Home Business Hiring those with disabilities isn’t charity, it’s good business

Hiring those with disabilities isn’t charity, it’s good business

WILLING AND ABLE: Bet-R Neighborhood Market has in recent years been increasingly hiring people with disabilities, including, from front, David Mills, Stephen Wascom, Molly Boulden, Emily Dunlap, Charles Reed and Nathan Kirshner. (Courtesy Cliff Boulden)

Any time Bet-R Neighborhood Market owner Cliff Boulden has a job opening, he tries to hire a person with an intellectual or developmental disability—not as a sign of sympathy, but because he sees …


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