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Kids & Family

Mercer County Nonprofit Expands North, Providing Jobs and Hope

We Make, Autism at Work, A nonprofit located in Pennington, NJ and serving Mercer and surrounding counties, expanded north this year.

Mercer County, NJ—Bettaway Supply Chain Services has completed is first year partnering with local Pennington nonprofit We Make - Autism at Work operating a structured hiring, training, and skills development program providing meaningful jobs and career opportunities for adults on the autism spectrum.

Bettaway is a family-owned supply chain services company that provides freight trucking, warehousing, inventory management, product packing, order fulfillment and pallet supply, and logistics management services for beverage and consumer products companies through New Jersey and the northeast U.S. and is led by John Vaccaro.

Founded in 2017, We Make is a nonprofit skills development and workforce management organization dedicated to supporting persons with autism, an autism spectrum disorder or IDD. With the creation of its model program, We Make supports resource and purpose-designs to enable companies to establish and sustain meaningful workplace opportunities to help autistic adults succeed on their own in compatible work environments. We Make has coined the term “Industry Inclusion,” and is a leader and consultant to companies wanting to diversify their work force. At the same time, the program provides participating businesses with reliable, skilled, high-performing employees at a cost typically less than that for workers hired from traditional temporary agencies.

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“This has been a major success for We Make and Bettaway, proving that with the right training and support, we can create pathways to meaningful, successful employment, skills development and inclusion for individuals with IDD, delivering real results in real industries,” said Moe Siddiqu, We Make’s Executive Director. “For these individuals, a job is so much more than a job,” he emphasized. “Being a recognized, respected, and contributing member of a workplace fosters confidence, builds self-worth, and brings joy and a feeling of pride at being an accepted part of the community delivering something of value to the business and its customers. This is a huge win for the IDD community and serves as a template for other businesses to participate as well.”

The We Make program builds upon Bettaway’s experience providing career opportunities for autistic adults. The company previously worked with the Rutgers Center for Adult Autism Services, providing jobs during the pandemic for the program’s participants. “That experience provided the proof points and the incentive for us to do more,” noted Vaccaro, whose son, Frankie, is on the autism spectrum.

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The program proved the worth of investing in individuals with IDD, as well as the bottom line impact their performance had on the business. At Bettaway, specific jobs were designed which involved packing assortments of various beverage products into cases and then moving them into a shrink-wrapping line. Over the course of the year, We Make participants produced tens of thousands of cases, fulfilled with over 99 percent accuracy, and exceeding productivity goals set for the project.

“From a business perspective, it was a remarkably smooth, sustainable performance,” Vaccaro stated, “But the real value for me and our team was watching how these individuals grew into the jobs, embraced them, improved, developed a camaraderie with the team and really found a joy that wasn’t there before. You could see it in their faces. There was a pride and a sense of accomplishment that you could see and feel.”

“That endorsed our expectation that our teams can deliver the precision and attention to detail to ensure orders are fulfilled efficiently and accurately,” noted Siddiqu. “We provide businesses with the opportunity to support, with action, the inclusion of workers from the autistic adult community.”

This Sunday, November 5th, We Make will host their 4th Annual Harvest Fun-Raiser as a way to boost funding to provide more employment opportunities for persons with autism or a related diagnosis. With about 1 in 68 children in the U.S. having been identified with an Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), the lack of programs and sustainable work situations for adults with autism will only become more acute, explained Tony Lesenskyj, We Make’s Founder and Board Chairman. “When your child has autism, you look at the world in a whole different way.”

Moe stated, "Harvest is a great party and a chance to bring awareness to our mission at We Make! We hope the community will come celebrate our successes so we can continue to provide jobs and meaningful employment to our community!" The Harvest Event will be hosted at the We Make Pennington facility located at 109 Route 31 North.

To purchase tickets to this year's Harvest event click here: WE MAKE HARVEST 2023 TICKETS

Click here to make a donation to We Make: WE MAKE'S DONATION PAGE

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