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American Foundation for the Blind
American Foundation for the Blind
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The American Foundation for the Blind (AFB) is an American non-profit organization, specifically a 501(c)(3),[1] for people with vision loss. AFB's objectives include conducting research to advance change, promoting knowledge and understanding, and shaping policies and practices.

Key Information

AFB is especially known for its development of the Talking Book in the 1930s,[2] and for having studios for recording these books in various audio technologies.[3] The M.C. Migel Memorial Library, in existence since the 1920s,[4] hosted one of the leading print collections of non-medical research regarding blindness and visual impairment.[5] Throughout its history, AFB has put out a scholarly journal, at first called Outlook for the Blind, then The New Outlook for the Blind, and subsequently, the Journal of Visual Impairment & Blindness.[6] Over the years, AFB has engaged in partnerships with the American Printing House for the Blind that have included transferring some of its programs to them,[7] such as the Migel Library in 2009.[5]

Eric Bridges, formerly the Executive Director of the American Council of the Blind, has been AFB's president and CEO since April 12, 2023.[8] For most of its history, AFB was based in New York City. Since 2017, AFB's main headquarters have been in Arlington, Virginia.

History

[edit]
AFB bookplate, 1921

AFB, with the support and leadership of M.C. Migel, a philanthropist who was moved to help the large number of veterans blinded in World War I, was formed in 1921 to provide both a national clearing house for information about vision loss and a forum for discussion for blindness service professionals. Its founding, made official at the convention of the American Association of Workers for the Blind in Vinton, Iowa, was also intended to spur research and represent the needs of people with vision loss in the US government.[9] It filed as a tax-exempt organization in 1922.[1] Its role as a national clearinghouse for information began in 1923.[10]

Robert B. Irwin, Director of the Bureau of Research of the American Foundation for the Blind, early 1920s; later he was the executive director of AFB

AFB's early accomplishments included taking the lead to standardize English Braille code and establishing the first professional publications program for teachers and administrators of programs for people with vision loss. In 1926, AFB's Directory of Services for Blind and Visually Impaired Persons was first published, compiled by social worker Lotta S. Rand.[9][11] The directory continued to be used for decades afterward as resource for both professionals and for the blind and their families to locate services in their geographical areas.[12]

In its early years, the foundation had its headquarters on East 46th Street in Manhattan.[13][10] AFB hosted the World Conference for the Blind in New York City in 1931.[10]

In 1932, AFB engineers developed the Talking Book and Talking Book Machine[14] and set up studios for recording these books, marking the advent of the modern audiobook. AFB played a major role in persuading the federal government to include talking books in the National Library System for blind people operated by the Library of Congress. The development by AFB of the Talking Book made a large-scale difference in how services could be extended to blind patrons.[2] The foundation engaged in fundraising campaigns to support thousands of talking book machines being distributed around the country.[10] In 1936, AFB set up arrangements for two additional organizations to produce Talking Books, the American Printing House for the Blind (APH) and the British National Institute for the Blind.[15] APH made extensive changes to its production facilities for this purpose.[2] Within the United States, the Library of Congress gave lists of titles needing recording and AFB and APH split the lists between them.[7]

From the 1930s through the 1990s, the American Foundation for the Blind had its headquarters at this building, 15 West 16th Street, in Manhattan in New York City

In 1934, the foundation built a new headquarters at 15 West 16th Street in Manhattan, between Fifth Avenue and Sixth Avenue,[10] in what would become known as the Ladies' Mile Historic District.[16] It was a three story, Georgian Colonial style structure.[10] Over time, a grouping of four buildings, surrounding a courtyard, became occupied by the American Foundation for the Blind.[17] They consisted of two Georgian Colonial buildings on West 16th Street as well as another building and a taller loft on West 17th Street.[18]

The information and public education department at AFB conducted tours of the facility and the recording studios for visiting professionals and student groups. This was a practice that has also been done at the similar facilities of APH.[19]

AFB's advocacy efforts have led to the passage of significant legislation for people with vision loss. AFB was instrumental in creating and passing the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA) and more recently worked on the renewal of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) to ensure that it contained provisions to meet the specific needs of children with vision loss.

AFB exhibit booth at an American Libraries Association event in San Francisco, 1958

By the 1980s, the cassette tape was the most common format for audio books, and they could be borrowed for no charge from the Library of Congress.[3] With eight recording studios featuring actors and actresses reading text, the American Foundation for the Blind was the largest producer of such cassette tapes for the Library of Congress and the format had become more popular than Braille for use by the vision impaired.[3]

For many years, AFB designed, manufactured and sold products that were made specifically for people with vision loss, such as braille writers, magnifiers, and audio blood pressure monitors. AFB also works with technology manufacturers at the design stage to develop products that can be used by everyone, sighted or visually impaired. Especially since the advent of digital technology, AFB believes that working to establish universal design practices among technology producers is the most promising and cost-effective option for making all products accessible in the long term.

AFB is the organization to which Helen Keller devoted her life. She worked for AFB for more than 40 years and was instrumental in the foundation of the Talking Books Program, among many others. She remained with AFB until her death, in 1968. Under the terms of her will, she selected AFB as the repository of her papers and memorabilia, which AFB maintains in the Helen Keller Archive.[20]

AFB had its headquarters at 11 Penn Plaza starting in 1997, and stayed in Penn Plaza until 2017

During the mid-1990s, the foundation decided to leave its West 16th Street location, but wanted to stay in New York City because of the talent pool there for the production and recording of the talking books it made and because of New York's status as a world city.[21] As a result, it leased space in Penn Plaza in midtown Manhattan[21] moving to 11 Penn Plaza in 1997.[22] (AFB sold its 16th and 17th Street buildings to the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research,[18] and the complex there became part of the combined Center for Jewish History.[17][16])

To cut costs during the 2008 financial crisis, AFB implemented staffing reductions and moved to smaller offices at 2 Penn Plaza.[4][23]

Louis Braille was the Frenchman who invented the raised dot code that bears his name. On January 4, 2009, the 200th anniversary of his birth, AFB created an online gallery that includes pictures of him and digitized books and articles.

In 2017, the foundation moved its headquarters from New York to the Washington metropolitan area,[24] specifically Arlington, Virginia.[25] AFB had had a government relations office in Washington since the late 1940s.[24]

M.C. Migel Memorial Library

[edit]
Some AFB documents from the late 1970s, showing the logo in use at the time

The origins of a research library at the American Foundation for the Blind date to 1926, and by 1928 there were 800 volumes.[4] The building of the new AFB quarters on 16th Street in 1934 contained space for a library, which by then contained some 6,000 volumes.[10]

This is a special library.[26] In particular, it is a print collection on blindness and visual impairment and was not intended as a repository of Braille works.[27] In 1963, the library was renovated and named after M.C. Migel, the philanthropist who had helped form the foundation; at that point it had 25,000 volumes.[4]

The library has one of the leading collections of non-medical research regarding blindness and visual impairment.[5] The volumes in the library cover topics such as rehabilitation, orientation and mobility, education, employment, and aging.[5] There are also fictional titles and children's books related to blindness and visual impairment as well as a periodicals collection going back to the 1920s.[28] The library also has materials on the life of Helen Keller.[5]

By the early 1970s, the library had 30,000 volumes and several librarians on staff to manage it.[4] By the 1970s it had some 35,000 volumes. New acquisitions by the library were regularly listed and described in a column in the New Outlook for the Blind and Journal of Visual Impairment & Blindness journals.[29]

The library's physical space was renovated during the early 1980s and a considerable amount of computer technology was introduced at that time.[27] With 37,000 volumes in the collection, the name was expanded to the M.C. Migel Memorial Library & Information Center.[27] By the end of the decades of the 2000s, the library had some 40,000 volumes.[28]

In 2009 it was announced that the operation of the Migel Library would be transferred from AFB to the American Printing House for the Blind, and physically from New York to Louisville, Kentucky.[5][28] With its name changed slightly to the M.C. Migel Memorial Collection, it remains there.[30] (The M.C. Migel Memorial Rare Book Collection was not part of this transfer, but instead was kept at AFB until its sale to the Library of Congress in 2021.[31])

Journal of Visual Impairment & Blindness and its predecessors

[edit]

In 1923, the foundation took over publication of the journal Outlook for the Blind, which had been in operation since 1907.[6] The journal absorbed another publication in 1942, The Teachers Forum for Instructors of Blind Children, and became known as Outlook for the Blind and The Teachers Forum.[32] In 1951, the title of this journal changed to The New Outlook for the Blind.[33]

It then was renamed to the Journal of Visual Impairment & Blindness in 1977,[6] and continues to be published under that name, in association with the American Foundation for the Blind.[34]

Blind Leaders Development Program

[edit]
As of 2017, AFB headquarters are located in Shirlington Tower in Arlington, Virginia, near the distant center of this scene

AFB launched the Blind Leaders Development Program in 2019 with the purpose of increasing upward mobility and creating meaningful leadership experiences for individuals who are blind or low vision, who are already employed and in the beginning stages of their careers. Every year, AFB selects a class of blind or visually impaired individuals: 50% emerging leaders as fellows and 50% established leaders to act as their mentors. [1]

Partnership with the American Printing House for the Blind

[edit]

The American Foundation for the Blind has a long history of cooperative arrangements with the American Printing House for the Blind (APH), which was founded in the mid-19th century and is based in Louisville, Kentucky.[7] In the 1930s, they collaborated on technical issues regarding the creation of Talking Books, and in the 1940s during the shortages experienced in the United States home front during World War II, they teamed up to find supplies of Vinylite and other necessary raw materials.[7]

Cooperative arrangements continued with the transfer of the M. C. Migel Memorial Library from AFB to APH in 2009.[4]

In 2018, AFB partnered with the American Printing House for the Blind (APH) to transition several AFB programs to continue under APH’s stewardship, including AFB Press, VisionAware, FamilyConnect, CareerConnect, and BrailleBug. With these programs under APH’s oversight, AFB said it would take its own work "to a new level by investing in policy and programs focused on creating stronger social systems, and ultimately a more inclusive, accessible society for people with vision loss."[35]

Helen Keller Archive

[edit]

In 2018, AFB launched the Helen Keller Archive, the first fully accessible digital archive collection, comprising more than 160,000 artifacts, dedicated to the life and works of Helen Keller. It is the largest repository of historical content about Helen Keller, whose iconic name is known in every corner of the globe for her groundbreaking work as an author, political activist, and humanitarian who played a critical role in changing public perceptions about people with disabilities.

VisionAware

[edit]

In 2012, AFB added VisionAware to its family of sites in partnership with the Reader's Digest Partners for Sight Foundation. The site folded in content from AFB's Senior Site, with new information and resources for adults of all ages with vision loss.

VisionAware's stated goal is to help adults and their family members to cope with age-related eye diseases, a growing public health problem in the United States. According to research on vision problems in Americans over 40, rates of vision loss from diseases like age-related macular degeneration, glaucoma and diabetic retinopathy are expected to double by 2030, as America's 78 million baby boomers reach retirement age.[36]

In 2018, VisionAware was transferred to the American Printing House for the Blind as part of the AFB-APH partnership.

FamilyConnect

[edit]

In spring 2008, AFB and the National Association for Parents of Children with Visual Impairments (NAPVI) launched FamilyConnect, an online community for caregivers of children with visual impairments.[37] NAPVI is an affiliate of Lighthouse Guild. In 2018, VisionAware was transitioned to the American Printing House for the Blind as part of the AFB-APH partnership.

Chief executives

[edit]

The highest-ranking official at the American Foundation for the Blind has been variously referred to as the executive director, president, or chief executive officer.

  1. Robert B. Irwin, executive director, 1929–1949[38]
  2. M. Robert Barnett, executive director, 1949–1974[39][40]
  3. Loyal Eugene Apple, executive director, 1974–1980[40][41]
  4. William F. Gallagher, executive director and later president, 1980–1990[42]
  5. Carl R. Augusto, president and CEO, 1991–2016[43]
  6. Kirk Adams, president and CEO, 2016–2022[44][45]
  7. Eric Bridges, president and CEO, 2023–present[8]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The American Foundation for the Blind (AFB) is a non-profit organization founded in 1921 by philanthropist M. C. Migel to provide support for veterans blinded in and to coordinate services and advocacy for people with vision loss nationwide. AFB's mission centers on removing systemic barriers to equality and expanding opportunities for individuals who are blind or have low vision through targeted policy advocacy, on , and development of practical tools like standardized information resources. Among its defining achievements, AFB led the standardization of the code in the early 1920s, enabling consistent literacy access, and initiated the Talking Books program in the 1930s, which recorded literature for audio playback and later integrated into the national library system to serve millions. The organization also produced the first Directory of Services for Blind and Visually Impaired Persons in 1926—a comprehensive resource updated through multiple editions—and exerted significant influence on federal policy, including contributions to the design and passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, which mandated broader accommodations for disabilities. Helen Keller, who affiliated with AFB in 1924 and remained involved until her death in 1968, amplified its visibility through global advocacy and fundraising, while the foundation established specialized archives and a research press to document and advance evidence-based practices in vision rehabilitation.

Founding and Historical Development

Origins and Establishment (1921–1930s)

The American Foundation for the Blind (AFB) was established in 1921 by educators and rehabilitation professionals responding to the fragmented landscape of services for blind individuals, particularly the influx of soldiers blinded during , which highlighted the need for coordinated national advocacy, research, and resource distribution across disjointed state and local efforts. The organization's formal founding occurred during the biennial convention of the American Association of Workers for the Blind (AAWB) in , where leaders, including figures like Dr. H. Randolph Latimer, emphasized centralizing information exchange and support to address inefficiencies in blindness rehabilitation. This initiative built on earlier groups such as the American Association of Instructors for the Blind (AAIB), founded in 1871, which had focused on cohesive but lacked broader national scope. Helen Keller, the renowned deafblind author and activist, emerged as a key early supporter and fundraiser for AFB starting in 1924, leveraging her public prominence to elevate the organization's national visibility and secure resources for blindness initiatives. Over the subsequent decades, Keller collaborated closely with AFB leadership, using her advocacy platform to promote unified efforts in , , and for the blind, thereby helping to legitimize and expand the foundation's influence beyond isolated regional programs. Among AFB's initial accomplishments in the and were efforts to standardize the code, which resolved inconsistencies in transcription practices across institutions to facilitate uniform literacy access for blind readers. In 1932, AFB partnered with the to launch the Talking Books program, producing recorded readings on discs as an alternative to for adults unable to read tactilely, with legislative support extending free mailing privileges by 1934. Additionally, in 1931, AFB convened the first World Conference on Work for the Blind in , gathering delegates from 32 nations and marking the largest assembly of blindness field workers to date, fostering international collaboration on rehabilitation standards.

Expansion and Key Legislative Influences (1940s–1970s)

In the 1940s, the American Foundation for the Blind (AFB) significantly expanded its operations to address the surge in blindness among World War II veterans, investing in research laboratories and distributing over 30,000 assistive devices, including braille watches provided to more than 1,600 veterans by the decade's end. AFB established a dedicated Service for the War-Blinded in 1945 under Kathern F. Gruber, which collaborated with the Veterans Administration (VA) to train 127 regional VA staff through four three-week courses in 1946 and supported the opening of the Hines Rehabilitation Center in 1948 as the first dedicated VA facility for blinded veterans. These efforts, including advocacy that contributed to President Truman's 1947 executive order mandating social rehabilitation training, directly facilitated the VA's program rollout, overcoming initial bureaucratic delays and enabling structured 18-week rehabilitation for initial cohorts of nine veterans at Hines. Concurrently, AFB's involvement in legislative efforts for blind employment bolstered the implementation of the 1938 Wagner-O'Day Act, which mandated federal procurement of products from blind-operated workshops, thereby creating sustained job opportunities amid postwar economic recovery. AFB's infrastructural growth in this era included facility expansions, such as acquiring properties in 1942 and constructing a four-story building for affiliated industries by 1947, which supported broader service delivery. The M.C. Migel Memorial Library, named in honor of longtime AFB leader M.C. Migel following his 1945 death, evolved into a central repository for blindness-related research materials, with rededication in new quarters around 1963 enhancing its role as a professional hub for field-wide resources and data dissemination. By the 1950s, AFB addressed emerging challenges like retrolental fibroplasia-induced infant blindness through a new welfare department in 1951, while pioneering devices such as the Tellatouch for deaf-blind communication in 1952 advanced rehabilitation standardization. Into the 1960s and 1970s, AFB solidified its policy influence by establishing a Washington, D.C., government relations office in 1948 to lobby federal agencies and launching the National Accreditation Council in 1966 to enforce uniform standards in blindness education and services. The foundation's advocacy for expanded access to recorded media culminated in transitions to cassette-based Talking Books by 1970, building on prior production for the National Library Service and improving dissemination for blind users. AFB played a pivotal role in the passage of the 1975 Education for All Handicapped Children Act (precursor to IDEA), promoting mainstreaming of blind children into public schools and influencing federal funding for . These initiatives, alongside into blinded veterans' needs in 1973 and partnerships like the 1977 collaboration for employment practices, underscored AFB's causal impact on legislative frameworks prioritizing rehabilitation and integration.

Modern Evolution and Centennial Milestones (1980s–Present)

In the 1980s, the American Foundation for the Blind (AFB) expanded its focus on technological adaptation by establishing the National Technology Center in in 1986 to research and evaluate assistive devices for individuals with vision loss. This initiative marked a shift toward addressing emerging assistive technologies amid broader societal changes, including the growing integration of computers and electronics into daily life. Concurrently, AFB supported the formation of the National Association of Parents of the Visually Impaired in 1980, reflecting an evolution from direct service provision to fostering networks that enhanced family support and . The 1990s saw AFB play a pivotal role in policy advocacy, contributing to the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) in 1990, which established civil rights protections for access to public accommodations and employment for people with disabilities, including those with vision loss. In response to demographic shifts, particularly the increasing prevalence of vision loss among aging populations, AFB led efforts to secure $15 million in federal funding in 1999 for Services for Older Individuals Who Are Blind, prioritizing rehabilitation and independence for this growing cohort. Technologically, AFB launched its fully accessible website, afb.org, in 1996, setting early standards for . Entering the 2000s, AFB further emphasized research and standardization by opening AFB TECH in , in 2002 to evaluate and promote accessible mainstream technologies, and by launching AccessWorld magazine in 2000 to review assistive tools. continued with leadership in establishing the National Instructional Materials Access Center (NIMAC) in 2004, ensuring timely provision of accessible educational materials, and the Communications and Video Accessibility Act in 2010, which mandated accessibility in advanced and video programming. These efforts underscored AFB's transition to a national nonprofit emphasizing equality of access through policy influence and technological standards. Partnerships formalized in the late , such as with the American Printing House for the Blind (APH) in 2018–2019, expanded archival resources and collaborative preservation, building on AFB's research role to address historical and ongoing needs in blindness services. The organization's centennial milestone, AFB100, celebrated in 2021 with events like the "Art of Inclusion" gala in , highlighted 100 years of impact, including sustained policy advocacy for the rights of approximately 25 million Americans experiencing vision loss.

Organizational Framework

Governance, Leadership, and Operations

The (AFB) functions as a 501(c)(3) , governed by a Board of Trustees consisting of 18 members drawn from corporate, technological, and sectors focused on accessibility and vision loss. The board is chaired by Sarah Herrlinger, Director of Global Accessibility Policy and Initiatives at , with Melissa Weisse, President and CEO of Leader Dogs for the Blind, as vice-chair; other officers include Secretary Katie Frederick and Treasurer Jon Chesshire, alongside members such as former Congressman and Senior Corporate Counsel Jamie Dean. Executive leadership centers on President and CEO Eric Bridges, who assumed the role on April 12, 2023, following prior leaders including Kirk Adams; Bridges oversees a team of chief officers, including Stephanie Enyart as Chief Public Policy and Officer, Matthew Janusauskas as Chief Technology and Programs Officer, Pam McGonigle as Chief Development Officer, and Sonya Shiflet as . AFB's headquarters are located in Arlington, , with operational structure organized into specialized teams such as the Executive Office, and , Technology and Workforce Programs, Resource Development, Communications, People and Planning, and Finance and Business Services. These divisions are staffed by experts in blindness, low vision, and related fields, enabling focused efforts in , , and professional support. The organization prioritizes empirical approaches, conducting original and issuing annual reports to inform decisions benefiting populations with vision loss.

Funding Sources and Financial Transparency

The American Foundation for the Blind (AFB) primarily obtains revenue through individual contributions, with the organization stating that the majority of its funding originates from private donors rather than corporate entities. Foundation grants supplement this, including a $150,000 award from the in October 2024 to advance research on digital inclusion for people with vision loss. Earlier support included core funding for AFB's and to develop technology policy recommendations. Corporate grants have also contributed, such as $100,000 from in 2019 to launch leadership development programs. Historically, AFB leveraged prominent advocates for fundraising, notably , who conducted national lecture tours from the 1920s onward, delivering speeches on blindness challenges and raising about $2 million to support organizational initiatives like textbook production and aid for blind adults. Keller's efforts included targeted appeals, such as securing 250 donated radios in a 1929 campaign for visually impaired individuals. This reliance on celebrity-driven philanthropy contrasted with AFB's contemporary model of diversified private funding, which mitigates risks associated with over-dependence on any single stream, including potential federal program fluctuations amid policy shifts. AFB demonstrates fiscal via mandatory IRS disclosures, accessible through repositories like and GuideStar, detailing annual revenues, expenses, and asset management—for instance, filings for fiscal years ending June 2023 and 2022 report program service revenues alongside contributions. assigns AFB a 4/4 star rating, reflecting strong financial health, with scores emphasizing 97% overall performance in accountability, finance, and impact metrics derived from audited statements and data. This evaluation underscores efficient fund allocation, where administrative costs remain below 15% of total expenses, though donor influences from ideologically aligned foundations like Ford—known for progressive priorities—warrant scrutiny for any alignment effects on focus.

Core Programs and Resources

Leadership and Professional Development Initiatives

The American Foundation for the Blind launched the Blind Leaders Development Program in 2019 to equip early-career blind or low-vision professionals with skills for higher-level roles in corporate, government, and nonprofit sectors. The ten-month initiative, funded by a $100,000 grant from , includes mentorship pairings with established blind leaders, curriculum, a two-day in-person , and bi-monthly webinars focused on , , and influence-building. Its core objectives center on boosting employment outcomes, upward mobility, and leadership attainment, with inaugural cohort fellows (15 participants from March 2020 to April 2021) demonstrating 90% completion of modules, 85% satisfactory mentor evaluations, and 90% achievement of personal goals via Leadership Practices Inventory assessments. Program evaluations indicate 90% of fellows and mentors would recommend it, underscoring its role in unlocking potential through accessible training. Complementing direct training, AFB administers the Migel Medal, established in 1937 by founding chairman M.C. Migel as the preeminent recognition for excellence in advancing opportunities for those with vision loss. Awarded annually in two categories—one for blindness-field professionals in areas like rehabilitation, , or , and another for external leaders whose innovations yield national impact—the medal has honored approximately 170 recipients over 87 years, including for advocacy and Senator for legislative support. Selection emphasizes verifiable, dedication-driven achievements that enhance services and quality of life, fostering a benchmark for professional standards and inspiring sustained contributions. AFB further advances field-wide capacity via its annual Leadership Conference, which convenes experts to exchange knowledge on emerging practices, policy, and innovation in blindness services. The event, rooted in AFB's century-long tradition of uniting veterans and newcomers, provides credits—such as nine through ACVREP for select 2025 sessions—and emphasizes collaborative strategies for professional growth. The 2025 conference, themed "Leading Together" and held November 12–14 in Arlington, , targets measurable skill enhancement amid evolving challenges like technological integration.

Public Education and Support Platforms

The American Foundation for the Blind initiated VisionAware as a consumer-oriented online platform in the early to assist adults with low vision in managing daily challenges through targeted resources on rehabilitation techniques, peer networking, and adjustments. Launched in partnership with the Partners for Sight Foundation around 2012, the site delivers customizable guidance, including a "Getting Started Kit" released in 2013 for individuals newly facing vision loss, emphasizing practical tips for home modifications and without claiming broad therapeutic outcomes. In 2018, operational management transferred to the American Printing House for the Blind, though the platform retains its foundational focus on evidence-informed strategies derived from expert consultations rather than large-scale user efficacy studies. Complementing adult-focused efforts, FamilyConnect emerged as a specialized digital hub created by the American Foundation for the Blind in collaboration with the National Association of Parents of Children with Visual Impairments, targeting families raising children who are blind or visually impaired. The platform provides searchable content segmented by child age, developmental milestones, educational interventions, and familial coping mechanisms, including virtual support groups like ParentConnect for exchanges on topics such as literacy and orientation skills. Resources draw from professional inputs on child-specific needs but incorporate user-submitted stories for relatability, with access structured to facilitate targeted navigation rather than generalized assurances of developmental universality. Both platforms prioritize accessible, web-based delivery of actionable information over clinical interventions, reflecting the Foundation's emphasis on through informed self-management for vision loss, though independent evaluations of user engagement metrics remain limited in public datasets.

Archival and Collaborative Preservation Efforts

The American Foundation for the Blind maintains the Archival Collection, recognized as the world's largest repository of materials related to , encompassing over 160,000 items including letters, speeches, press clippings, scrapbooks, photographs, architectural drawings, artifacts, and audio-video recordings spanning her life from 1880 to 1968. This collection documents not only Keller's personal correspondence and advocacy but also broader social and political history through her interactions, with efforts funded by the enabling online accessibility for researchers worldwide since 2018. AFB's archival preservation extends to its own institutional records, capturing over a century of developments in blindness services, technological innovations, and policy influences from the early onward, including materials on early standardization and employment programs for the visually impaired. These holdings serve as primary sources for scholarly analysis of , emphasizing empirical records of challenges faced by individuals with vision loss rather than idealized narratives. In 2019, AFB formalized a partnership with the American Printing House for the Blind (APH), loaning the Archive and AFB's core historical collections to APH's museum in , to centralize resources on blindness history from the 17th to 20th centuries and enhance public and educational access. This collaboration positions Louisville as a hub for U.S. history exhibits, facilitating hands-on and that counters historical misconceptions about blindness through artifact-based education, with collections stewarded by APH for long-term preservation and broader dissemination.

Policy Advocacy, Research, and Achievements

Standardization and Technological Contributions

In 1932, the American Foundation for the Blind (AFB) collaborated with the National Institute for the Blind in to establish Standard English Braille as a code across the , resolving prior inconsistencies from competing systems such as American Braille and that had hindered consistent and material production. This effort culminated in formal adoption by the American and British Uniform Type Committees in 1932, with the American Printing House for the Blind implementing Grade 2 Standard English Braille by 1933, enabling scalable transcription and education. The standardization's long-term effect was to centralize Braille resources, reducing production costs and improving accessibility for readers by standardizing dot configurations for frequent English characters and contractions based on empirical . AFB's involvement extended to ongoing code updates amid debates over unification, including support for (UEB) introduced in the 1990s by the International Council on English Braille and adopted in the U.S. via the Braille Authority of in 2012, with AFB providing transition resources like webinars despite controversies over its integration with specialized codes for and science. Critics argued UEB's contractions could disrupt fluency in technical subjects without Nemeth code retention, yet AFB emphasized its potential for streamlined literary and digital compatibility, prioritizing evidence from international trials over fragmented national variants. AFB pioneered Talking Books in 1932–1934, innovating 33⅓ rpm long-playing records and developing spring-driven ($20) and electric ($30) playback machines through engineer J.O. Kleber to address durability and affordability barriers. Initial distribution reached 10,000 machines by 1937 and 20,000 by 1940 via the , with production scaling through partnerships to produce 23,000 units by 1942, outpacing book output and enabling broader literature access for non-Braille readers. This technology's causal impact lay in empirically verified uptake, as post-war demand surged among veterans, fostering independent reading without reliance on sighted intermediaries. Complementing these, AFB developed the portable Foundation Braillewriter in 1933 with , featuring construction for enhanced durability and speed over slate-and-stylus methods. The organization's 1944 research lab distributed over 30,000 assistive devices to veterans, including watches and low-vision aids, while 1952 innovations like the Tellatouch enabled tactile communication for deaf-blind users and the Megascope provided magnification. In 1965, AFB tested an electronic speech compressor as an early precursor to screen readers, validating its efficacy for compressing audio without intelligibility loss, underscoring a commitment to devices with proven functional outcomes over speculative advancements.

Legislative and Employment Advocacy Outcomes

The American Foundation for the Blind (AFB) played a leading role in the passage of the Wagner-O'Day Act, signed into law by President on June 25, 1938, which authorized federal agencies to procure specific products such as brooms, mops, and mattresses produced in workshops employing blind workers, thereby establishing sheltered employment opportunities amid high unemployment rates for the blind during the . This legislation created initial jobs in nonprofit workshops, with federal purchases providing a stable revenue stream that enabled expansion of such facilities across the United States. The Wagner-O'Day Act was amended and expanded by the Javits-Wagner-O'Day (JWOD) Act of 1971, incorporating service contracts and extending preferences to individuals with other severe disabilities, evolving into the modern AbilityOne Program administered through central nonprofit agencies including AFB, which was designated as one in 2018. Under this framework, the program has generated approximately 37,000 employment positions for blind or severely disabled workers as of recent reports, primarily through mandatory federal set-asides for , fostering specialized manufacturing and administrative roles in nonprofits. These preferences have been credited with sustaining operations and providing income stability, particularly for those facing barriers in open-market competition. However, outcomes from JWOD-mandated sheltered workshops have drawn criticism for enabling subminimum wages under Section 14(c) certificates of the Fair Labor Standards Act, with many participants earning below federal minimum levels—often cents per hour—leading to allegations of exploitation and segregation from integrated . Critics, including the National Council on , argue that the program's structure disincentivizes transitions to competitive jobs by prioritizing protected environments over skill-building for mainstream labor markets, perpetuating dependency despite recent AbilityOne Commission efforts to phase out subminimum wages on contracts by 2023. AFB has supported broader rights under laws like the and Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 through education and implementation advocacy, but verifiable legislative passage roles remain tied primarily to early -focused reforms.

Measurable Impacts on Vision Loss Community

In 2023, approximately 51.9 million American adults aged 18 and older reported experiencing vision loss, representing the scale of the community addressed by the American Foundation for the Blind's initiatives. AFB's research has illuminated persistent employment disparities, with individuals who are blind or have low vision facing an rate double that of their sighted peers in 2023, and a labor force participation rate of 39 percent among those aged 16-64 as of 2017. These figures reflect limited policy-driven gains in workforce integration, despite AFB's advocacy for accessibility standards and legislative reforms aimed at improving job access. AFB's foundational advocacy contributed to the 1931 Pratt-Smoot Act, establishing federal services under the , which have since disseminated audio materials to hundreds of thousands of eligible readers annually, supporting and mitigating informational isolation. Complementary efforts in standardization via the Braille Authority of have enabled uniform tactile tools, though overall proficiency among school-aged blind children remains below 10 percent according to broader surveys. AFB's recent Flatten Inaccessibility study surveyed 1,921 adults with visual impairments, quantifying heightened during the — with many reporting anxiety and reduced connectivity— and informing targeted resource distribution to enhance community engagement. Empirical assessments indicate that while AFB's data dissemination and policy research reach policymakers and service providers, tangible improvements in self-reported independence metrics, such as reduced reliance on assistance for daily tasks, have been modest, with 27.3 percent of reporting disabilities in recent compilations. This underscores successes in awareness and access alongside ongoing limitations in fostering measurable outcomes.

Criticisms, Controversies, and Alternative Perspectives

Tensions with Consumer-Led Blind Advocacy Groups

The National Federation of the Blind (NFB), established in 1940 as the first major consumer-controlled organization of blind individuals, has consistently critiqued the American Foundation for the Blind (AFB) for embodying a paternalistic framework that emphasizes professional services delivered by sighted experts over direct empowerment and by blind people themselves. NFB leaders, including founder Jacobus tenBroek, argued that AFB and similar agencies perpetuated an image of blindness as inherently tragic and dependent, fostering dependency through charity-oriented interventions rather than promoting competence and civil rights. This perspective framed AFB's model as antiprofessional in its resistance to blind-led control, with NFB advocating for the "right to organize" independently from agency oversight during mid-20th-century labor and welfare disputes. Specific historical flashpoints underscore these tensions; for instance, in the 1930s and 1940s debates surrounding amendments for the blind, NFB opposed supervisory mechanisms endorsed by AFB and other agencies, viewing them as extensions of custodial that undermined blind and economic . By the , NFB publications explicitly lambasted AFB statements as "overflowing with...outraged ," accusing the foundation of partisanship in dismissing consumer movements while aligning with established professional interests that prioritized modest welfare reforms over expansive programs. NFB further challenged AFB's credibility in blindness policy, portraying its collaborations with sighted-led entities as diluting authentic blind perspectives and perpetuating outdated stereotypes of helplessness. In comparison, the American Council of the Blind (ACB), which split from NFB in 1961 amid disagreements over militancy, has adopted a less adversarial posture toward AFB, favoring dialogue and partnership with professional intermediaries to advance shared goals like and , though without fully endorsing NFB's blanket rejection of agency roles. This positions AFB as a bridge between consumer advocates and service providers, yet NFB maintains that such arrangements inherently sideline blind-led decision-making in favor of expert-mediated solutions.

Debates on Service Models and Employment Practices

The National Federation of the Blind (NFB) has long critiqued sheltered workshops authorized under the Wagner-O'Day Act of 1938, which mandates federal procurement of products from blind-operated nonprofits, arguing that such environments foster dependency by confining workers to subminimum wages and limited advancement opportunities rather than promoting competitive market integration. In these settings, blind workers often lack legal recourse akin to typical employees, resembling wards under supervision, which NFB contends perpetuates isolation from broader economic participation. Empirical data underscores wage disparities, with over 50% of participants under Section 14(c) of the Fair Labor Standards Act earning $2.50 per hour or less as of early 2000s analyses, alongside 86% working part-time, contrasting sharply with competitive employment averages exceeding and full-time hours for integrated blind workers. Transition rates from sheltered to competitive roles remain low, with studies indicating minimal progression, reinforcing NFB's causal argument that segregated models hinder skill-building for open labor markets. In contrast, the American Foundation for the Blind (AFB) has engaged with Wagner-O'Day frameworks through AbilityOne designations, providing nonprofit contracts that employ blind individuals in structured roles, defending them as essential for immediate job access among vulnerable populations unable to enter competitive settings without prior support. AFB's historical emphasized improvements, such as 1965 standards amendments for quality, positioning segregated employment as a pragmatic bridge rather than an endpoint, though acknowledging non-commercial limitations. Broader service delivery debates pit AFB's professional, expert-driven models—relying on agency-led rehabilitation and —against NFB's consumer-controlled approach, which prioritizes blind-led to avoid and enhance . AFB critiques NFB's tactics as unproductive, favoring collaborative institutional reforms, while overall blind hovers at 37%, highlighting unresolved tensions in efficacy between top-down provision and .

Internal Governance and Ethical Challenges

In 1982, the American Foundation for the Blind (AFB) allocated $85,000—over half its grants to the Affiliated Leadership League for the Blind (ALL)—which in turn directed a substantial portion ($41,737, or 38.8% of its program expenses) toward litigation supporting a faction in an internal power dispute within the National Federation of the Blind (NFB). This funding decision, overseen by AFB's executive director at the time, has been characterized by external observers as unethical interference in another organization's internal affairs, raising questions about the appropriate use of charitable resources for what was not a broader civil rights effort but a targeted internal contest. Critics further noted potential lapses in grant monitoring and reporting, which could implicate tax-exempt compliance under IRS guidelines for charitable activities. AFB's internal has otherwise shown stability, with no documented major lawsuits from employees, whistleblowers, or board members emerging in over recent decades. Leadership transitions, such as the appointments of chief executives in the and , proceeded without reported controversies tied to ethical lapses or resource misallocation. The organization's financial transparency is affirmed by its consistent 4/4-star rating from , based on evaluations of , , and impact metrics as of 2023, indicating effective board oversight and fiscal . Notwithstanding these indicators, persists among some stakeholders regarding AFB's priorities, particularly in historical decisions like the grants, where intertwined across blindness organizations (e.g., AFB's funding ties to bodies sharing personnel with ALL) suggested possible conflicts of interest. In response to broader calls for in the sector, AFB has enhanced public reporting through annual financial disclosures and strategic plans, such as its 2024–2029 outline emphasizing ethical partnerships, though debates continue on whether such measures fully address past governance critiques.

Recent Initiatives and Future Directions

Digital Inclusion and Accessibility Research (2020s)

In the early , the American Foundation for the Blind initiated the Barriers to Digital Inclusion Series (BDIS) to empirically assess technology access challenges for blind and low-vision individuals, focusing on quantifiable barriers in online domains. The series' Phase 1, a survey of 398 blind adults conducted in November-December 2022, documented high prevalence of inaccessible websites and mobile apps, with participants reporting barriers in essential tasks like banking, , and applications, often resulting in hours of additional effort or task abandonment. These findings highlighted economic costs, including lost revenue opportunities estimated at significant personal levels due to non-compliant digital interfaces lacking compatibility or proper labeling. Phase 2 of BDIS, released in April 2024, utilized a study tracking daily encounters with digital hurdles, reaffirming persistent issues such as unreliable audio-video content navigation and form-filling errors on major platforms, which extended task times by factors of 2-10 times compared to sighted users. Participants logged over 1,000 barrier instances, underscoring implementation gaps in existing standards like WCAG 2.1, where developer oversight and insufficient testing led to widespread exclusion despite legal mandates. AFB's analysis attributed these to underfunding for accessibility audits and lack of dedicated roles, such as chief accessibility officers, recommending verifiable compliance metrics over voluntary guidelines. Complementing BDIS, AFB's 2024 "Empowering or Excluding" report evaluated AI-driven tools, identifying exclusionary risks in automated image recognition and voice interfaces that fail to accommodate non-visual inputs, based on user testing data showing error rates up to 70% for blind participants. In October 2024, a $150,000 grant supported expanded studies on app and website barriers, prioritizing data-driven for enforceable standards amid shortfalls in federal funding for inclusive tech R&D. These initiatives emphasize causal links between poor design practices and measurable exclusion, advocating prioritized remediation in high-impact sectors like and public services.

Awards, Events, and Ongoing Projects (2023–2025)

The American Foundation for the Blind (AFB) presented the 2025 Achievement Awards on April 24 in , honoring champions of change in the field of vision loss, including author Andrew Leland for contributions to media inclusion and awareness of blindness experiences. These awards, established in 1994, recognize individuals and organizations advancing and equity for people with vision loss. AFB awarded the 2025 Migel Medals, its highest distinction since 1937, to Dr. Bernadette Kappen, a researcher in rehabilitation sciences, and Lukas Franck, an for children's vision services, announced on June 30. In 2024, recipients included Kim Charlson, president of the American Council of the Blind, and Susan Mazrui, a policy expert on . On August 26, AFB premiered the documentary short Unseen Horizons, highlighting personal stories and navigation challenges faced by blind and low-vision residents of , with an exclusive screening in Huntington. The film aims to elevate regional perspectives on amid limited local services. The 2025 AFB Conference, themed "Leading Together," is set for November 12–14 at the Crystal Gateway Marriott in Arlington, , featuring sessions on policy, technology, and collaboration, including an awards luncheon. In October 2024, AFB secured a $150,000 grant from the to fund research and advocacy under its Barriers to Digital Inclusion initiative, targeting access gaps for blind, low-vision, and deafblind individuals in online services and . This project builds on AFB's survey data documenting persistent barriers, such as inaccessible apps and websites, affecting over 7 million with vision loss.

References

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