East Meets West: Helping entrepreneurs who have disabilities make dreams a reality (IL UCEDD/LEND)

November 21, 2016

When Laura Martinez first told people about her aspirations of becoming a chef and opening a restaurant, they weren't supportive.

"They'd say, 'There's no way you're going to make it,'" Martinez recalled. "They said, 'Blind people don't do that,' and 'If you work in a grocery store, that's a big success.'

"But I'm as capable as you are. I'm a chef. I want to cook."

For a long time, she struggled to find the resources and help that she needed. From issues with grants to frustrations with service providers, the road to make her dreams a reality wasn't easy, she said. "It's like you have to draw blood or something. It shouldn't be like that."

Martinez now runs La Diosa, Spanish for "the goddess." The North Side restaurant serves Mexican food with a French influence. She's the first blind chef in the country to open her own restaurant. Still, her fight is far from over.

"I'm still struggling to keep the place going," she said.

Her story of facing challenges far more difficult than other entrepreneurs who don't have disabilities is not uncommon.

"People with disabilities in the United States are almost twice as likely to be self-employed than those who don't have disabilities," said Maija Renko, associate professor of managerial studies.

UIC researchers Maija Renko and Sarah Parker-Harris are collaborating on the project. (Photo: Joshua Clark)

In 2010, Renko began a collaboration with Sarah Parker Harris, professor of disability and human development, to begin a pilot program called Participation Through Innovation, which led to a second collaboration, the Chicagoland Entrepreneurship Education for People with Disabilities (CEED). The effort, funded by a two-year, $300,000 grant by the Coleman Foundation in 2014, provides support for entrepreneurs with disabilities.

"As we looked at what was existing in the disability employment area as well as entrepreneurship, we realized there is physically no communication between the two disciplines," said Kate Caldwell, the project coordinator for Participation Through Innovation. Caldwell now leads CEED's training sessions as a post-doctoral fellow.

"So people with disabilities don't have the same opportunities or access to critical information and resources in order to pursue entrepreneurship on the same footing as everybody else."

Together, Renko, Harris, Caldwell and their multidisciplinary team developed operational definitions, conducted literature reviews and identified key barriers that social entrepreneurs with disabilities experienced.

"We found that there was a real need and desire for good information, resources and tools to actually make [entrepreneurship] a viable employment opportunity [for people with disabilities]," Caldwell said.

The CEED team - composed of project investigators, researchers and an expert panel from the disability and human development and managerial studies departments, Great Lakes ADA Center, the Institute for Entrepreneurial Studies and other professionals from the disability and business sectors - created an evidence-based educational program for entrepreneurs with disabilities and the service providers who help them. Forty entrepreneurs and 30 service providers from disability community agencies and small business development centers participated this summer.

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