Cape Abilities Teams Up Again with WHOI

TOM KLEINDINST/WOODS HOLE OCEANOGRAPHIC INSTITUTION WHOI first teamed up with Cape Abilities in 2009 on a project to build parts for deep-sea instruments used to measure naturally occurring electric and magnetic fields on the seafloor. Shown here are project manager Trevor Harrison and Carol Hudon working on the assembly of a silver chloride electrode in a laboratory. The electrodes were completed and deployed in 2013.

TOM KLEINDINST/WOODS HOLE OCEANOGRAPHIC INSTITUTION
WHOI first teamed up with Cape Abilities in 2009 on a project to build parts for deep-sea instruments used to measure naturally occurring electric and magnetic fields on the seafloor. Shown here are project manager Trevor Harrison and Carol Hudon working on the assembly of a silver chloride electrode in a laboratory. The electrodes were completed and deployed in 2013.

WOODS HOLE – The Peter and Elizabeth C. Tower Foundation has awarded the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution a $150,000 grant that will help fund a three-year collaborative project with Cape Abilities, a nonprofit organization dedicated to finding jobs for Cape Cod residents with disabilities.

The grant will support a project manager who will act as a liaison and provide training to individuals from Cape Abilities for a variety of production-based, ocean science and technology projects.

“This will provide a resource for scientists to have high quality products created, while also demonstrating that people with disabilities can be part of complex work,” said Rob Evans, a senior scientist in the Geology and Geophysics Department who will lead the effort at WHOI.

Evans first teamed up with Cape Abilities in 2009 on a project to build electrodes for deep-sea instruments used to measure naturally occurring electric and magnetic fields on the seafloor.

The instruments were needed for research at a subduction zone, where the plunging of one of Earth’s tectonic plates beneath another can trigger earthquakes and tsunamis.

The electrodes were completed and deployed in 2013.

“The individuals from Cape Abilities did a great job and the quality of the products that were produced were high,” said Evans.

Originally funded by a National Science Foundation grant, the pilot program paved the way for more partnerships between WHOI and Cape Abilities.

Workers have produced sediment traps for a study on wind erosion, built battery packs for a variety of oceanographic instruments, and helped prepare dried sediment for chemical analysis as part of a project studying ancient hurricanes, according to WHOI.

“Employment at WHOI provides unique opportunities for Cape Abilities participants to take part in research projects conducted by the world’s leading oceanographic institution, creating pride and a truly gratifying experience,” stated Tom Zurn, Associate Director, Cape Abilities.

While the NSF funding for the program ran out last June, the Tower Foundation grant will enable the project manager to work with a Cape Abilities job coach to coordinate two or more collaborative projects at WHOI each year.

The exact projects are still to be determined, but Evans says that at least one would involve building more electrodes for his lab.

“We’ve already got a working model in place, and we’re looking forward to continuing the collaboration with Cape Abilities thanks to this new funding from the Tower Foundation,” said Evans.

“It’s been a win-win situation in the past,” he added.

“From the feedback that we have received from Cape Abilities and parents of past participants is that it gives them a great deal of confidence. They’re coming into a work environment in the lab. When they go on to find more permanent employment, they take that confidence with them.”

The Tower Foundation, which is based in Getzville, NY, supports community projects that help children, adolescents, and young adults affected by substance abuse, learning disabilities, mental illness, and intellectual disabilities achieve their full potential.

“Supporting pathways for individuals with intellectual disabilities to find meaningful work is very important to the Tower Foundation,” said Tower Foundation Executive Director Tracy Sawicki. “We are very excited about the collaboration between Woods Hole and Cape Abilities to make this happen.”

 



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