The Chicago Journal

How Friends and Neighbors Can Better Assist People in the Disability Community

While diversity remains at the forefront of today’s conversation, people with disabilities are woefully underrepresented in the workforce. According to the US Department of Labor, only 21.3% of individuals with disabilities were employed in 2022, while people without disabilities enjoyed a 65.4% employment rate.

“Disability is the most common minority group ,” says Josh Fields, co-founder and CEO of The Next Step Programs. “At their jobs, people with disabilities face unnavigable workplaces, inaccessible technology, and tasks fraught with communication barriers. They want to work, and their friends and neighbors can be the key to helping them overcome the obstacles in their way.”

The first step to an inclusive future is awareness

Before people with disabilities can be included in meaningful work, their community members need to learn how to make workplaces inclusive. Awareness is the key to this change. Learning about a person’s needs is not difficult; it simply takes a little bit of time and the willingness to ask questions.

Today, Josh Fields leads his non-profit to help empower young people with disabilities to find their next step after graduation. His quest for inclusivity didn’t start with a business plan, though. It began with a shock of awareness in his high school cafeteria.

When Fields was 16, he set down his lunch tray and quizzed his classmates about future plans. Friends rattled off ideas for upcoming college tours and careers, but Meghan Kensil — a friend of his with Down Syndrome — remained quiet. Fields pushed her for details about her dream job but only received a shrug in response. 

“That was the day I realized some of my friends didn’t have the same chances and opportunities ahead of them,” says Fields. “As a person who liked to dream big, I was devastated that they couldn’t share in the excitement about graduation.”

Fields came to understand that he could only assist his friends with disabilities by educating himself. Learning what it was like to actually have a  disability prompted him to press for inclusive environments, and witnessing the discrimination and stigma faced by the disability community motivated him and his co-founder, Richard Price to push for positive change. While statistics and studies were useful, he garnered the most meaningful insight through friendship, curiosity, and real-life conversation. 

“Many people are simply not aware of the day-to-day challenges people with disabilities face,” comments Fields. “Until they ask questions about how people access employment, find transportation, and navigate public spaces, they just won’t understand. But by educating themselves and learning more about the disability community, friends and neighbors can become advocates in creating inclusive and supportive environments.”

Awareness leads to actions that create inclusive environments

During the summer of his junior year in high school, Fields volunteered at a camp for young adults with Down Syndrome, where he met his future co-founder Ricky Price. At camp, Fields mentioned his ongoing frustration with the lack of post-graduation opportunities for his high-school friends with disabilities and found that Price shared the same concerns for his brother who had been diagnosed with neurofibromatosis.

“Ricky and I launched the Next Step Programs to give people with disabilities access to exciting opportunities and a sense of belonging in their communities,” Fields recalls. “We provide a wide range of services and support to those with disabilities, including vocational training, employment services, community integration programs, and life skills coaching. Through these programs, we empower individuals with disabilities to live more independent and fulfilling lives and help them achieve their goals and aspirations.”

While not everyone will create a non-profit like Fields, everyone in the community has a part to play in assisting their friends, family members, and neighbors with disabilities. For example, employers play a role by defying discrimination, learning about their employees, and being open to their needs. National employment studies reveal that people with disabilities have equal or higher performance ratings, better retention rates, and less absenteeism than their peers without disabilities. 

Most workplaces are designed for able-bodied individuals, but the supports that change this are readily available and typically cost little more than creativity and compassion. When managers become part of the solution, they improve the lives of their own employees; and when they spread their success with other hiring managers, they can help improve lives around the world.

At the same time, neighbors and friends can become involved by learning about people’s individual needs and reaching out to offer support. For instance, one person may offer to provide transportation to appointments or social events, while another may volunteer time at a local disability organization, and still, another may simply offer a friendly ear. In time, these people all become voices advocating for an inclusive community with better public transportation and disability-friendly practices in local businesses.

“When friends and neighbors take time to learn about the specific needs of people with disabilities, they become allies,” says Fields. “First comes awareness, followed by the simple actions that make real differences in the community. By working together and supporting one another, we can collaborate to create a more inclusive and supportive society for everyone — regardless of their ability or disability.”

AeroFlexx: Giving Consumers What They Want in Packaging

When it comes to customer expectations, some things never change. Consumers are looking for something that will save them time and money while still delivering quality, meaning they want products that are easy to use, efficient, functional, and reliable.

Other things, however, do change. In recent years, for instance, consumers have made a significant shift toward sustainability in their purchasing patterns and now expect products to be designed and produced in a way that minimizes the impact on the environment. AeroFlexx, a global leader in sustainable liquid packaging, is meeting that expectation.

AeroFlexx CEO Andrew Meyer recently spoke with New York Weekly about the shift in consumer expectations and the need for brands to take note, saying, “With 43% of US consumers saying that the environmental impact affects their purchasing decisions, it is more important than ever that companies make environmentally sound decisions.”

AeroFlexx gives companies what they need to make those sound decisions and boost their commitment to sustainability. Its innovative AeroFlexx Pak is an entirely new form of liquid packaging that combines the positive attributes of rigid and flexible packaging while eliminating the negatives. Thanks to AeroFlexx, brands no longer need to choose between value, the consumer, or doing good for the environment.

Recently, Meyer spoke with The Los Angeles Tribune and stated, “By adopting the AeroFlexx Pak, companies can accelerate progress toward their environmental, social, and governance goals. For organizations that have fallen behind their targets, our packaging also offers a quick and easy way to get back on track.”

Boosting sustainability with the AeroFlexx Pak

The AeroFlexx Pak was designed to bring unprecedented sustainability benefits to liquid packaging, starting with the manufacturing process. It reduces upfront plastic use by utilizing 50% recycled content and requires 70% less plastic to produce than other liquid packaging. Combined, these design elements eliminate up to 85% of the virgin plastic needed to produce a traditional rigid bottle.

Once produced, the AeroFlexx Pak can also be shipped in a more sustainable way. Its flat design requires only 10% of the shipping space of traditional rigid bottles, and its ISTA 6-Amazon rating allows it to be packaged without additional cushioning. These innovations allow the Pak to be shipped with fewer trucks, which means fewer carbon emissions, empowering brands that adopt them to achieve new levels of sustainability as they scale.

Meyer recently spoke with The San Francisco Post about the shipping benefits the AeroFlexx Pak delivers, saying, “Unfilled, [the] AeroFlexx Pak can be shipped flat so fewer ships and trucks are needed along the supply chain. And, once filled, they don’t break or spill. They don’t even need additional packaging, which saves more space as well as cardboard and those annoying styrofoam peanuts.”

AeroFlexx also makes it easy for consumers to contribute to sustainability efforts by making Paks easy to recycle, as they can be curbside recycled anywhere plastic bottles are accepted. They have also earned Interseroh’s “Made for Recycling” seal, which designates that both the product’s materials and design are optimized for recycling.

As companies and consumers embrace AeroFlexx Paks, they will support a shift that promises to protect the environment by reducing waste and conserving resources. The 2.5 billion products AeroFlexx projects it will produce over the next five years would reduce waste by 980.8 million pounds and reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 256.8 million pounds. In addition, the production and distribution of the Paks will save 599.4 million kilowatt-hours of energy and 65.3 million gallons of gas compared to what is needed for an equivalent amount of traditional packages.

Enhancing the consumer experience with the AeroFlexx Pak

When AeroFlexx set out to disrupt the liquids packaging industry, it committed to doing much more than just delivering sustainability — it also set its sights on developing a better overall product for users. The AeroFlexx Pak achieved that goal, providing consumers with a package they love to use.

The AeroFlexx Pak incorporates a one-step easy-tear opening that streamlines access while doing away with plastic waste. Its self-sealing valve allows liquids to be dispensed with precision and ease, requiring only the squeeze of one hand. Between uses, the Pak’s self-sealing valve ensures that liquids stay in the bottle, eliminating waste and the clean-up required after a spill.

​​Meyer recently shared with New York Weekly his thoughts on how convenient the award-winning Pak is for users, saying, “The design of AeroFlexx packaging eliminates consumer frustration. Once consumers tear open the Pak, they just need to grab and squeeze it to dispense, with the unique value design preventing any unwanted excess from escaping.”

The latest studies show that consumers are more committed than ever to supporting sustainability. A recent survey found that 72% of shoppers are actively buying more environmentally-friendly products than they were five years ago, while 81% say they plan to spend even more over the next five years on those products. As consumers look to companies to provide those products, they will find AeroFlexx leading the way.

“We have an unwavering obligation to society and future generations to do our part without compromise,” says Meyer. “Companies that are using AeroFlexx proprietary liquid packaging will achieve or perhaps accelerate their sustainability goals and like us, benefit the most as being the leaders in the industry.”