting them from changing jobs?
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Adamson
Absolutely.Ěý It would take more of the hardworking environment, more of rubbish jobs and bad day after bad day after bad day before a blind person would have to quit because you hear the statistics of how many people who are visually-impaired and blind that are out of work and how hard it is to get a job and if you mention on your CV that you’re blind forget any chance of getting an interview and all that sort of stuff.Ěý And you just think – it’s just so hard, the job market is so hard for someone who is visually-impaired and I’m very aware of how lucky I am that I have a job that I enjoy and that it’s something that I can go to work and I’m happy to do.Ěý And I’m very aware of how lucky I am and I do appreciate very much what I have.
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Williams
Would you be prepared to move for a job?
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Adamson
Yes, a change in job would almost certainly include a move of house and a changing of location for the family but that isn’t that unusual.
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Williams
But it is harder to move as a blind person, learning new routes in a new area, establishing new support networks and that sort of thing in a new area.
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Adamson
All those considerations would be something that you’d have to think about.
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White
Nick Adamson and Dave Williams. Ěý
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Responses from you are always welcome of course and you might like to pick up on another point made in that discussion – the challenges – let’s just put it that way – for visually-impaired people of moving house.Ěý We want your nightmare stories of course but we’d also like bright ideas of making it less daunting.Ěý You can call our Actionline on 0800 044 044 for 24 hours after the broadcast or email intouch@bbc.co.uk.Ěý
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From me Peter White, producer Lee Kumutat, and the team, goodbye.
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- Tue 4 Jul 2017 20:40ĂŰŃż´«Ă˝ Radio 4
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In Touch
News, views and information for people who are blind or partially sighted