Hartwood Makes A House A Home

Improving Quality of Life Matters Most

The 21st Annual Hartwood Open Golf Tournament is Thursday, June 27th at Westfields Golf Course


We are excited to celebrate our 21st Annual Hartwood Open Golf Tournament on Thursday, June 27th at 2:00pm at Westfields Golf Course. We are expecting many Washington Redskins alumni as well current Commanders to attend, plus a couple more surprises as our live and silent auction items are the best in the area.

Want to support us in this magnificent, fun event? Limited player foursomes can be submitted immediately. Additionally, sponsorship opportunities are still available, and we would love to partner with your organization in our event.

Please contact AJ Oskuie at 703-981-4911 or via email at ajoskuie@hartwoodfoundation.com for more details.

We are proud to be celebrating our 21st Annual Golf Tournament and are grateful for your support!

If you cannot attend, but would like to support Hartwood Foundation, you can do so here:

DONATE HERE

Volunteers build a patio cover at a group home on Long Pine Drive in North Springfield.

More pictures from the Rebuilding Together renovations at two group homes

Last month, we featured the two renovation projects from the Rebuilding Together organization that benefitted the homes in North Springfield. Hartwood Foundation is grateful for funding provided by Navy Federal Credit Union to implement these renovations with our partners at Rebuilding Together. We wanted to share more pictures of the renovations for you to enjoy.

As a recap of the projects, nine men with developmental disabilities living in two group homes in the North Springfield area got a nice surprise when they returned from outings Saturday evening.

While they were gone, volunteers from several Annandale churches spent the day fixing up their homes.

The annual event is carried out by a partnership of the Annandale Christian Community for Action (ACCA) and the Arlington-Fairfax-Falls Church affiliate of Rebuilding Together. ACCA sponsors two homes a year.

Sixteen people from John Calvin Presbyterian Church, Ravensworth Baptist Church, and Providence Presbyterian Church worked on a home on Long Pine Drive.

The kitchen and living room get a new coat of paint.

The work included painting the interior, putting a roof for the backyard patio, and building planter boxes. Volunteers from Queen of Apostles Catholic Church brought lunch for the workers.

On a second project, another volunteer team – from Annandale United Methodist Church and St. Barnabas’ Episcopal Church – fixed up a group home on Southampton Drive in Kings Park.

The church members painted and extended the carport, lined the driveway with gravel, painted the fence, and power-washed and stained the deck. Lincolnia United Methodist Church supplied lunch.

Volunteers fix up the exterior of this house in Kings Park.

The two homes are among the 17 group homes for developmentally and intellectually disabled adults operated by the Hartwood Foundation. Some of the occupants also have physical disabilities. Fifteen of the homes are in Fairfax County; the other two are in Henrico County outside Richmond.

The average age of occupants is mid-50s, says Hartwood Executive Director Sean McGinnis. Each home is overseen by a staff member 24/7.

ACCA donates funds to Rebuilding Together, which is used for paint, lumber, and other supplies, says Laurie Lewis of John Calvin Presbyterian Church. The Hartwood Foundation works with ACCA to determine what needs to be done and what the volunteers can handle.


This article was featured in Annandale Today on April 29, 2024.

New Law Requires Airlines To Better Assist Travelers With Disabilities


People with disabilities are poised to see big improvements when traveling by air thanks to a host of changes tucked inside a massive reauthorization of federal aviation programs.

The measure signed by President Joe Biden this month includes new requirements for airline workers assisting wheelchair users, accessibility upgrades at airports and enforcement of rules protecting the rights of flyers with disabilities.

The law mandates that airline workers be trained before assisting passengers boarding with an aisle chair or before storing wheelchairs and other mobility devices. It also requires airline websites, apps and kiosks to be accessible and specifies that the Federal Aviation Administration must reconsider airplane evacuation procedures to ensure that all passengers can deplane quickly in an emergency.

The legislation gives people with disabilities the option to request seating accommodations on aircraft so that they can be with a companion, have more leg room or be near a restroom, for example. Further, lawmakers took steps to ensure that people know they can reserve onboard wheelchairs.

All medium and large airports will be required to install or maintain at least one universal changing station — designed to allow caregivers to assist people of all sizes who cannot use the restroom — in every terminal and to post signage about the location of these changing stations. The law also establishes a new pilot program providing grants to airports to upgrade accessibility.

Meanwhile, the legislation mandates that the secretary of transportation submit a “strategic roadmap” to Congress within a year on the feasibility of restraining wheelchairs on commercial airliners. If the idea is deemed doable, the secretary would have two years to produce a report studying the economic and financial implications of seating arrangements that could accommodate wheelchairs in flight.

The measure “represents the most significant effort by Congress in over a decade to make flying safer, easier and more accessible for passengers with disabilities,” said U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill., who uses a wheelchair and who championed many of the disability provisions.

Steve Cullen, board chair of All Wheels Up, a nonprofit that has funded research looking at including wheelchairs on aircraft, said it’s significant that Congress specified that training for workers assisting with aisle chairs must instruct employees on “how to effectively communicate with, and take instruction from, the passenger.”

“When traveling by air, passengers who use wheelchairs assume personal risks above that of the average flyer due largely to the need to physically transfer,” Cullen said. “To protect passengers’ personal health, safety and dignity, airport and airline personnel who assist wheelchair users need to be trained on standards of care and best practices, which includes listening to the passenger with a disability on what works for their wellbeing.”


The article was featured in Disability Scoop on May 24th, 2024 by Michael Diamante

As always, we greatly appreciate any support that our subscribers can provide as these donations directly impact our residents every day!

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3702 Pender Dr. Suite 410
Fairfax, VA 22030
Phone: 703-273-0939
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