About
the Kentucky Association of the Deaf
The Kentucky Association of the
Deaf (KAD) is an affiliate member of the
National Association of the Deaf (NAD).
NAD was founded in 1880 and is the oldest
and largest organization of the deaf in
the United States with more than 22,000
members. The NAD along with other 50 state
associations of the deaf and KAD work to
improve the lifestyle and opportunities
of the deaf and hard of hearing people.
The Kentucky Association of the
Deaf (KAD) was founded in 1891 by a group
of alumni of the Kentucky School for the
Deaf who were concerned about the deaf being
excluded from the decision- and making-
processes affecting their own destinies.
The Kentucky Association of the
Deaf, Inc. (KAD) is organized exclusively
for charitable and educational purposes,
with the right to receive contributions
and to distribute them to organizations
which qualify as exempt under Section 501
(c) (3) of the Internal Revenue of 1954
or any provisions. The specific purposes
of the Corporation is for mutual assistance
and encouragement of deaf people and to
secure moral, intellectual and social improvement
of their educational and vocational opportunities.
Also it promotes measures to improve conditions
and standing in society at large of deaf
persons in Kentucky.
The Kentucky Association of the
Deaf, Inc. (KAD) has been working closely
with the Kentucky Commission on the Deaf
and Hard of Hearing (KCDHH), the Kentucky
School for the Deaf Alumni Association (KSDAA)
and the Kentucky Registry of Interpreters
for the Deaf (KYRID).
In December of 2005, KAD launched
the new KyDeaf.org as a one-stop resource
site for the Kentucky Deaf Community.
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