Archive for July, 2024

Access Trax Expands Opportunities for Outdoor Fun for the Disabled

Tuesday, July 23rd, 2024

Many disabled people that have to use walkers or wheelchairs are deprived of experiencing outdoor activities they used to enjoy, such as going to the beach, going fishing at lakes, or other outdoor activities.  A new American-made product produced by Access Trax is restoring their ability to enjoy outdoor activities. Access Trax specializes in outdoor portable pathway solutions for wheelchair and handicap access for sand, gravel, grass, and more. Their premier product is the Trax modular pathway.

I learned about this product when I had lunch recently with a long-time friend, Kathy Roberts.  Access Trax was co-founded by her niece, Kelly Twichel.  Kathy said that Kelly wanted to help disabled people because her mother (Kathy’s sister) had a stroke when Kelly was only 12 and then spent the rest of her life being disabled before she died in 2020. Kathy connected me with Kelly, and I had the pleasure of interviewing her virtually last Friday.

Kelly said “While I was a student at the University of St. Augustine for Health Sciences in San Marcos in 2016, Eric Packard and I were tasked to create an assistive technology device as part of our course work to become occupational therapists. Our inspiration came from a desire to assist local adaptive surfers in crossing the sand to the water’s edge while maintaining dignity and independence.

We tested numerous prototypes in cooperation with the local adaptive surfing community before I graduated with a degree in Occupational Therapy in 2017. After we had achieved a successful design, we launched the company in early 2018. Our mission is for everyone to access the outdoors.”

She said that they got some good news coverage in 2019 and 2020 from local news outlets that helped increase their sales (see featured news coverage here). 

She added. “We were on the verge of having to shut our doors in early 2020 and were saved by winning the highly competitive Federal Express Small Business Grant Contest and receiving a grant of $50,000. I was interviewed by Shawn Styles of CBS 8 San Diego News after winning the grant.  This grant helped us to be able to nearly triple our sales in 2021 over 2020. All together, we have won over $100,000 in different grants since 2017, and we have been able to increase our sales every year.”

Kelly explained, “Besides selling our Access Trax mobile panels to individuals and families for personal use, we are also selling them to the National Park Service, City and County Park and Recreation Departments, and the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. Our latest customers are movie crews using the panels for outdoor film productions.”

Some of the benefits for these entities are:

  • Stable walkway for ADA compliance
  • Durable and reliable for years
  • Quick and easy set up and maintenance
  • Stake down panels for permanence  
  • Ability to customize the pathway

I asked Kelly if she had any patents, and she replied, “Eric and I were granted a design patent in 2021 and we have three trademarks.  I recently applied for a design trademark on our logo. Our portable wheelchair access mats are durable, lightweight, foldable for use on terrain like sand, gravel, dirt, mulch, grass, and snow.  They work with mobility devices and heavy equipment of up 1,000s of pounds.”

In answer to my question about manufacturing, she said, “No, we buy the raw material from a company in Florida and have a company in San Diego size the panels and add our logo. Then, my employees and I assemble the panels into our standard kits and ship them to customers using Federal Express.”

I asked if Eric is still involved in the day-to-day operations, and she said, “No, he is a silent partner now.”

Kelly said, “We give back to the community in three main ways. First, we sponsor outdoor adaptive sports events so participants can get the access routes they need over sand and grass.  We have been an in-kind sponsor of events for the U.S. Open Adaptive Surfing Championships since 2017.

Second, I travel around the country to speak on subjects such as the value of adaptive sports and recreation, assistive technology, universal design, and how to become a social impact problem-solver. I share information based on my background as an occupational therapist and what I’ve learned with Access Trax.

Third, I joined a small group of San Diego-based nonprofits and businesses focused on empowering people in the community who use wheelchairs for mobility. The group coined their name the “Mobility Community Access Partners” or MCAP for short. Our first goal was to host an event in San Diego to bring people together. In June 2022 we hosted the first ever Adaptive Sports, Recreation and Resource Fair in San Diego. The event included adaptive sports such as wheelchair basketball, adaptive fitness, kayaking, boccia ball, and adaptive over-the-line.”

Kelly added, “Access Trax was a co-host of the June 3rd 2023 event “San Diego Adaptive Sports, Recreation & Resource Fair”. We also co-hosted it again last month on June 29th, 2024 at the same place (recap video).”

I told her that I have being doing what I could to first save and then rebuild American manufacturing since my first book, Can American Manufacturing be Saved? Why we should and how we can” was published in 2009.  I’ve been using my God-given talents to write two more books since then, the latest being Rebuild Manufacturing – the Key to American Prosperity

I told her that besides writing hundreds of blog articles, I have been giving back by helping and mentoring inventors since 2014 as a board member for the San Diego Inventors Forum (SDIF)and was also a mentor for the CONNECT Springboard program for startup companies in San Diego from 2015 – 2018.   

Kelly, said, “I went through CONNECT ALL at the Jacobs Center in 2019, which used to be partly supported by CONNECT. It was a business accelerator that supported local San Diego small businesses with an emphasis on minority and low-to-moderate income founders. When I went through the accelerator, it was a free, six-month program with mentorship, learning modules, and access to a beautiful brand-new coworking space. The program ran from 2019 until 2024 and each cohort was about 4 months long with about 10-15 founders each. Unfortunately, this program recently lost funding and the building was purchased by San Ysidro Healthcare so we lost our co-working space. But I will forever be grateful for that accelerator and the folks who managed it.”

Kelly later emailed me that the former CONNECT ALL is now The Jacobs Center’s Business Accelerator program  The website says it “is the region’s first low to moderate-income and diversity-focused business accelerator program, guiding startups that want to grow rapidly with all the support they need to be successful. A partnership between the City of San Diego, CONNECT w/ San Diego Venture Group, and the Jacobs Center, the Business Accelerator was founded to provide participants with mentors, free co-working space, and guidance on how to scale their businesses.”

I told her that It’s very important to support companies like hers to restore our domestic manufacturing base. SDIF didn’t get to have any in-person meetings for three years because we lost our meeting location at AMN Healthcare’s conference center during the COVID pandemic lock downs, and Zoom meetings didn’t work out.  Finally, we found a new location to resume meeting in person last September, so we just had our 11th meeting on July 11th. I told her that our group supports the national organization, US Inventors, that is working to restore our broken patent system. Our group currently meets the second Thursday of the month at the law offices of Knobbe Martens in the Carmel Valley area of San Diego.  and invited her to our next meeting on August 8th. I thanked her for her time and wished her continued success for her much-needed product for disabled people.

The Manufacturing Institute FAME Initiative Continues to Grow

Tuesday, July 2nd, 2024

The 2024 Deloitte and The Manufacturing Institute sixth manufacturing talent study revealed that the “US manufacturing industry is experiencing strong growth. Manufacturing employment has surpassed pre-pandemic levels and stands close to 13 million as of January 2024.”

The study noted that “The net need for new employees in manufacturing could be around 3.8 million between 2024 and 2033. And, around half of these open jobs (1.9 million) could remain unfilled if manufacturers are not able to address the skills gap and the applicant gap.”

Since my previous article about The Manufacturing Institute’s FAME (Federation for Advanced Manufacturing Education) in June 2022, FAME has expanded to “more than 40 chapters in 16 states—and more forming all the time.” according to MI President and Executive Director Carolyn Lee.  “FAME is training thousands of global best technicians nationwide and the number of program participants is on the rise,” she said. “This is good news for manufacturing, which sorely needs talent to continue to make the many, many things people use every day.”

The Manufacturing Institute, the National Association of Manufacturers 501(c)3 nonprofit workforce development and education affiliate, is seeing significant growth in its FAME initiative, an earn-while-you-learn training program with an emphasis on technical skills, lean training, and professional behaviors development.

FAME was created by Toyota more than a decade ago and moved to be under the management of The Manufacturing Institute in 2019.  The website states, FAME “provides global-best workforce development through strong technical training, integration of manufacturing core competencies, intensive professional practices and intentional hands-on experience to build the future of the modern manufacturing.”

I recently reconnected with Tony Davis, National Director for FAME for The Manufacturing Institute, whom I had interviewed in 2022.  He said that FAME has expanded from 13 states to 16 states as shown below:

The latest news on the website highlighted the following chapters:

Northwest Louisiana FAME Chapter Celebrates First Graduating Class On May 10, the first graduates of the Northwest Louisiana Chapter of FAME.  “The Northwest Louisiana Chapter of FAME was created in May 2022 by a group of area manufacturers, BPCC and the North Louisiana Economic Partnership (NLEP) to meet a critical need for skilled maintenance technicians faced by most manufacturing and industrial employers.”

The Kentucky Federation for Advanced Manufacturing Education (KY FAME) Cumberlands Chapter graduated its eighth class Thursday evening, celebrating 21 students who have earned their degrees while working for a regional sponsoring manufacturer.

“John Wood Community College (JWCC), the Great River Economic Development Foundation (GREDF), DOT Foods, Gardner Denver (Ingersoll Rand), General Mills, The Knapheide Manufacturing Company, and Titan Wheel launched Illinois’ first Federation for Advanced Manufacturing Education (FAME) chapter today. (January 11, 2024)

Washtenaw Community College’s FAME program — the Michigan Federation for Advanced Manufacturing Education, a work-and-learn program between the college and advanced manufacturing employers, has been taking steps to help the state change its trajectory. There are several FAME chapters across the nation; Washtenaw Community College started the first Michigan chapter in January (2023).

Tony said there is a brand new chapter in Greensboro, NC, the North Carolina Federation for Advanced Manufacturing Education (NC FAME) Program, which “partners students with industry while they take classes at Guilford Technical Community College. The goal is for students to gain valuable employment experience with manufacturing leaders while also completing their associate degree.”

I told Tony that I had visited Greensboro, NC in August 2017 as the guest of the Greensboror Chamber of Commerce to visit manufacturers and write blog articles.  I also visited the community college located near the airport, Guilford Technical Community College, that provided training for aircraft and airline-related jobs.  He said that this is one of the colleges partnering with the NC FAME.

I asked if the Northwest Indiana Manufacturers network ever found the education provider they were seeking that was mentioned on the FAME website news of April 3, 2023:  He said that Ivy Tech Community College in Valparaiso, IN agreed to be a partner for a second FAME chapter.  I later found information on the Ivy Tech Community College website that reported that eleven high school students were accepted to start the FAME program at Ivy Tech Fort Wayne’s Flex Lab within The Steel Dynamics, Inc. Keith E. Busse Technology Center.

Tony told me that Kentucky has the most FAME chapters at 12 chapters, and Alabama has the second most at 8 chapters—and with two more starting.  He said that Indiana and Texas now have five chapters, but they are exploring starting a chapter in the northwest part of the Houston metro.  He said, “Unfortunately, most states only have one or two chapters.” 

I noticed that there are no chapters west of Colorado, and asked if there was any plan to add a chapter in California. And he said, “We are exploring Fresno.” 

I asked that the obstacle was to forming more FAME chapters, and he said “Lack of awareness of the FAME program is the biggest obstacle.  We have to rely on word-of-mouth referrals.” 

I gave him some suggestions for increasing the awareness of FAME through the Manufacturing Extension Partnerships and the National Association of Colleges & Employers (NACE).

Tony noted that his team has been building systems and improving processes constantly to make it easier for local manufacturers of all sizes to utilize the FAME model. “Visiting our website [FAME-USA.com] is a great way to learn more about the training programs, the footprint, and how to get connected to start or join a chapter,” adds Tony.

I told him that the next time I reconnected with him that the number of FAME chapters will have dramatically increased because the need for skilled manufacturing workers is so great.