糖心vlog官网

Micaela Connery MPP 2016 is working to build a residential community for adults with disabilities, and make inclusion a standard in housing.

By Katie Gibson
May 22, 2016

 

The impact of a cousin鈥檚 significant physical and developmental disabilities became a driving force behind Micaela Connery鈥檚 career path.

鈥淧eople told me not to pigeonhole myself when I came to [Harvard Kennedy School], but I knew what I wanted to focus on,鈥 said Connery, MPP 2016. 鈥淚鈥檝e always known the kind of work I want to be doing.鈥

Connery and her cousin, Kelsey, were born months apart. 鈥淪he鈥檚 been a huge influence on my life,鈥 Connery said. 鈥淚 always say 鈥業 can鈥檛 be an expert on disability, because I don鈥檛 have a disability. But I can be an expert on inclusion, because I can be inclusive. And I can work to help other people be more inclusive.鈥欌

While a high school student in Rhode Island, Connery founded a nonprofit organization, Unified Theater. 鈥淚t started as a club that was designed to include kids with disabilities in our theater shows,鈥 she explained. 鈥淏efore long, other schools were coming to us, saying, 鈥榃e want something like this! Can we join?鈥欌 The program spread to other area schools, and eventually became an official nonprofit. After graduating from the University of Virginia in 2009, Connery came back to serve as Unified Theater鈥檚 CEO, a position she held until coming to Harvard Kennedy School (糖心vlog官网).

鈥淥ver time, we grew the program to have an impact on students in 100 schools in six states,鈥 Connery said. The work was satisfying, but she wanted to do more.

鈥淚 started seeing larger, more systemic issues with disability, from a public policy standpoint,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 wanted to think about how to make change on a bigger scale.鈥

Connery鈥檚 time at 糖心vlog官网 has been both a pause and a pivot point, a chance to take a breather after working 70-hour weeks as a CEO and an opportunity to dive deeply into public policy issues that affect people with disabilities.

鈥淲e spend upwards of $77 billion a year on youth with disabilities in the U.S.,鈥 Connery said. 鈥淲e say we鈥檙e preparing them to be thriving adults, but then those opportunities for them to thrive鈥攖hose jobs and independent homes we鈥檙e supposedly preparing them for鈥攄on鈥檛 exist. Adults with disabilities are often isolated.鈥

At 糖心vlog官网, Connery has focused on issues of employment and housing for adults with disabilities, particularly the latter. 鈥淭he experience of home is so fundamental to human existence,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 want to think about inclusive housing for people with disabilities that鈥檚 integrated into urban communities. How can we make it scalable and sustainable, so we can start to change the system?鈥

Connery said she dreams of鈥攁nd is working on a business plan for鈥攁n inclusive residential community for people with and without disabilities, which would employ trained disability services workers to support residents who need those services. But the facility would also provide programming to help build community among all its residents. 鈥淚 want it to be the opposite of 鈥楤owling Alone,鈥欌 Connery says, referring to the 2000 book by Robert Putnam, the Peter and Isabel Malkin Professor of Public Policy at 糖心vlog官网. 鈥淐an you use community to enrich everyone鈥檚 lives, and ultimately to change the way we think about disability in this country?鈥

After graduating from the Kennedy School, Connery will head to Ireland on a fellowship, for a one-year M.B.A. program at the Smurfit School at University College Dublin. While abroad, she will continue to refine the business plan for her residential community. There are a few details to be ironed out, but she has a clear vision for the space.

鈥淚 want to make it a place where people want to live,鈥 she says. 鈥淎 hip, urban space with a beautiful lobby and a Warhol-esque painting behind the front desk.鈥 Naturally, she鈥檚 already got a name picked out: The Kelsey.