May 17, 2012
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The Chance to Connect

The Evansville Regional Autism Community unites local organizations and families dealing with the challenges of autism
Kip Farmer’s teenage son Jackson, who has autism, inspired his father to help create a community resource for other families.

When Jackson Farmer was born in August 1994, first-time parents Kip and Maria Farmer were elated. But months before they celebrated Jackson’s first birthday, the couple couldn’t silence the nagging thought that something was wrong with their son.

Red-faced, the baby would cry for hours as his parents strapped him into a car seat and drove around Evansville, trying to calm him. He was angry, anxious, and inconsolable, and the Farmers didn’t know why.

At age 2, Jackson was diagnosed with autism, a developmental disorder that affects his ability to communicate and interact with other people. The news blindsided his parents, who knew little about autism and virtually nothing about raising a child with the disorder. “We didn’t know where to go,” says Kip Farmer, an Evansville interior designer who owns the firm Kip Farmer Design. “We were knocking on so many doors at a time when we still were reeling from the diagnosis.”

The couple felt isolated and overwhelmed as they called hospitals, schools, and nonprofit organizations seeking help for Jackson. More than a decade later, Farmer reasons that maybe, if they could have browsed one website or called one phone number to learn about regional autism resources, the learning curve may have been that much gentler.

The desire to create a one-stop resource for families dealing with autism led to the formation of the Evansville Regional Autism Coalition (ERAC), founded during the national Autism Awareness Month in April 2008. The organization recently changed the word “Coalition” to “Community,” reflecting a shift from a professional association to a group that welcomes families. This October, ERAC prepares to host its first major event: the Autism, Asperger’s and Social Skills Conference, featuring professor and animal scientist Temple Grandin and autism expert Jed Baker.

“(Autism) is an emerging crisis,” says Farmer. “The time is now.” (The Farmers also have two boys, ages 13 and 10, who do not have autism; Evansville Living profiled the family when Jackson was 8 in “Especially Needed,” January/February 2003). When Jackson was diagnosed 14 years ago, the Farmers learned their son was one in 2,000 children with the developmental disability. Now, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimate that autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) affect one in 110 children, and they’re four times more likely to occur in boys than in girls.

ASDs range from Asperger’s syndrome, characterized by social awkwardness and fixations on narrow topics, to severe autism, often marked by behavioral problems and a complete inability to communicate. There is no cure, and no one knows what causes the disorder.

Before ERAC, “there wasn’t anything happening for autism in a big way,” Farmer says. He and three community-minded friends — Cindi Beeler, Lisa Jones, and Patricia Weinzapfel — wanted to change that, and together they launched the coalition. Its purpose is to educate families and the community about autism spectrum disorders while connecting them with resources — whether it’s a speech therapist, a patient photographer willing to take family photos, or another local family facing autism. They brought various skills to the task: “Cindi’s the consummate event planner and organizer. Lisa is a great researcher and communicator,” says Farmer. “And Patricia is the extrovert, the PR link — not just to the media but to the public.”

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