60th Anniversary Commemorative Report

Transcription

60th Anniversary Commemorative Report
Blazing Trails &
Promoting Abilities
Dale Rogers
ANNIVERSARY
Honoring our Legacy
Commemorative Report
60th Anniversary * October 13, 2013
Honoring our Legacy
T
his 60th Anniversary Commemorative Report is dedicated
to the brief life of Robin Elizabeth Rogers. Her short
life inspired parents to create organizations like Dale Rogers Training Center where people with disabilities can learn,
grow and work so they can become productive citizens.*
2
Presidential Roll Call
M
y name is Rebecca Cook,
and it is my honor to serve
Dale Rogers as President
of the Board of Directors
during 2013, our 60th Anniversary year.
I speak for the entire Board when I
say how proud we are to be part of this
amazing organization that is committed to excellence in serving the needs of
individuals with disabilities. Dale Rogers holds a unique status in the state
of Oklahoma. The oldest agency of its
kind, Dale Rogers is also one of the largest in the Southwest, providing training
and jobs to over 1,200 people with disabilities each year. Over 150 people with
disabilities per year are placed and supported in jobs in community businesses
in the Oklahoma City metro area. Dale
Rogers Training Center has the widest
array of program choices for families
supporting people with disabilities in
Oklahoma, bar none. The individuals
placed in our in-house and work programs earn between 5.4 and 5.9 million
dollars in wages per year.
Here are some facts:
•Dale Rogers Training Center is 83%
financially self-sufficient due to its diversified array of contracts, services and
businesses.
•Over 82% of its programs are located
in the communities of 7 Oklahoma
locations.
•And, it does all this with a low 3%
overhead cost.
I worked in disability services in Oklahoma for 40 years, most recently for the
University of Oklahoma. In the course of
my work I first crossed paths with Connie
Thrash McGoodwin in the early 1980s
when she came to Dale Rogers Training Center as the new director. I have
never ceased to be amazed at her vision
and talents as the Center has grown and
flourished under her leadership. Together,
the Dale Rogers staff, Board, the many
people with disabilities served and their
families have accomplished great things
over the past 60 years.
On behalf of the Board of Directors, we
thank all of you for joining our celebration and invite you to visit our newly renovated campus, the new Workforce Skills
Training center, the Robins Corner Museum Exhibit and Dale & Roy memorabilia collection.
Rebecca Cook
President
tHANK YOU FROM
Board of Directors
rEBECCA Cook, President
Cheryl Moore, 1st vp
Carl Hamilton, 2nd vp
Bob Hale, Secretary
Frank Stone, Treasurer
Allen Brown
Ann Knutson
Barbara Hahn
Fred Henderson
Gene Binning
mARc EDWARDS
Helen Stakem
Jerry Hocker
Kathy Reed
Lavonne Hutchison
Martha Knight
Mike Jones
Tom Spencer
Past Presidents
Jerry Hocker & Marc Edwards
Honoring The Memory of Lavonne Hutchison, Past President
3
Rave Reviews for DRTC
Table of
Contents
Dale Rogers introduces you, not to disabilities, but
“ *to possibilities
* Supports a very special niche of our
Oklahoma Impact................ 5
population * Entrepreneurial spirit * Hand up rather than hand out * Exceptionally professional staff *
Treats everyone with dignity and respect * Outstanding service to the troops at Tinker Air Force Base
* Renovated campus’s a symbol of beauty and
energy * Outstanding example of a forward
thinking sustainable, non-profit organization
60
YEARS
People With
Disabilities Find Jobs!........ 7
Everyone Wins
When You Hire..................... 8
"
10
30
1993 1995
2001
2003
2006
2009
2009 2010
Online Store
2010 2011
4
It’s How You
Ride The Trail...................... 12
Continuing The Legacy....13
From The Director........... 14
2012
Papa Murphy’s
3
FAA Custodial
3
AFRC Norman & Mustang
1
Prairie Spices
Wyman Frame & Supply
Lockheed Martin
Tinker Admin Custodial
GSA Downtown
12
April
2
4
7
Tinker Custodial
Altus Food Service
Tinker Food Service
Prism Place
18
in
4
US Marshals Custodial
YEARS
1953 1983
Opened
7
20
You Have Work,
We have Workers................... 9
From A Barn
To Businesses ......... 10 & 11
YEARS
YEARS
Dale Rogers Training Center
Shop For A Cause............... 6
2013
Happy Trails......................... 15
Connect With DRTC...... 16
Oklahoma Impact
At A Glance
TRAINING CENTER
35
At a Glance
81
•Award-winning, entrepreneurial
non-profit serving individuals with
disabilities since 1953.
44
20
9
40
•Named in honor of Dale Evans Rogers,
wife of Roy Rogers and “Queen of the
Cowboys”.
2
31
15
27
8
29
10
24
19
6
13
18
16
17
21
5
283
•Oldest, largest and most innovative
community vocational training and
employment center in the Southwest.
82
23
377
25
22
177
30
44
1
11
4
26
Locations Served
81
7
183
•Trains, serves or employs more than
1200 teens and adults each year.
3
40
12
14
28
35
DRTC Offices
•Self-generates 83% of its total revenue.
•Individuals placed in the community or
in-house programs earned more than
$5.5 million in wages last year.
•Through programs offered at DRTC,
individuals gain confidence to become
working, taxpaying citizens – 82%
of programs and services are in the
community.
Serving Oklahomans In 29 Locations!
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Altus
Bethany
Blanchard
Chandler
Chickasha
6. Choctaw
7. Duncan
8. Edmond
9. El Reno
10.Harrah
•Businesses include: Prism Place,
Wyman Frame & Supply, Prairie
Spices, and Papa Murphy’s Pizza
franchise.
5
11.Lawton
12.McCloud
13.Midwest City
14.Moore
15.Mustang
16.Newcastle
17.Noble
18.Norman
19.Oklahoma City
20.Piedmont
21.Purcell
22.Seminole
23.Shawnee
24.Spencer
25.Tecumseh
26.Tipton
27.Tuttle
28.Walters
29.Warr Acres
30.Washington
31.Yukon
Shop For A Cause
At Dale Rogers Training Center’s Campus Gift Shop
N
ow you can SHOP at Dale
Rogers Training Center.
Our new gift shop features
all the advantages of onestop shopping for your framing, trophies, acrylic awards and Oklahoma
themed Prairie Spice gifts, including our Boot Kickin’ BBQ Set and
White Hat Southwest Dip Mix Set.
New ‘Fast Framing’ at our Wyman
Frame business gives you the option
to pick your price and get
quality, local framing in
5 days. Custom framing,
shadow boxes, engraving
and other specialty framing
options are also available at
this innovative retail frame
shop. See our
beautifully
designed
retail showroom and speak to our
Certified Professional Framer.
Prism Place, the one-stop award
shop, provides top of the line gifts,
plaques and awards. Custom-made
acrylic awards, manufactured by
Prism Place, provide rewarding jobs
for individuals at Dale Rogers Training Center. In business for 30 years,
Prism Place is also located in our new
retail area.
Give the gift of meaningful work for
people with disabilities with beautifully packaged gift sets, made in the
heart of Oklahoma. Custom blended by Cedar Hill Seasonings and
packaged by individuals at DRTC,
these MIO spice products are sure to
please. Other items in our new gift
shop include, “Embracing the Difference” note cards, featuring artwork
by 11 of our own individuals, and
holiday cards with original art. *
DRTC Gift Shop
* 405-813-9998
* www.DRTC.org/commerce
6
People With Disabilities Find Jobs!
D
erek doesn’t take anything
for granted. He is one of the
400 employees working at
the Service Work Projects.
A wide range of jobs are provided at
a variety of high-profile locations including, Tinker AFB, Altus AFB,
the Oklahoma City Federal Building,
Lockheed Martin, the Armed Forces Reserve Centers in Mustang and
Norman and the Mike Monroney
Aeronautical Center (Federal Aviation Administration). These jobs offer
highly competitive pay and benefits
while providing the opportunity to improve hard and soft work skills. People
with all types of disabilities are employed including those who are hearing impaired, individuals with autism,
mental illness, intellectual disabilities,
physical and medical disabilities.
Derek has always said he was working
hard to make sure his two boys went to
college. Derek, who has Cerbral Palsy
has been a cashier since 1992 at the
Tinker AFB Vanwey Dining Facility;
he recalls it was not always easy. After
being laid off from his cashiering job
at Sears with 10 years of experience,
it took more than three years for him
to find employment.
Service Work Projects
Many employees are hired at the Service Work Projects with little or no
resources for transportation, sustainable living arrangements, clothing,
medical care and/or insurance for
themselves and their family. Because
of their employment in the program,
employees are able to purchase cars,
rent apartments, buy homes and build
their savings. By providing the training and services necessary for people
with severe disabilities to remain in
stable employment, they are able to
access many of the things that others
take for granted. *
Derek B., Tinker Food Service
“It was very frustrating when I was
turned away because these were jobs
I was qualified for and I knew I could
do it, but they wouldn’t give me a
chance,” said Derek.
Today, Derek beams with pride because both of his sons are attending
the University of Oklahoma. “One
wants to be a pharmacist and the other a doctor. That sounds just fine to
me,” he said with a smile.
7
Derek is wearing a colorful vest
that has over 100 military patches on it. Some service men and
women give him their patch when
they retire.
Everyone Wins When You Hire
O
A Person With A Disability - Employment Services
klahoma employers partner
with Dale Rogers Training
Center to meet staffing
or diversity goals, gain tax
incentives and practice strong corporate citizenship. Employing motivated people with a track record
for longevity and dependability is a
win-win situation for everyone.
support for success, including additional training when needed.
Last year more than 168 employees found jobs in the community
through this successful program,
where matching jobs with skills is
what Dale Rogers Training Center
does best. DRTC clients have successfully maintained jobs in a myriad of industries including security,
food service, janitorial, retail, child
care, gaming and many more.*
Our award-winning program provides your business with a trained
Kayla G., Taco Bell
job coach to assist you in matching
your position to an employee. The
job coach will also provide training for your new employee, giving
them the smoothest transition possible into your workplace. From the
start, people with disabilities in the
DRTC program receive on going
Hire a person with a disabilAnthony L., Superior Security, Inc.
ity and find out what this
untapped employee resource
can do for your business.
8
Luke S., Grand Casino
You Have Work. We Have Workers
W
Done
When You Need It.
DALE ROGERS TRAINING CENTER
DALE ROGERS TRAINING CENTER
MOBILE WORKFORCE
by
ork can be completed
our skilled workforce of
more than 90 trained assemblers, packagers and
shrink wrappers at our main location.
Jobs can also be fulfilled by our Mobile Workforce at your worksite by
4-8 workers accompanied by a trained
DRTC supervisor and transportation. Either way, Dale Rogers Training Center can meet your contract
or sub-contracting needs with great
workers like Chris.
Special Services &
Programs Supported
By United Way
MOBILE WORKFORCE
YOU HAVE WORK. WE HAVE WORKERS!
YOU HAVE WORK. WE HAVE WORKERS!
YOUR
YOUR
COMPANY
4-8
WORKERS
4-8
WORKERS
It’s all about YOUR
COMPANY
needs! YOUR product,
It’s
all about atYOUR
assembled
YOUR
needs!
YOUR
product,
location,
with OUR
assembled
workers. at YOUR
location, with OUR
workers.
With our trained
SUPERVISOR &
With our trained
TRANSPORTATION
SUPERVISOR
&
at YOUR location.
TRANSPORTATION
at YOUR location.
YOUR
WORK
YOUR
WORK
Done the way you need!
5
DAYS
A WEEK
5
DAYS
A WEEK
Done the way you need!
PER PIECE
RATE
PER
PIECE
Commitment to
always be there!
Commitment
We NEVERto
always
be there!
call in sick!
We NEVER
call in sick!
RATE
Guaranteed product
QUALITY with a
Guaranteed
competitive product
per piece rate!
QUALITY
with a
Workers’ compensation
competitive
per piece
benefits provided
at rate!
Workers’
no cost tocompensation
YOU!
benefits provided at
no cost to YOU!
SAVE
TIME &
SAVE
MONEY
TIME
&
MONEY
405-946-2113 x403
405-946-2113 x403
*Camp Tumbleweed
*Special Needs Program
*Transportation
*Adult After Care
*Rehabilitation
If you need a reliable, dependable and
motivated workforce to complete assembly, packaging, fulfillment,
shrink wrapping, kit assembly or
sub-assembly work, consider making Dale Rogers Training Center a
business partner. Contact us for a free,
no obligation quote at (405) 9462113 x403.*
$$
For ten years, Chris has worked on
the Mobile Workforce team at Pelco
Products, an Edmond-based company, assembling kits that are sent to
50 states and 14 countries. The Pelco Mobile Workforce crew is credited
with an astoundingly low error rate
and are valued members of the Pelco
team, according to Phil Parduhn, the
co-founder of Pelco Products.
9
“We never make a mistake, and we’re
cautious with our work. We make our
work right everytime,” says Chris with
a proud smile.
Chris H., Pelco
From a Barn to Businesses
1981
by 1985
by 1989
•Post-its invented
•Ronald Reagan is President
•Launch of the Columbia shuttle
•Sandra Day O’ Connor becomes
Supreme Court Justice
• Prince Charles and Diana marry
•Pac-Man craze
•FDA approves Nutrasweet
•First season of Miami Vice
•Movies: “Flashdance” and
“Big Chill”
• Sally Ride becomes 1st US American
woman astronaut in space
•Apple introduces the “Mac”
•Michael Jackson’s “Thriller”
• First artificial heart transplant
•“Smurfs” the cartoon debuts
•Fights for Cabbage Patch dolls
•VCRs are introduced
•“We are the World” is recorded
•Movies: “Top Gun” and “Aliens”
•“Black Monday” market crash
•CDs outsell vinyl records
•Challenger Shuttle explodes
•Nintendo games hit U.S.
•Oliver North scandal
•Milli Vanilli caught lip syncing
•Oprah Winfrey show national
•Cosby Show rules
•Movies: “Fatal Attraction” and
“Lethal Weapon”
• 54 clients/students served
• 3 public school special education
classes
• Staff of 8 + 3 teachers
• No state funding for people with
disabilities
• Some daycare and 2 vans
• Utah/Meek a dirt road
• Remains of old Meek buildings at
23rd and Utah
• 3 subcontracts
• Clients earn 90¢/day
• $90,000 in services provided
• 90 clients/students served
• Staff of 21
• Prism Place is born
• Utah Drive is paved
• Lawn maintenance contracts begin
with OSBI
• A new wing and dock are added
onto the workshop
• SBA loan for equipment
• Executive Director chairs committee for first legislative money to
workshops
• Sally Goldman donates cookbook
proceeds
• Supported Employment concept
introduced
• $592,385 in services provided
• 135 clients served/employed
• Staff of 30
• Subcontracts greatly expanded
• Supported Employment programs
expanded
• Yard Crew program includes
landscaping
• School-to-Work Transition with
five public schools
• Time capsule buried at Dale Rogers’
33rd anniversary
• School-age classes return to public
schools
• $775,900 in services provided
10
By end of 2006
•Murrah Building bombed
•Dolly the sheep cloned
•Princess Diana dies
•Clinton and Lewinsky affair
•MTV’s “Real World” is first
reality program
•Columbine school shooting
•Category-5 tornado in OKC
•TV: “Friends” and “Seinfeld”
• Movies: “Sleepless in Seattle” and
“Jurassic Park”
•Y2K scare
• September 11 tragedy/War on Terror
• Enron scandal
•Martha Stewart goes to prison
•Space Shuttle disintegrates
•Saddam Hussein captured
•Internet usage surpasses TV
•TV: “Survivor” and “Apprentice”
•Movies: “Harry Potter” and “Lord
of the Rings”
• Obama vs. Romney for President
• Black Monday, Economic Crisis,
Take Back Wallstreet
• iPhone, iPad, Facebook, Amazon
• Haiti & Japan hit by tsunamis &
earthquake
• Oprah signs off, Joe Pa fired & OKC THUNDER ROARS
• Goodbye Michael, Whitney,
Steve & Osama
• TV: Reality Shows, Showtime, HBO, Sci Fi, A&E, FX, AMC
• Movies: Harry Potter, Twilight &
Hunger Games series
• Will & Kate wed and start a family
• 340 clients served/employed
• Staff and non-disabled: 85
• NISH Food Service contract begins at Tinker AFB
• Tinker wins two Gold Plate awards
for Food Services
• Awarded Federal Food Service
contract at Altus AFB
• Special Needs Program is created
for multi-handicapped
• Old Meek house and garage
demolished
• New building at 23rd and Utah
• Prism Place sells nationally
• Enclaves of 6 individuals work in 3
community companies
• Individuals earn $1 million in wages
• $4.1 million in services provided
• 929 clients served/employed
• Staff and non-disabled: 178
• 2003 – 50th anniversary
• Awarded industrial custodial
contracts at Tinker
• Waivered services expanded
• Employment Services office
opened in Lawton
• Camp Tumbleweed built
• Custodial contracts at new Federal
Building, Post Office and
Courthouse in OKC
• Award winning OETA video
• 2800 sq. ft. warehouse built
• Individuals earn $3.4 million
• $14 million in services provided
• 1300 people with disabilities served
by 200 support staff
• Custodial contract for FAA
(50 Jobs) – 2012
• Custodial at Armed Forces Reserve
Centers Norman/Mustang – 2011
• NEW: Job Readiness Classes,
Support Services, Job Placement &
Ticket to Work Programs
• NEW: Wyman Framing, Online Store
& Prairie Spices, Papa Murphy’s
• Nationally accredited by CARF
and completion of Standards
for Excellence
• Added: Workforce Skills Training
Building, purchase of building on
corner, Serenity Court & new wing
for Fiscal
• Individuals’ earnings grew from $3
million to $5.9 million over 4 years
• $16 million dollar budget
• Awarded Admin Custodial
(170 buildings) contract at
Tinker - January 2006
• Contract with Lockheed Martin
begins – April 2006
11
2007-2012
From a Barn to Businesses
By end of 1990s
It’s How You Ride the Trail That Counts
O
The Legacy
nce upon a time, long before
Twitter, paintball or video
games, a Saturday meant
using your hard earned
nickels and dimes to go downtown
for the Saturday matinées.
pieces of fan mail a week, his huge
merchandising empire, second only
to Walt Disney, or may have seen
Roy and his trusty palomino horse,
Trigger, on the front page of Life
magazine in 1943.
If you were going to see one of the
29 Roy Rogers westerns featuring
Dale Evans, you knew you were
going to leave that theatre with the
sense that good always trumps evil
and that even cowboys liked a good
sing along. A few years later, you
could see them on TV every single
week on Sunday evenings, and you’d
sing along at the end of the show as
they wished you “Happy Trails”.
What many of you may not know
about Roy and Dale is the many
civic and humanitarian awards they
received for their commitment to
sick and handicapped children. In
fact, four of the nine Rogers children were adopted. Most of their
tour stops and performances included visits to children in hospitals or
orphanages. They walked the walk as
well. Their visits included the fledgling Dale Rogers Training Center in
Oklahoma City.
After trying out a couple of different stage names, Roy settled on the
last name Rogers, after his hero
Will Rogers, and Roy, which meant
“king”. This new “King of the Cowboys” star was ready to stand boot to
boot with Oklahoma’s Gene Autry,
who was America’s most watched
singing cowboy.
Most people who remember Roy and
Dale might remember his 20,000
In 1953, Dale’s first book Angel
Unaware hit the bookshelves. It was
a national bestseller and was later
translated into dozens of languages.
The book was her story of the short,
but meaningful life of Dale and
Roy’s daughter, Robin Elizabeth,
who was born with Down syndrome
in 1950. In two short years, Robin influenced the Rogers family and
12
gave them perspective on life as well
as peace and solace. In her book,
Dale was able to share this positive
perception with families around the
globe.
In 1953, DRTC was established by
Oklahoma City parents as a school
for children with Down syndrome
and other developmental disabilities. Dale Rogers book, Angel Unaware, was one of the driving forces
for the development of the agency
and created the programs and services that were not yet available to
young Robin or children like her.*
Continuing the Legacy
Reality Exceeds Expectations
W
hen the Roy Rogers and
Dale Evans Museum
closed and most of the collection was auctioned, we
sent a “Hail Mary” letter
to Roy Rogers Jr. (Dusty). In June 2009,
the trustees of the museum crated up and
sent the artifacts from Robin’s Corner,
the museum display of Robin Rogers,
and our legacy came full circle.
When Dusty was asked why
they chose our
agency, he said
“because that’s what my mother would
have wanted”.
This exhibit and the additional Schmitz
collection features more than 50 items,
such as a satin coverlet from Robin’s
layette, the original oil pastel painting
of Robin and the red miniature piano mentioned in Dale Rogers’ popular
book, Angel Unaware. The memorabilia
collection displays vintage figurines of
the “King of the Cowboys and
the Queen of the West” on their
13
iconic horses Trigger and Buttermilk,
original Dale Evans comic books and a
vintage Roy Rogers and Trigger, childsize guitar.
*The exhibit will be open to the public at
2501 N. Utah, MonFri 8am-5pm.
If It Was Easy Everyone Would Do It
From The Director
I
t took us two and a half
years to finally reach our
Grand Opening for our first
Papa Murphy’s pizza franchise. By the fourth time we
had to move the opening date back,
staff and I were frustrated. We had
been doing full food service at Tinker Air Force Base for over twenty
years; how hard could making pizza
be?!@# The answer was, if you are
going to do it right, it’s “HARD”! In
a stroke of brilliance someone said to
me, “Connie, if it were easy, everyone
would do it”! Light bulb! Of course
they were right! Dale Rogers is the
first non-profit to own a Papa Murphy’s franchise in the United States,
and we have a history of being innovative and willing to go out-of-thebox to try new ideas that meet our
mission to train and employ people
with disabilities. We do it to allow our
folks to be more independent and to
become tax-paying Oklahomans, regardless of how challenging or inconvenient a new program may be for us
as staff and management.
Our first federal contact at Tinker
Air Force Base started back in 1993.
We knew nothing about food service
and had almost no financial resources, but our start-up team and Board
were determined. General Richard
Burpee (Ret.) was the Post Commander at the time. He has a family
member with a disability and was willing to let agencies like DRTC compete for contracts and prove that we
could be competitive. DRTC won an
award our very first year; next came
custodial contracts at Tinker AFB
and more food service at Altus AFB.
The real victory though was the increase in dignity and self-worth for
the folks who were newly employed
with these great jobs and benefits.
Dale Rogers first business started in
the eighties, Prism Place, our awards
and trophy business; others include
our Gift Shop, featuring our Prairie
Spice Line, Wyman, our framing
company, and Papa Murphy’s. The
challenge is integrating these different business models into our culture; all these business models have
different regulations and a myriad of
different licensing, software, payrolls,
training requirements, surveys, different contract years, etc.
14
DRTC has struggled because we
never take the beaten path. We do,
however, need better marketing and
MORE CUSTOMERS so we can
continue to increase our self-sufficiency! As this population continues
to age, more geriatric and specialized
programs will be needed.
Connie Thrash McGoodwin, M.Ed.
Executive Director
“Thanks to dedicated parents,
satisfied customers, community
advocates and a trusting partnership between DRTC’s professional staff and the Board of Directors, there are no limitations
to how far we can evolve.”
Be not forgetful to entertain
strangers: for thereby some
have entertained angels
unawares. - Hebrews 13:2
I
f Robin was born today, she
and her family would have so
many choices and options for
her future. What a joy it is to
see the opportunities for training and
jobs this agency provides for people
with disabilities and their families, to
watch the pride and sense of accomplishment earned the old fashioned
way and best of all, to know the good
guy still wins at DRTC.
We thank the Rogers family and
Schmitz for the trust they have in
Dale Rogers Training Center and
our pledge to be caring stewards of
their gifts as we continue the legacy
of Robin Elizabeth Rogers and the
impact of Dale Evans Rogers’ book
Angel Unaware.*
Happy Trails To You!
15
Connect with DRTC
a
Shop For a Cause
Gift Shop Hours: Monday - Friday from 8am to 5pm
* 405-813-9998 * www.DRTC.org/commerce
Prism Place * 405-946-1079 * www.PrismPlace.org
Wyman Frame * 405-437-5659 * www.WymanFrame.org
Papa Murphy’s Pizza u 405-601-6869 u www.facebook.com/PapaMurphysDRTC
23rd & Flynn (Between May & Penn) u Mon-Thur: 11am-8pm u Fri-Sat: 11am-9pm u Sun: 11am-8pm
Tell a friend, neighbor or relative
about all of our programs, services and businesses!
Training
Programs
Camp Tumbleweed
Special Needs
Transportation
Adult After Hours
Transition
Rehabilitation
Services
Assembly
Packaging
Fulfillment
Shrink Wrapping
Kit Assembly
Sub Assembly
Find Us! Like Us! Follow Us!
Visit us at www.drtc.org for updates on our
mission or to shop for our products online!
Your support is appreciated!
2501 N. Utah • Oklahoma City, OK 73107 • 405-946-4489 • www.DRTC.org