Richard Asztalos Looks Back on Over 40 years with The Guild

When Richard Asztalos graduated from Boston University with a liberal arts degree in 1975, he had his sights set on applying to law school. In need of a job in the interim, he responded to an ad and landed a gig as a special education teacher. It didn’t take long for him to fall in love with the human services field. It’s been nearly five decades since then, and he hasn’t looked back.

Reflections from “What’s causing the boarding crisis in hospitals?” Op-Ed

Earlier this month, Guild CEO Amy C. Sousa wrote an op-ed in Commonwealth Magazine, What’s causing the boarding crisis in hospitals? The article looks at the crisis of psychiatric boarding and its direct connection to the dire need for residential services for people with complex developmental and behavioral health needs.

Guild Employees Attend Massachusetts Direct Support Professionals Conference

Last month, four Guild employees attended the Massachusetts Direct Support Professionals conference in Falmouth. The event, which took place on October 24th and 25th, honored the essential work of direct support staff across the state while providing networking and professional development opportunities.


The conference’s plenary speakers included:

From ‘Me’ to ‘We’: Engaging in Healthy Relationships with Elevatus Training

Each Wednesday night last fall, a group of six Guild adult residents cleared out their schedules and logged onto Zoom at 5 p.m. sharp. They would spend the next hour in lively discussion talking about relationships with employers, family members, romantic partners, and themselves. The group was part of The Guild’s Healthy Relationships course, designed by Elevatus Training.

Ask the Expert: ‘Nonspeaking’ vs. ‘Nonverbal’ and Why Language Matters

The language we use to describe ourselves and others has lasting implications. Language preferences are personal, especially as terminology evolves within the disability movement to accurately reflect individuals’ unique strengths and challenges. Recently, some have shifted away from the term ‘nonverbal’ in favor of ‘nonspeaking’ to describe individuals who use modalities other than speech to communicate.

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