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Program Hopes to Expand
, 06 20th, 2008
In the latest autism news, Marathon County residents who worry about a loved one at risk of wandering away will have an added safety net when a local agency can raise enough money and volunteer support.
The Aging and Disability Resource Center of Central Wisconsin needs about $15,000 and trained rescue personnel to start Project Lifesaver in the county, said Lonnie Cole, the center’s Older Americans Act director.
Project Lifesaver provides traceable radio-transmitter wristbands for people who suffer from dementia or other conditions such as autism that make them vulnerable to becoming lost and endangering themselves.
The resource center already has implemented Project Lifesaver in Wood County. The agency serves both counties.
Wood County authorities joined the national program in February 2007, four months before a 7-year-old autistic boy went missing from his Wisconsin Rapids-area home. He was found dead in a nearby pond a year ago today. The boy’s mother since has become a Project Lifesaver donor.
“For the most part, those we have on the program in Wood County are children with autism,” said Tami Drew-Huiras, a social worker in charge of the county’s Project Lifesaver efforts.
“We could have hundreds of people signed up for it,” she said. “I know for a fact that there are many more people out there who could use it.”
Cole said she has yet to calculate how many Marathon County residents would qualify for Project Lifesaver, which asks that families pay $25 a month for the service.
July 10th, 2008 at 3:50 pm
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