3 minute read

Arthur Blank’s stuttering center

Go All Out! Buy 1 Bundtlet, Get 1 Free

Sandy Springs 5975 Roswell Rd, Suite A-103 Sandy Springs, GA 30328 (404) 236-2114

HOURS OF OPERATION Mon-Sat: 9:30am - 6:00pm Sun: Closed

Expires 1/31/22. Limit one (1) coupon per guest. Coupon must be presented at time of purchase. Valid only at the Nothing Bundt Cakes bakery(ies) listed. Valid only on baked goods; not valid on retail items. Must be claimed in bakery during normal business hours. Not valid for online orders. Not valid with any other offer. Discounts applied before tax. Coupon may not be reproduced, transferred or sold. Internet distribution strictly prohibited. No cash value.

For Bakery Use Only

A Place Where You Belong

Spend the day or evening on the Town!

Stop by for a bite to eat or use curbside and delivery services!

DINING

(Winter 2022) (Spring 2022)

186c 355c 358c Yellowc

BROOKHAVEN

Arthur Blank expands stuttering treatment center to Brookhaven

BY AMY WENK

Seven-year-old Judah Toure had a message to share about stuttering.

“It’s not a bad thing,” Toure said Dec. 14 during the grand opening of the first satellite location of The Arthur M. Blank Center for Stuttering Education and Research.

The center today sits in Brookhaven’s Executive Park. A permanent location is planned for the Arthur M. Blank Hospital at Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, which is under construction on North Druid Hills Road and set to open in 2025.

Blank, owner of the Atlanta Falcons and Atlanta United who runs a foundation based in Buckhead, first established the stuttering center at The University of Texas at Austin in 2020 with a $20 million gift. Now, he is expanding the reach of the center with the new satellite location, which was fueled by an additional $12.25 million grant from his foundation.

For Blank, it’s personal. He stuttered as a child.

“I just had a very supportive mother who told me time and time again that ‘What you say is important. What you think is important,’” Blank said during the December event.

Blank used President Joe Biden as an example of a person who stutters and is working to normalize the condition.

“We all have dreams in life. We all

want to live life to our fullest,” Blank said. “To me, the true beauty of the work is that it unlocks each one of these lives to be the very best at whoever they want to be … If you want to be president of the United States, you can be the president of the United States. You can be whatever you choose to be.” Blank’s center offers services free of charge. It works to advance effective At right, Judah Toure with Kia Johnson, associate director of The treatments and proArthur M. Blank Center for Stuttering Education and Research. gramming for stuttering, as well as create a pipeline of clinicians and researchers. It also wants to remove the stigma around stuttering, giving kids the confidence to pursue their dreams. “Stuttering is not something you should be ashamed of,” said Kia Johnson, associate director of the Atlanta satellite. Johnson has a 9-year-old child who stutters. “It does not hold you back.” Dr. Courtney Byrd leads the center, Arthur Blanks speaks with kids during the Dec. 14 event. described as a “whole-person therapeutic approach that helps children, teenagers and adults grow as confident, effective communicators.” The Atlanta center looks to help 500 people in its first year. The hope is to open more satellite centers across the country. Byrd’s intensive treatment program “Camp Dream. Speak. Live.” is also planned for countries including Nigeria, South Africa, Italy and Belgium, among several others.

This article is from: