Current:Home > ScamsHe worried about providing for his family when he went blind. Now he's got a whole new career.-Angel Dreamer Wealth Society D1 Reviews & Insights
He worried about providing for his family when he went blind. Now he's got a whole new career.
View Date:2024-12-24 04:00:54
In 2005, Calvin Echevarria was on top of his game. He had two jobs, bought a house and was raising a 3-year-old daughter with his wife. But suddenly, it felt like it was all being taken away. He could no longer work as a FedEx driver because he was going blind.
He was diagnosed with diabetic retinopathy. "At first, like, 'Heck with the money, heck with the house we just got. I don't care about that. All I care is about my wife and my daughter,'" he told CBS News. "I'm like, 'How am I going to see my daughter grow?'"
Echevarria at first worked on developing independent living skills like walking with a cane. But he wanted to learn more — like skills that would be useful for a job. That's when he found Lighthouse Works in Orlando, a company that creates jobs for the visually impaired and blind.
"Seven out of 10 Americans who are visually impaired are not in the workforce," said Kyle Johnson, the president and CEO of Lighthouse Works. "And we knew that people who are blind are the most highly educated disability group on the planet. And so, very capable people, who want to work and contribute. So, we created Lighthouse Works to help them do that."
What began as Lighthouse Central Florida in 1976 has evolved. The organization originally focused on helping the blind and visually impaired learn independent living skills and enter the workforce. But in 2011, they created Lighthouse Works in Orlando, their own company that provides call center and supply chain services and hires people who are blind or visually impaired.
Echevarria says he was the first blind person he ever knew. But at Lighthouse Works, nearly half of the employees are visually impaired or blind, Johnson told CBS News.
Echevarria works in the call center, where Lighthouse Works has contracts with several clients, including the Florida Department of Economic Opportunity; Lighthouse Works employees help callers trying to access unemployment benefits.
Other Lighthouse Works employees work on supply chains, building products for a variety of clients.
In his call center job, Echevarria uses a system called JAWS to "hear" the computer he uses. The system reads the computer screen to Echevarria in one ear as he listens to a customer call in his other ear.
"The voice of the JAWS, for many of our call center agents, is going so fast that people like you and I don't understand what it's saying," Johnson said. "I always say it's faster than the voice at the end of a car commercial."
Echevarria has gotten good at it — really good. He now listens to JAWS on an almost comical speed.
"Since I used to see, it was very hard for me to listen because I was more visual," he said. "So, everything in my learning skills I've had to change from visual to being auditory now. It took a little while, but little by little, if you want something in life you have to reach out and grab it and you have to work on it. So, that's basically what I did."
He said what makes his call center job fun is that the person on the other end of the phone doesn't even know he's blind. And he said working in a fully accessible office space, with other visually impaired people who can relate to him, is an added benefit.
"It gives me a purpose. It makes me feel better because I can actually be proud of myself, saying, 'I provide for my family,'" he said.
His original worry was not being able to be there for his daughter. Now, he's her mentor, because she's an employee at Lighthouse Works as well.
"You know, little kids come to their parents, and all of a sudden when they become teenagers, they go away and they hardly ask you," he said. "Now, we're going back again to those days that my daughter use to come to me all the time. And I still feel needed."
Caitlin O'KaneCaitlin O'Kane is a digital content producer covering trending stories for CBS News and its good news brand, The Uplift.
veryGood! (1841)
Related
- Police capture Tennessee murder suspect accused of faking his own death on scenic highway
- Biden administration proposes rule to ban junk fees: Americans are fed up
- Dominican Republic has partially reopened its border with Haiti. But a diplomatic crisis persists
- 11 high school students arrested over huge brawl in middle of school day
- FSU football fires offensive, defensive coordinators, wide receivers coach
- NASA reveals contents of OSIRIS-REx capsule containing asteroid sample
- Rare birdwing butterflies star in federal case against NY man accused of trafficking insects
- Man who found bag of cash, claimed finders-keepers, pays back town, criminal charge dropped
- What Republicans are saying about Matt Gaetz’s nomination for attorney general
- Carlee Russell, whose story captivated the nation, is due in court over the false reports
Ranking
- Trading wands for whisks, new Harry Potter cooking show brings mess and magic
- Walmart will build a $350M milk plant in south Georgia as the retailer expands dairy supply control
- How Israel's geography, size put it in the center of decades of conflict
- Scientists Disagree About Drivers of September’s Global Temperature Spike, but It Has Most of Them Worried
- California teen pleads guilty in Florida to making hundreds of ‘swatting’ calls across the US
- Scientists Disagree About Drivers of September’s Global Temperature Spike, but It Has Most of Them Worried
- 2023 Fat Bear Week has crowned its winner – a queen that's thicker than a bowl of oatmeal
- Biden administration proposes rule to ban junk fees: Americans are fed up
Recommendation
-
Megan Fox and Machine Gun Kelly are expecting their first child together
-
Mary Lou Retton, U.S. Olympic icon, fighting a 'very rare' form of pneumonia
-
Nashville sues over Tennessee law letting state pick six of 13 on local pro sports facility board
-
Prominent patrol leader in NYC Orthodox Jewish community sentenced to 17 years for raping teenager
-
Michigan soldier’s daughter finally took a long look at his 250 WWII letters
-
AP PHOTOS: Rockets sail and tanks roll in Israeli-Palestinian war’s 5th day
-
'Anointed liquidator': How Florida man's Home Depot theft ring led to $1.4M loss, prosecutors say
-
Gaza is tiny and watched closely by Israel. But rescuing hostages there would be a daunting task