Staff with Dale Rogers Training Center (DRTC) visited vocational training program participants who have been staying safer at home during the COVID-19 pandemic. Staff put together goodie bags and decorated an agency bus for the “We miss you tour” that stretched from Edmond to Moore, and Yukon to Del City.
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DRTC closed its main campus vocational training programs and divisions in late March in accordance with Governor Stitt’s Executive Orders. The agency is now implementing a phased approach to re-open the agency. DRTC’s divisions (Awards, Framing, Gift Shop and Promotional Items) are open and processing orders, offering curbside pickup during customer service hours of 8am-4pm, Monday-Friday.
Dale Rogers Training Center (DRTC), a 501(c)(3) nonprofit agency, is Oklahomaâs leading community vocational training and employment center for people with disabilities in Oklahoma. With multiple locations in Oklahoma, DRTC trains or employs approximately 1,000 people with disabilities per year. Visit us online: DRTC.org.
Youth sporting over-sized, custom championship rings; working professionals taking meeting notes in pad folios; agencies handing out branded health-related promotional items at trade shows. What do they all have in common? The Swag Team working in DRTC Promotional Items.
Our detail-oriented team carefully inspects each item that passes through DRTC, ensuring quality while providing an extra level of benefit for customers across the state and beyond Oklahomaâs border. Promotional items companies typically ship orders directly to customers. At times there can be errors with the imprint, functionality, or even quantity; at DRTC, you know your order is 100%!
On this day, a large order takes over most of one work floor. Individuals are removing pad folios from a cardboard box, inspecting the zipper, and making sure they include a pad of paperâ300 in all. Each one is pored over, looking for imperfections. If it doesnât pass the test, it doesnât go to the customer.
âWe catch issues with the items,â said Shon, who proudly recounts providing quality control. She says depending on the item ordered, she can go through a whole box of up to 1,000 items.
âI like to have fun with it,â added Shon.
Dennis enjoys the pace of the job. âItâs fast and furious,â he jokes.
Lindsey agrees. Sheâs also on the Swag Team and has helped check all kinds of items, from custom-branded apparel to medicine containers and even emergency kits.
âI think itâs pretty awesome,â said Lindsey.
Their work is well known and greatly appreciated. Among the most notable jobs: custom youth baseball championship rings. Moore Youth Baseball Association (MYBA) is a repeat supporter of DRTC. Last year, MYBA ordered 2,400 championship and finalist rings for its tournament. In 2020, they ordered 4,000.
âThose went over like a hit,â said MYBA Tournament Director Matt Purser. âItâs been a smashing success.â
MYBA first started working with DRTC in 2011 through a trophy order. Over the years, though, the need for tournament trophies shifted to championship rings. The larger-than-life rings feature a custom MYBA design in various colors and stand out for the young athletes who earn them on the field. For Matt, the partnership extends beyond the diamond.
âWe try to do as much local (business) as we can,â said Matt. âYou guys are running a good business and thatâs why we keep coming back.â
The District Attorney’s Council (DAC) is another repeat supporter of DRTC and stands behind the work of the Swag Team. Dale Rogers Training Center has several items listed in the State Use Program which provides work opportunities for people with disabilities.
“Quality and workmanship (are) fantastic,” said Tina Harman with DAC. “We truly love that your mission embodies putting people to work.”
Dale Rogers Training Center (DRTC) is the oldest and largest community vocational training and employment center for people with disabilities in Oklahoma. With multiple locations in Oklahoma, DRTC trains or employs approximately 1,000 people with disabilities per year. Visit us online: DRTC.org.
Congratulations to all of the 2019 Governorâs Disability Employment Awards winners! DRTC was well represented at the 34th annual awards ceremony held at the Governorâs Mansion: five Employment Services Program participants and seven partnering businesses received honors. DRTCâs Employment Services Program works with Oklahoma Department of Rehabilitation Services to match individualsâ capabilities and skills with job openings in the area, helping them learn the job at no additional cost to the employer. Do you own a business and want to partner with our award-winning program? Email SupportedEmployment@drtc.org.
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Dale Rogers Training Center (DRTC) is the oldest and largest community vocational training and employment center for people with disabilities in Oklahoma. With multiple locations in Oklahoma, DRTC trains or employs approximately 1,000 people with disabilities per year. Visit us online: DRTC.org.
Craig Parr is a tall, strapping young man with a smile as big as his heart. On this day he sits next to his mom Theresa, with his arm around her, as he patiently poses for photos and answers questions. Heâs a little nervous at all the attention, though, and his mom quietly reminds him to relax. He responds with a smile and a kiss on her cheek.
At 18 years old, Craig attends high school and is taking a course on small engine repair at Francis Tuttle. His relationship with DRTC began at Camp Tumbleweed, which he attended for three summers. The Campâs grounds are on the DRTC campus. Campers, aged 14-21, have fun, work on self-advocacy skills, enjoy arts & crafts and take a variety of field trips. Craigâs favorite? âHarkins Theatre,â he says unequivocally. Equally unwavering is his popcorn preference. âSalt and butter,â he says.
In addition to Camp Tumbleweed, Craig participated in DRTCâs Transition School-To-Work program, which was the next step in his schoolâs special ed program. Heâs proud to announce that heâs just gotten his learnerâs permit, which his mom acknowledges like all moms do, with a slightly nervous smile.
âCraigâs self-advocacy has really become stronger since heâs been a part of DRTC,â Teresa says. âThe training here really encourages them to tell someone when something isnât right and how to (act) at a job. Heâs made so many friends. He loves everyone, and he loves being here.â
This is Craigâs senior year, and one of the highlights of high school has been his career with ROTC. Heâs an officer and a member of the Color Guard. âI like ROTC. We get to do fun things,â he says. His training shows. Craig is a confident, polite young man with a great sense of humor. Bowling with the Special Olympics in a special needs league is another favorite pastime, and he also likes to volunteer with other nonprofit organizations through DRTC.
Dale Rogers Training Center (DRTC) is the oldest and largest community vocational training and employment center for people with disabilities in Oklahoma. With multiple locations in Oklahoma, DRTC trains or employs approximately 1,000 people with disabilities per year. Visit us online: DRTC.org.
Lindsey Nguyen is a born multi-tasker. Now, sheâs sorting mail into cross sections,
paying close attention to the details. âThese are supposed to be by state and then by name,â she says. Her nose and cheeks are peppered with freckles and her shiny hair bobs as she turns her head.
While she chats, her eyes flick around the room, watching over her colleagues, ready to step in with words of support should someone appear bogged down. Itâs mid-morning, and the room is abuzz: sorting, packaging of various items and convivial chatter and laughter. Among other things, Lindsey is looking forward to her lunch break. âI bring my lunch. My mom packs different things. Today I have chicken and potatoes. Iâm diabetic, and we have to watch what I eat,â she says.
At 34, Lindseyâs experience with Dale Rogers Training Center has spanned more than a decade, beginning when she was in high school at Westmoore. A job coach at the school helped Lindsey get into the School-to-Work program, which in turn led to her gaining valuable skills, and her job with DRTC.
âOh, yeah, I enjoy it. Iâm an independent person. Iâm always busy and hectic. If I need help I ask and get it. I get paid on the 15th and the 31st, and I save up my money, or I buy CDs and DVDs. I love Disney and Nickelodeon movies,â she says.
Sheâs also a fierce competitor, playing on a bocce ball league, and competing in the Special Olympics in basketball and swimming. âMy stroke is freestyle. And breaststroke,â she says. Lindsey plays bocce in Norman and Stillwater. In basketball, sheâs a guard. When asked if sheâs good, she replies with the confidence of a seasoned athlete: âYes.â
At DRTC, Linsdey is the president-elect of Happy Trails Civitan Club, which meets every Thursday night to plan fundraisers and give back to the community. âAwhile back we raised money to help people with self-advocacy,â Lindsey says.
When she thinks about the future, she says some day she will progress to working at a job in the community.
Dale Rogers Training Center (DRTC) is the oldest and largest community vocational training and employment center for people with disabilities in Oklahoma. With multiple locations in Oklahoma, DRTC trains or employs approximately 1,000 people with disabilities per year. Visit us online: DRTC.org.
Like many women, Emily Stone loves pretty clothes, sparkly jewels and spending time with her friends. âSheâs extremely social, and thatâs something people donât always realize,â says her mother Genie Stone. âShe does not talk, but she does use her voice, for example if something makes her happy, sheâll squeal. She can understand you and carry on a conversation if you ask her yes or no questions.â
Emily, now 46, has been coming to DRTC for more than 20 years, and spends her days accomplishing tasks and socializing with friends sheâs known since grade school. With a little assistance, Emily and the rest of her friends in the Special Needs Program participate in paid vocational training/subcontract work, learn job skills, exercise, enjoy leisure activities and take community field trips.
In grade school, Emily spent about a year in a mainstream program, but her mom said it didnât work out that well. âShe was maybe 10 or 11 when she and one other child spent time in a first-grade classroom, but it was more for socialization. She also had speech therapy and physical therapy, but she didnât learn to read. She does know some sight words, but schools really werenât teaching special needs kids to read back then,â Genie says.
When it came time to graduate, options for much beyond staying home with mom all day were few and far between. DRTC soon launched its Special Needs Program, and Emilyâs mom got her registered. Her schoolmates Patty, Jason, Kenny and Heath also joined the program and their community blossomed.
Genieâs voice wavers as she thinks back to those days. âI donât know what we would have done without DRTC. Not so much for us but for her. We were all just trying to care for our kids, and weâre all still taking care of our children. DRTC has been a lifesaver for us. I donât think Emily would be 46 if she hadnât had DRTC. She never wants to miss, she loves her friends, and it just would have been really rough to not have had that. Itâs a lifesaver for us.â
Dale Rogers Training Center (DRTC) is the oldest and largest community vocational training and employment center for people with disabilities in Oklahoma. With multiple locations in Oklahoma, DRTC trains or employs approximately 1,000 people with disabilities per year. Visit us online: DRTC.org.
Jacklyn McDaniel is an energetic young woman and an enthusiastic grocery sacker at Crest Foods grocery store in Midwest City. Sheâs also a creative soul, an aspiring writer who spends her free time working on her Disney-inspired fiction project âSnow Rose and the Beast,â and an artist whose illustration was selected for the 2016 Dale Rogers Training Center holiday card.
âI started at Dale Rogers Training Center as a newbie. I didnât know where to sit, I didnât know anything. I sat at an empty table and here came Dustin. He said, âHey, whatâs your name?â Then I began to learn, little by little. (DRTC) helped me a lot. I like to work. Working inspires me to work!â Jacklyn says.
From March 2015 to November 2016, Jackie was a part of the Vocational Services Program , and participated in the Crest training program during her time at DRTC. She later sought job assistance through DRTCâs Employment Services Program, landing a job with Crest in 2017, where she shares a nearby home with her parents. Jackie moved to long-term stabilization through DDS until Feb. 2019, when her DRTC case was closed for successful completion. DRTC can/will provide support should Jackie need it in future.
She now confidently earns her own paycheck, doing a job she loves, which allows her to help her parents with bills, which makes her extremely proud. âIâm not going to spend my money on useless things. I like to help my parents.â
Jacklynâs tasks at work include sacking groceries and helping customers take them to the car, as well as some cleaning and light stocking chores to make sure her area is work-ready. âShirley, my manager, and about five ladies worked with me every day to be less stressed, focus on the job, and always have a smile on my face,â she says.
âSay you want your bags light. Iâll put five, maybe six items in the bag. But if you say very light, Iâll but more like three or four items,â Jacklyn says. âI just learn, little by little. We arenât stupid, we just have a hard time learning sometimes.â
Jacklyn, like most of us, identifies with what she does for a living, and her work is meaningful. Theresa Flannery, Community Resources and Compliance Director for Dale Rogers Training Center, says thatâs exactly as it should be. âJacklyn is a very young woman. Sheâs being given the opportunity to think about her life beyond just living with her mom. DRTC gave her the opportunity to do paid work. Crest hired her, and that allows her to keep growing.â
Disability is no longer the kind of barrier it once was. âPeople arenât bad, but they sometimes donât know how to integrate people who are different from them. Without these kinds of opportunities, without Dale Rogers, the only option for people like Jacklyn was to stay home,â Flannery says.
Instead, today, Jacklyn is flourishing, a fact that makes Flannery smile. âWhat I love about Jacklyn is her independence, her confidence in pushing boundaries, her creativity and her vision. Sheâs got so many opportunities ahead of her and weâre excited to see her grow.â
Dale Rogers Training Center (DRTC) is the oldest and largest community vocational training and employment center for people with disabilities in Oklahoma. With multiple locations in Oklahoma, DRTC trains or employs approximately 1,000 people with disabilities per year. Visit us online: DRTC.org.
Derek Burton, a sweet-tempered man wearing a green vest covered in patches from around the world given to him by his customers, carefully makes his way into the room. Heâs moving a little slower than usual due to a badly-stubbed toe, but his sunny disposition remains intact. His hair is carefully-combed, his clothes neat and pressed. He smiles ear-to-ear and his laugh is easy and frequent.
This is a man who is confident and content. Heâd sung in his school choir for years, and after graduating from Classen High School, had worked and attended community college. But in the early 1990s, it was a different story. By then he was a young, single father of two small sons, in a precarious situation. Like most parents, he needed a job so he could support his children. The hitch? Derek has limitations which seriously affect his mobility and ability to stand. But it has never affected his spirit or determination.
Heâd worked for a decade at Sears, and during his tenure there had earned his associateâs degree in computer science from Oklahoma City Community College. When Derek heard Sears was closing that store, he felt like a heavy weight had been placed on him. For three years, he desperately sought another job without any success.
He had experience and an impeccable work record, but no one would hire him. That was until one day when his vocational rehabilitation counselor told him about a cashier position for a new Food Service contract set aside for the Dale Rogers Training Center on Tinker Air Force Base through the AbilityOne Program, creating a confluence of circumstances which led to the impossible becoming possible for a man whose biggest dream was to be able to send his sons to college.
Derek applied and was hired on a cold December day in 1992. âI applied, and I got the job,â he says. âDale Rogers (Training Center) gave me a chance to grow and to believe in myself. Many times, we donât think we can survive or compete, but we can do more than just suffer with disability. At (DRTC), you become a part of the family, and it gives you confidence.â
Burtonâs own family motivates him to do a good job at Tinker. He spends his time away from work determined to return the favor and consistently motivate his now-adult children to also do their best. “I try to teach my sons how to live everyday life and to do the right thing,” Burton said. “That’s my number one goal.”
His naturally-outgoing personality allowed him to treat the young airmen and women, often nervous and away from home for the first time, with fatherly warmth. When they come through his line, he greets them with a smile and asks how theyâre doing. âWhen they first come in, theyâre scared and maybe lost a little, so you just grab hold of them and make them feel like theyâre part of the family,â he says.
On his well-worn green vest is the tangible evidence of how much Derek means to his customers. Patches and emblems cover nearly every inch of it. âEach patch is a gift. I got this red star from a sailor who was headed to Switzerland. He wanted me to have something to remember him by. Tinker was his first station and he said I made him feel like a little brother. That red star started it all,â Derek says.
Today, some 25 years later, Derek and his two sons are thriving, and the dreams of this father have come true. Dakoda, his eldest son, is now in vet school, and younger son Dylan is completing his internship to become a pharmacist.
Dale Rogers Training Center (DRTC) is the oldest and largest community vocational training and employment center for people with disabilities in Oklahoma. With multiple locations in Oklahoma, DRTC trains or employs approximately 1,000 people with disabilities per year. Visit us online: DRTC.org.
Derek Burton, a sweet-tempered man wearing a green vest covered in patches from around the world given to him by his customers, carefully makes his way into the room. Heâs moving a little slower than usual due to a badly-stubbed toe, but his sunny disposition remains intact. His hair is carefully-combed, his clothes neat and pressed. He smiles ear-to-ear and his laugh is easy and frequent.
This is a man who is confident and content. Heâd sung in his school choir for years, and after graduating from Classen High School, had worked and attended community college. But in the early 1990s, it was a different story. By then he was a young, single father of two small sons, in a precarious situation. Like most parents, he needed a job so he could support his children. The hitch? Derek has limitations which seriously affect his mobility and ability to stand. But it has never affected his spirit or determination.
Heâd worked for a decade at Sears, and during his tenure there had earned his associateâs degree in computer science from Oklahoma City Community College. When Derek heard Sears was closing that store, he felt like a heavy weight had been placed on him. For three years, he desperately sought another job without any success.
He had experience and an impeccable work record, but no one would hire him. That was until one day when his vocational rehabilitation counselor told him about a cashier position for a new Food Service contract set aside for the Dale Rogers Training Center on Tinker Air Force Base through the AbilityOne Program, creating a confluence of circumstances which led to the impossible becoming possible for a man whose biggest dream was to be able to send his sons to college.
Derek applied and was hired on a cold December day in 1992. âI applied, and I got the job,â he says. âDale Rogers (Training Center) gave me a chance to grow and to believe in myself. Many times, we donât think we can survive or compete, but we can do more than just suffer with disability. At (DRTC), you become a part of the family, and it gives you confidence.â
Burtonâs own family motivates him to do a good job at Tinker. He spends his time away from work determined to return the favor and consistently motivate his now-adult children to also do their best. “I try to teach my sons how to live everyday life and to do the right thing,” Burton said. “That’s my number one goal.”
His naturally-outgoing personality allowed him to treat the young airmen and women, often nervous and away from home for the first time, with fatherly warmth. When they come through his line, he greets them with a smile and asks how theyâre doing. âWhen they first come in, theyâre scared and maybe lost a little, so you just grab hold of them and make them feel like theyâre part of the family,â he says.
On his well-worn green vest is the tangible evidence of how much Derek means to his customers. Patches and emblems cover nearly every inch of it. âEach patch is a gift. I got this red star from a sailor who was headed to Switzerland. He wanted me to have something to remember him by. Tinker was his first station and he said I made him feel like a little brother. That red star started it all,â Derek says.
Today, some 25 years later, Derek and his two sons are thriving, and the dreams of this father have come true. Dakoda, his eldest son, is now in vet school, and younger son Dylan is completing his internship to become a pharmacist.
Dale Rogers Training Center (DRTC) is the oldest and largest community vocational training and employment center for people with disabilities in Oklahoma. With multiple locations in Oklahoma, DRTC trains or employs approximately 1,000 people with disabilities per year. Visit us online: DRTC.org.
Clients at Dale Rogers Training Center (DRTC) are keeping staff and instructors busy with requests to be assigned to the agencyâs brand new, $50,000 screen printing machine, affectionately called âThe Octopus.â Itâs the newest work option at DRTC, which includes subcontracting projects, awards manufacturing and picture frame assembly.
Screen printing is the latest entrepreneurial step designed to further the nonprofit agencyâs goal of self-sufficiency. Dale Rogers Training Center, which provides work opportunities for people with disabilities in the Oklahoma City metro, recently purchased a state-of-the-art, eight-station screen printing press.
âThe Octopusâ features eight rotating stations, with the capability of producing t-shirts, polo shirts, tote bags and other branded items. The new screen printing press was installed with the safety of DRTCâs program participants in mind; it features several auto-off sensors, as well as a safety bar and a foot pedal to advance to the next station. DRTCâs team can produce 200-300 t-shirts per hour!
âAny time we consider a new job, safety is at the forefront of our mind,â said Mark Claunch, DRTC Sales & Business Manager. âWith so many moving parts, each person who wants to work in our screen printing area is fully trained in the various components of the machine to ensure a safe working environment for all.â
Dale Rogers Training Center has already filled orders for several entities, including the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics, Putnam City Public Schools and Richeyâs Grill. For ordering inquiries, please visit DRTC at 2501 N. Utah Ave., Monday-Friday, 8am-5pm, email promosales@drtc.org or call 405-946-1079.
Dale Rogers Training Center (DRTC) is the oldest and largest community vocational training and employment center for people with disabilities in Oklahoma. With multiple locations in Oklahoma, DRTC trains or employs approximately 1,000 people with disabilities per year. Visit us online: DRTC.org.