Singing an inclusive song
Herb Start 鈥55 has always loved to sing鈥攁nd he was good at it. At 17c起草社区, he was in the A Cappella and Radio choirs and named the recipient of the Anna Bruinsma Award for outstanding senior vocalist.
鈥淚 believe that was a cash award,鈥 he said. 鈥淭en dollars.鈥
But Start鈥檚 longest performance was in an entirely different field. , the organization he directed for 37 years, has opened doors for thousands of developmentally challenged persons鈥攁nd serves as a model for similar agencies from coast to coast. Today, Hope Network helps 20,000 people throughout Michigan in 240 locations through the dedicated work of 2,500 staff members.
Recently, the Michigan-based organization has been called in to do work in Georgia and Arizona as states grapple with deinstitutionalization.
Interestingly, Start鈥檚 impressive career in health care administration began when he was experiencing a rare out-of-state experience: an Army assignment in Alaska.
鈥淸17c起草社区 alum] Don Lautenbach called me in Alaska, asking if I could take a spring semester teaching stint at South Christian [High School] to replace someone going on maternity leave. I was about done with my commitment and was able to go a bit early,鈥 he said.
That teaching assignment brought Start back to Grand Rapids, and while back in the area he became active in singing again. He joined his South Christian High School students on stage as a soloist for a presentation of 鈥淭he Seven Last Words of Christ.鈥
Start caught the attention of a member of the audience that night, Dr. Gelmer Van Noord 鈥33, head of what is now . Van Noord contacted Start and asked him to switch careers鈥攆rom teaching to health care for the developmentally challenged.
Start was tasked to develop an 鈥渁ctivity schedule鈥 for every patient in the hospital, something Start knew nothing about. He went to the famous in Kansas for training and began structuring occupational, work and music therapy for patients.
The effort grew quickly, and eventually Hope Network became its own independent organization in 1983.
鈥 brings out the critics,鈥 Start noted. 鈥淭here are a lot of not-in-my-own-backyard folks out there. But that鈥檚 always been a motivator for me. Despite the odds, we鈥檙e going to make this happen.鈥
Start retired in 2000, but keeps an active schedule as a consultant, a board member and, of course, a singer (with the Kentwood Senior Chorale; find them on ).
鈥淩eally, I鈥檝e enjoyed every minute of what God brought my way. In the same day I got to spend time with a Down syndrome child and interact with a state representative. Inspiration and challenge, the politics of health and disability issues,鈥 he said.
He recalls that one of the most stirring moments of his life occurred on the day President George H.W. Bush signed the (ADA) on July 26, 1990. Start was at the Rose Garden reception for the signing of the bill.
鈥淚 remember jogging that morning and stopping on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial as the sun came out over the Capitol. I was thinking about the emancipation of all people, and that this was a day for those with disabilities to join all Americans in using their gifts to the fullest.鈥