Current:Home > InvestHow a signature pen has been changing lives for 5 decades -MoneyBase
How a signature pen has been changing lives for 5 decades
View
Date:2025-04-17 22:47:51
Greensboro, North Carolina — More than four million pens roll off the assembly line at a Skilcraft North Carolina manufacturing plant every year.
But the people who make them have never seen them and don't use them.
"I think that this place saved me," Stefani Sellars told CBS News. "It brought me back."
Sellars, like most here, is blind, and working for the nonprofit National Industries for the Blind, which inked a deal to produce Skilcraft pens for the government 55 years ago. It has been doing so ever since.
"Coming here, you see what people are capable of," said Richard Oliver, a 27-year employee. "And I saw that the world was open to me."
The work has given Oliver, and hundreds of others over the past five decades, the ability to provide for their families, buy a house, put children through college. That's critical. because the unemployment rate for the blind and visually impaired hovers near 70%, according to the nonprofit group World Services for the Blind.
"They wouldn't be working," responded Oliver, when asked where his fellow employees would be without their positions at Skilcraft. "They would be at home."
"There's a lot of us that are blind or impaired," Sellars added. "We got a reason to get up. We got a job, and we have fun doing it."
It's work that's changing lives. Even the pen, used everywhere from post offices to combat front lines, has not changed. It's perfectly designed to fit in military uniform pockets, is often used to measure distance on maps, even standing in for a two-inch electrical fuse, and coming in handy during emergency tracheotomies.
"So you think that people who are blind or have other disabilities can't produce, and they can't perform at the same levels of other people," Oliver said. "And we're proving that wrong every single day."
- In:
- visually impaired
- North Carolina
Janet Shamlian is a CBS News correspondent based in Houston, Texas. Shamlian's reporting is featured on all CBS News broadcasts and platforms including "CBS Mornings," the "CBS Evening News" and the CBS News Streaming Network, CBS News' premier 24/7 anchored streaming news service.
Twitter InstagramveryGood! (19)
Related
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Involuntary manslaughter case dropped against 911 dispatcher in Pennsylvania woman’s death
- U.S. man who killed girlfriend, stuffed body in suitcase gets 42 years for femicide in Colombia
- Latino advocacy group asks judge to prevent border proposal from appearing on Arizona’s ballot
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- Lawyer wants to move the trial for the killing of a University of Mississippi student
- How Ariana Grande's Brother Frankie Grande Feels About Her Romance With Ethan Slater
- Stock market today: Asian stocks rise after Wall Street barrels to records
- Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
- Kevin Costner said he refused to shorten his 17-minute eulogy for Whitney Houston: I was her imaginary bodyguard.
Ranking
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Sparks' Cameron Brink shoots down WNBA rookies vs veterans narrative: 'It's exhausting'
- Giraffe’s nibble turns into airborne safari adventure for Texas toddler
- The carnivore diet is popular with influencers. Here's what experts say about trying it.
- Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
- Deceased Rep. Donald Payne Jr. wins New Jersey primary
- GOP backers of 3 initiatives sue to keep their fiscal impact off the November ballot
- Powerball winning numbers for June 5 drawing: Jackpot climbs to $206 million
Recommendation
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
We love competitiveness in men's sports. Why can't that be the case for the WNBA?
Amanda Knox, another guilty verdict and when you just can't clear your reputation
US antitrust enforcers will investigate leading AI companies Microsoft, Nvidia and OpenAI
San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
Man in Mexico died of a bird flu strain that hadn’t been confirmed before in a human, WHO says
U.S counterterrorism chief Christy Abizaid to step down after 3 years on the job
Cucumbers linked to salmonella outbreak that has spread to 25 states