https://m.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100056782098069
&ref=content_filter
https://m.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100056782098069
&ref=content_filter
Mysterious explosion over Western US was likely SpaceX rocket debris, experts say
It looked like a stunning meteor shower. It was actually some of Elon’s space junk.

That’s no meteor shower: Glowing debris spotted over the Pacific Northwest this week was likely the remnants of a SpaceX rocket. (Image credit: Erik Rasmussen)

Skywatchers in the Pacific Northwest saw an unexpected display of pyrotechnics overhead on Thursday night (March 25).
In video footage, a slow-motion meteor shower appears to strafe overhead, with dozens of glowing orbs dragging fiery tails across the sky. In reality, it was likely the death spiral of a SpaceX rocket, experts said.
"The widely reported bright objects in the sky were the debris from a Falcon 9 rocket 2nd stage that did not successfully have a deorbit burn," the Seattle branch of the National Weather Service (NWS) tweeted shortly after the event. "Based on the observed video, this looks more likely than a bolide meteor or similar object, as they would be moving far faster on impact with our atmosphere." (A bolide is a bright meteor that is often called a fireball, according to NASA.)

According to Harvard astronomer Jonathan McDowell, the debris likely came from a Falcon 9 rocket that launched on March 4 to put several Starlink satellites into orbit. (Starlink is a constellation of more than 1,000 internet satellites being constructed by SpaceX; the constellation will eventually include more than 30,000 satellites.)
As Live Science previously reported, Falcon 9 rockets reach the atmosphere thanks to two main boosters, or stages. The first stage, which houses nine engines, lifts the rocket off the launch pad; eventually, the first stage decouples and can be steered remotely back to a SpaceX ship for reuse (sometimes that part doesn’t work out so well).
The second stage, which contains a single engine, guides the rocket into orbit, then is usually left to decay in the atmosphere, becoming one more piece of space junk.
According to McDowell, the second stage of the rocket that launched on March 4 "failed to make a deorbit burn" after launching the Starlink satellites, meaning it didn’t come down where it was expected to. After three weeks of drifting in the atmosphere, it finally came down on Thursday, breaking apart in a spectacular explosion.
RELATED CONTENT
15 Unforgettable images of stars
9 Strange Excuses for Why We Haven’t Met Aliens Yet
The 15 weirdest galaxies in our universe
The NWS stressed that there is no risk that any of those fiery pieces of debris made it through the atmosphere to cause damage. And according to McDowell, big pieces of space junk burn up in our atmosphere more frequently than you might think.
"This is the 14th piece of space junk with a mass over one tonne [1.1 tons] that has reentered since Jan 1st this year," McDowell tweeted. "In other words, about one a week. Plus lots more smaller bits of course."
Originally published on Live Science.
RECENT NEWS

Live Science is part of Future US Inc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.
About Us
Terms and conditions
Privacy policy
Cookies policy
Accessibility Statement
Topics
Advertise with us
Web notifications
Update Consent
© Future US, Inc. 11 West 42nd Street, 15th Floor, New York, NY 10036.
FBI searching for yacht captain who sailed off after Sarm Heslop vanished
Composite image of Sarm Heslop, who disappeared in the Virgin Islands after sailing there on a yacht — and the owner, Ryan Bane.
NY Post composite
Before she vanished without a trace earlier this month from a serene bay off St. John in the US Virgin Islands, Sarm Heslop was happily working to improve her culinary skills.
Along with images of azure waters and beach sunsets, Heslop’s Instagram account features photos of garlic, chili and soy fried shrimp on a bed of coconut rice and baby spinach; an artful display of banana and peanut butter muffins wreathed in fresh strawberries and mango chunks; and ham-wrapped eggs garnished with slices of avocado.
“Practicing my presentation,” wrote Heslop, 41, on Feb. 16, next to a photo of the eggs.
It was among the last snapshots the suntanned brunette with the colorful shoulder tattoo of a seahorse, bird and flower would post before she disappeared from her new boyfriend’s charter yacht where she’d been working as a cook since January.
Three weeks after she was last seen on March 7, Heslop’s mysterious disappearance has sparked an island-wide manhunt that now includes the FBI. It has also revealed a dark side of Ryan Bane, the handsome sailor she met on Tinder last year. Bane, 44, went to jail for beating up his ex-wife, who recently confessed that she slept with a shotgun under her pillow during the final months of their marriage.
And now, Bane has disappeared. A source told The Post that he sailed away from St. John on Thursday. FBI agents scrambled to find him and chartered a boat for the search.
Sarm Joan Lillian Heslop is a former flight attendant from Southampton, England, with a restless sense of adventure. By the time she ended up in the Virgin Islands at the end of 2019, she had already traveled the world. And, over the last few years, she had discovered a passion for sailing, friends told The Post.
41-year-old Sarm Joan Lillian Heslop went missing from a catamaran from St. John in the US Virgin Islands on March 8, 2021.
Nearly two years ago, Heslop sailed the Atlantic on a whim with two friends from La Linea de la Concepcion, a city in southern Spain near Gibraltar where she had been living on a boat.
They landed in the US Virgin Islands in late 2019, and Heslop instantly fell in love with the Caribbean, a friend told The Post. Then last fall, Heslop, whose Instagram handle is “sarmaluvin,’” fell in love with Bane, a self-described entrepreneur who left a successful business in Michigan to work as a charter boat captain in St. Thomas, according to his Siren Song charter company’s website.
Like Heslop, Bane, who calls himself Captain Ryan, has a sense of adventure and loves the outdoors. A passionate life-long sailor, the sun-bleached blonde lists his hobbies as deep sea diving, surfing, “dancing in flip flops and just having a blast.” Bane, who grew up in the Detroit suburbs and started sailing on Lake Michigan when he was 10, studied at Michigan State University. While still a student there, he took his first trip to the Virgin Islands for a natural science study-abroad program in 2000. “He knew he found the perfect paradise,” according to a bio on his website.
After completing an MBA at Central Michigan University, Bane became an automotive parts salesman, working for Fortune 500 companies, his website says. But after growing disenchanted with Michigan winters, he sold his home and returned full time to the Caribbean where he worked on acquiring a deep-sea diving masters certificate and started his charter boat company. Bane is also a seaplane pilot, according to public records.
Ryan Bane and Sarm Heslop
Facebook
Friends on the island say Bane first met Heslop in the fall of 2020 in Grenada, where Bane had gone to ride out hurricane season.
By that time, Heslop had quickly adapted to hopping from island to island in the Caribbean, posting selfies from Mustique, Antigua and St. Lucia. “Goodbye to St. Lucia. It was a great week #sarmaluvin meeting new people,” she wrote on February 25, 2020, next to photos of the island and sharing a beer with two friends at an outdoor restaurant. About a week later, she posted pictures of herself snorkeling in a bikini and holding hands with an islander in long shorts and plastic sandals who is staring deeply into her eyes. “Snorkelling and a declaration of love all in one day #sarmaluvin the Caribbean,” she wrote on March 4, 2020.
Sarm Joan Lillian Heslop
After a brief trip to Malta to visit friends last year, Heslop returned to the Virgin Islands in January, moving onto Bane’s 47-foot catamaran where she cooked for the tourists who spend up to $2,000 a day for tours around the Caribbean.
“Becoming the chef on the boat was a way for her and Ryan to be together,” said Zan Lawther, a friend of Heslop’s, in an email to The Post. “All reports from Sarm and the few that met him were that they were very happy.”
Heslop’s more recent social-media posts feature photos of her posing on the boat in twilight, and lying on a hammock with a flower in her hair. There are also photos of Bane’s Labrador retriever, Hunter, at the beach, but no photos of Bane.
Although outwardly funloving and carefree, Bane has been described as having an almost split personality by his former wife. In 2011, he pleaded guilty to domestic violence and spent three weeks in a Michigan jail, according to a police report.
Bane’s ex-wife Cori Stevenson claimed that Bane dragged her out of their car when they arrived at their Orion Township home near Detroit on Nov. 27, 2011, after attending a wedding. Once inside, Bane “grabbed her in the dining room, threw her to the ground, and smashed her head into the floor, chipping one of her teeth,” according to the report.
Corie Stevenson, ex-wife of Ryan Bane.
MEGA
Bane told police that Stevenson, whom he married in 2008, had attacked him first. But police found Stevenson with a chipped tooth “that appeared to be fresh. Her right ear lobe was bloody and scratched. Her right shoulder and the right side of her neck showed red scratches. Her right eyelid was scratched and red.”
The couple divorced in 2014.
“He was a total Jekyll and Hyde character,” said Stevenson in an interview with The Sun from her home in Melbourne, Fla., last week. “He would have a good week, and then all of a sudden he changed. There was never a day when I didn’t fear him. I slept with a shotgun the whole time I went through my divorce.”
Ryan Bane on Wednesday, March 24th, 2021
MEGA
Stevenson reportedly has spoken with Virgin Islands authorities about Bane’s past and has provided them with court documents related to their marriage and divorce.
Bane and his Virgin Islands-based attorney David Cattie refused to comment.
Heslop vanished after a night of drinking with Bane at 420 the Center, a popular dive bar in Cruz Bay. According to Bane, the couple returned to his boat, which was anchored about 100 feet from the shore on nearby Frank Bay, on an inflatable dinghy and went to bed just after 10 pm. Bane told authorities that he noticed Heslop was missing at 2 am when he was woken by the boat’s anchor alarm, which sounds if the boat drifts too far from where it’s anchored. The weather was calm although the current near the bay was rough, according to locals. At 2:30 am, he reported her disappearance to local police, who told him to call the US Coast Guard. Bane did not make that call until several hours later. The dinghy was still on Bane’s boat, according to a local sailor whose own boat was anchored close by.
Ryan Bane, the American boyfriend of missing British yachts woman Sarm Heslop, aboard the catamaran from which she is said to have gone overboard.
MEGA
The mystery deepened when Bane reportedly refused to allow authorities to search the boat the next day.
“If she left the boat at night, she didn’t take the dinghy, but had to swim to shore,” said Rick Smith, who runs Cimarron Yacht Charter in St. John. “It’s only 100 feet but the current is really strong and very dangerous in that area. The whole thing is pretty perplexing.”
A Sarm Heslop missing poster.
MEGA
Heslop’s friends and family in England are also baffled and deeply worried. They have started the “findsarm” website, posting daily articles and photos and urging anyone with information to contact authorities.
“We have heard that Sarm’s phone, passport and all belongings were left on the boat, where she was living with Mr. Bane,” said Andrew Baldwin, a friend from England. “She would not just disappear, leaving no trace. She is savvy and sensible. It’s not like her at all. It just doesn’t add up.”
Bane’s catamaran remained anchored off the coast of St. John until a few days ago, according to Smith. He said that a Coast Guard helicopter appeared on the scene the day after Heslop was reported missing. But he told The Post that he did not see Coast Guard divers or boats searching the waters.
Bane handed over Heslop’s phone and other possessions to police, according to Cattie, who claimed to the Detroit News that Bane is actively cooperating with authorities to find Heslop.
In 2011, Ryan Bane pleaded guilty to domestic violence and spent three weeks in a Michigan jail.
Facebook
But on Thursday, the Siren Song disappeared from Frank Bay where it had been anchored for weeks after Heslop’s disappearance. “He could have gone anywhere — to a Dutch, French, or even British island where there is no extradition,” said Smith. The British Virgin Islands is only five miles away from St. John, he said.
The FBI would not comment on the case, other than to say its division headquartered in San Juan, Puerto Rico, was assisting the U.S. Virgin Island Police Department.
Sarm Joan Lillian Heslop went missing on March 8, 2021.
findsarm.com
If Heslop somehow managed to swim to shore at night, locals worry that “something could have happened” on the island. Although St. John, pop. 4,170, is considered relatively safe, the US Virgin Islands has one of the highest crime rates in the Caribbean. Last year, there were 49 homicides in the archipelago, which has a population of 106,000.
“Certainly something could have happened to her wandering around alone at night,” said Smith, who has lived in the Virgin Islands for 12 years. “Wherever she is, she’s long gone.”
An undated handout photo shows Sarm Heslop, a British woman who was last seen on a sailboat moored off St. John, in the U.S. Virgin Islands.
via REUTERS
FILED UNDER FBI , FBI INVESTIGATIONS , MISSING PERSONS , U.S. VIRGIN ISLANDS , 3/27/21
trending now
‘Bad Girls Club’ star killed in Virginia Beach shooting
Yes, Topanga is married to the Cinnamon Toast Crunch shrimp guy
US Navy ready to help free cargo ship blocking Suez Canal
Lil Nas X’s ‘Satan Shoes’ will contain drop of human blood
Coming up short: Peloton’s height requirement leaves some users in the lurch
Long Island police chief due for ‘egregious’ million-dollar payday
MORE ON:
U.S. VIRGIN ISLANDS
Feds join search for woman who vanished from beau’s yacht — as he refuses to let cops search boat
Boyfriend of missing woman was reportedly jailed for beating ex-wife
Man blocks search of Caribbean yacht where girlfriend was last seen
Woman goes missing from catamaran moored off US Virgin Islands
Email Newsletters
Mobile Apps
Contact Us
Tips
Facebook
Twitter
Instagram
LinkedIn
Email
YouTube
© 2021 NYP Holdings, Inc. All Rights Reserved
Terms of Use | Privacy
Blindness Statistics
There are several ways to define blindness. Many people regard blindness as the inability to see at all or, at best, to discern light from darkness. The National Federation of the Blind takes a much broader view. We encourage people to consider themselves as blind if their sight is bad enough—even with corrective lenses—that they must use alternative methods to engage in any activity that people with normal vision would do using their eyes.
The United States Bureau of the Census question about “significant vision loss” encompasses both total or near-total blindness and “trouble seeing, even when wearing glasses or contact lenses.”
The statutory definition of “legally blind” is that central visual acuity must be 20/200 or less in the better eye with the best possible correction or that the visual field must be twenty degrees or less.
There are no generally accepted definitions for “visually impaired,” “low vision,” or “vision loss.”
Almost all statistics on blindness are estimated, which means that the numbers found in a sample are extrapolated to the entire population. United States government agencies—including the Bureau of the Census, the National Center for Health Statistics, and the Bureau of Labor Statistics—use sophisticated statistical techniques that lead to population estimates with great accuracy. Moreover, these techniques also provide the margin of error.
Blindness among Children
American Printing House for the Blind (2017)
Each year, the American Printing House for the Blind (APH) polls each state for data on the number of legally blind children (through age twenty-one) enrolled in elementary and high school in the US eligible to receive free reading matter in Braille, large print, or audio format. This is used to develop a “quota” of federal funds to be spent in each state for material in each alternative format.
Please note that the numbers quoted below from the APH Annual Report do not meet the standard definition of statistics. However, they do provide useful data that is worth including on this page. According to the APH,
"The specific purpose of the annual Federal Quota Census is to register students in the United States and Outlying Areas who meet the definition of blindness and are therefore eligible for adapted educational materials from APH through the Act to Promote the Education of the Blind.
Statements regarding student literacy, use of appropriate learning media, and students taught in a specific medium cannot be supported using APH registration data" (APH News: December 2017).
Total number of students: 63,357
By reporting agency:
Reported by state departments of education: 53,155 (83.9%)
Reported by residential schools for the blind: 4,940 (7.8%)
Reported by rehabilitation programs: 3,800 (6.0%)
Reported by multiple disability programs: 1,462 (2.3%)
By primary reading medium:
Braille readers: 4,963 (7.8%)
Print readers: 20,460 (32.3%)
Auditory readers: 6,833 (10.8%)
Non-readers/Symbolic Readers: 20,718 (32.7%)
Pre-readers: 10,383 (16.4%)
American Printing House for the Blind, "Annual Report 2017: Distribution of Eligible Students Based on the Federal Quota Census of January 4, 2016 (Fiscal Year 2016)." Retrieved from http://www.aph.org/federal-quota/distribution-of-students-2017/.
Disability Statistics, American Community Survey (2016)
The number of non-institutionalized males or females, ages four and under through twenty, all races, regardless of ethnicity, with all education levels in the United States who reported a visual disability in 2016.
Prevalence:
Total: 706,400 (0.8%)
Girls: 337,700 (0.79%)
Boys: 368,700 (0.83%)
Erickson, W., Lee, C., von Schrader, S. (2017). Disability Statistics from the American Community Survey (ACS). Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Yang-Tan Institute (YTI). Retrieved from Cornell University Disability Statistics website: www.disabilitystatistics.org.
Blindness among Adults
These estimates (for adults age sixteen and older reporting significant vision loss, who were in the non-institutionalized, civilian population) are all derived from the American Community Survey results for 2016, as interpreted by Cornell University’s Employment and Disability Institute (EDI), unless otherwise credited.
Prevalence of Visual Disability (2016)
The number of non-institutionalized, male or female, ages sixteen through seventy-five +, all races, regardless of ethnicity, with all education levels in the United States reported to have a visual disability in 2016.
Total (all ages): 7,675,600 (2.4%)
Total (16 to 75+): 7,208,700 (2.83%)
Women: 3,946,300 (3.01%)
Men: 3,262,300 (2.65%)
Age 16 to 64: 4,037,600 (2.0%)
Age 65 and older: 3,171,100 (6.6%)
Race or Ethnicity (2016)
The number of non-institutionalized, male or female, all ages, with all education levels in the United States reported to have a visual disability in 2016.
White: 5,546,000 (2.4%)
Black/African American: 1,215,600 (3.0%)
Hispanic: 1,253,400 (2.2%)
Asian: 250,500 (1.4%)
American Indian or Alaska Native: 100,400 (3.8%)
Some other race(s): 563,100 (2.1%)
State Distribution (2016)
The number of non-institutionalized, male or female, all ages, all races, regardless of ethnicity, with all education levels in the United States reported to have a visual disability in 2016.
State Number
Alabama 150,600
Alaska 17,600
Arizona 175,600
Arkansas 97,900
California 797,300
Colorado 107,700
Connecticut 61,200
Delaware 19,200
District of Columbia 16,400
Florida 544,700
Georgia 267,100
Hawaii 24,500
Idaho 43,500
Illinois 258,900
Indiana 159,800
Iowa 60,700
Kansas 67,900
Kentucky 152,000
Louisiana 155,900
Maine 30,800
Maryland 111,500
Massachusetts 129,800
Michigan 223,500
Minnesota 86,500
Mississippi 96,400
Missouri 153,900
Montana 21,800
Nebraska 39,700
Nevada 101,500
New Hampshire 28,600
New Jersey 163,700
New Mexico 65,200
New York 418,500
North Carolina 285,500
North Dakota 14,400
Ohio 280,100
Oklahoma 138,100
Oregon 104,500
Pennsylvania 298,500
Puerto Rico 218,400
Rhode Island 22,100
South Carolina 153,300
South Dakota 16,600
Tennessee 205,400
Texas 702,500
Utah 55,000
Vermont 14,100
Virginia 178,400
Washington 161,900
West Virginia 71,400
Wisconsin 110,300
Wyoming 14,500
Educational Attainment (2016)
The number of non-institutionalized, male or female, ages twenty-one to sixty-four, all races, regardless of ethnicity, in the United States reported to have a visual disability in 2016. These numbers refer to the highest level of education attained by a given individual.
Less than high school graduation: 847,000 (22.3%)
High school diploma or a GED: 1,201,600 (31.6%)
Some college education/associates degree: 1,151,500 (30.3%)
Bachelor’s degree or higher: 598,000 (15.7%)
Income and Poverty Status (2016)
The annual earnings and poverty status of non-institutionalized persons aged twenty-one to sixty-four years with a visual disability in the United States in 2016.
Median Annual Earnings: $38,500
Median Annual Household Income: $41,300
Number living below the poverty line: 1,048,600 (27.7%)
Supplemental Security Income (2016)
The number of non-institutionalized persons aged twenty-one to sixty-four years with a visual disability in the United States who received SSI benefits in 2016 was 649,900 (17.1%).
Health Insurance Status (2016)
The number of non-institutionalized persons aged twenty-one to sixty-four years with a visual disability in the United States in 2016.
Uninsured: 471,900 (12.4%)
Insured: 3,326,300 (87.6%)
Employer/Union: 1,351,100 (35.6%)
Purchased: 449,500 (11.8%)
Medicare: 801,400 (21.1%)
Medicaid: 1,486,200 (39.1%)
Military/VA: 208,800 (5.5%)
Indian Health Service: 38,700 (1.0%)
Employment (US) (2016)
The number of non-institutionalized persons aged twenty-one to sixty-four years with a visual disability in the United States who were employed full-time/full-year in 2016 was 1,120,700 or 29.5%.
Therefore, for working age adults reporting significant vision loss, over 70% are not employed full-time.
Erickson, W., Lee, C., von Schrader, S. (2017). Disability Statistics from the American Community Survey (ACS). Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Yang-Tan Institute (YTI). Retrieved from Cornell University Disability Statistics website: www.disabilitystatistics.org.
Mobility
There are very few reliable current statistics on the use of canes or dog guides in the United States. However, according to Perkins School for the Blind, “Most people who are visually impaired don’t use a white cane. In fact, only an estimated 2 percent to 8 percent do. The rest rely on their useable vision, a guide dog or a sighted guide.”
Perkins School for the Blind. (2015, October 15). “10 Fascinating Facts about the White Cane.” Accessed on January 14, 2019, from https://www.perkins.org/stories/10-fascinating-facts-about-the-white-cane.
Guiding Eyes for the Blind estimates that “there are approximately 10,000 guide dog teams currently working in the United States. Another frequently cited statistic is that only about 2% of all people who are blind and visually impaired work with guide dogs.”
Guiding Eyes for the Blind. (2019). "FAQs." Accessed January 14, 2019, from https://www.guidingeyes.org/about/faqs/.
Computer Use
For data on the preferences of screen reader software users, please see the report on the results of the October 2017 survey from WebAIM (Web Accessibility In Mind), Screen Reader User Survey #7 Results. WebAIM is a nonprofit organization based at the Center for Persons with Disabilities at Utah State University.
For data on the use of computer and internet technologies by “users with low vision”, please see the report on the results of the September 2018 survey from WebAIM, Survey of Users with Low Vision #2 Results.
Additional Resources
American Foundation for the Blind, "Statistical Snapshots from the American Foundation for the Blind." Retrieved from http://www.afb.org/info/blindness-statistics/2.
Bell, E. C., & Silverman, A. M. (2018). Rehabilitation and Employment Outcomes for Adults Who Are Blind or Visually Impaired: An Updated Report. Journal of Blindness Innovation and Research, 7(1). Retrieved from https://nfb.org/images/nfb/publications/jbir/jbir18/jbir080101.html. doi: 10.5241/8-148.
Brault, Matthew W., United States Economics and Statistics Administration, United States Bureau of the Census. "Americans with disabilities: 2010." Current population reports. no. 131 (2012). Retrieved from https://www.census.gov/library/publications/2012/demo/p70-131.html.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “Vision Health Initiative (VHI): Data & Statistics.” Retrieved from https://www.cdc.gov/visionhealth/data/index.html.
National Center for Special Education Research, Institute of Education Sciences, U.S. Department of Education. Retrieved from http://ies.ed.gov/ncser/.
Eye Institute, "Blindness, Statistics and Data [NEI]." Retrieved from https://www.nei.nih.gov/eyedata/blind.
Blindness America, "Vision Problems in the US: Prevalence of Adult Vision Impairment and Age-Related Eye Disease in America." Last modified 2012. Retrieved from http://www.visionproblemsus.org/index.html.
United States Bureau of the Census, "American FactFinder." Retrieved from http://factfinder2.census.gov/faces/nav/jsf/pages/index.xhtml.
(Updated January 2019)
Donate
Join Us
National Federation of the Blind
200 East Wells Street at Jernigan Place
Baltimore, Maryland 21230
Phone 410-659-9314
Email nfb
Connect with Us
Facebook
YouTube
Subscribe to Our E-newsletter
Our Community
People Who Are Blind
People Losing Vision
Parents of Blind Children
Blind Parents
Seniors
Students
Educators
Employers
Get Involved
Join Us
Ways to Give
National Convention
Membership Building
Twitter Chats
Calendar
Programs & Services
Independence Market
Free White Cane Program
Center of Excellence in Nonvisual Access
Advocacy
NFB-NEWSLINE®
Education
Safety & Support
Scholarships and Awards
Legal Program
Braille Certification
Research Program
KNFB Reader
Meet the Blind Month
Career Mentoring
Blind Parent Mentoring
Free Slate and Stylus Program
Resources
Publications and Media
Speeches and Reports
Jacobus tenBroek Library
Blindness Statistics
Braille Resources
DeafBlind Resources
Guide Dog Resources
Distance Education Resources
Voting Resources
COVID-19 Resources
About Us
Leadership
State Affiliates
National Headquarters
Divisions, Committees, and Groups
Training Centers
History and Governance
Partners
Press Room
Annual Report and Financials
Career Opportunities
Contact Us
Privacy Policy
Accessibility Policy
Code of Conduct
Copyright © 2021 National Federation of the Blind. All rights reserved.
Drupal Commerce by Acro Media