| What type of services
does Zenith Services provide?
Zenith Services serves people with disabilities
and their families, providing vocational and day activities.
We establish community connections, teach community integration
skills and offer a positive atmosphere that builds self esteem
and decision-making abilities. We offer a number of volunteer
opportunities, career opportunities and social integration
opportunities to the individuals we serve.
Whom does Zenith Services
serve?
Zenith Services has experience serving people
with a variety of needs and diagnoses. These include adults
with a range of developmental disabilities and related conditions,
mental health diagnosis, dual diagnosis, hearing and/or visual
impaired, physically disabled, chemically dependent, and challenging
behaviors. We provide services to individuals who may live
with family members, in a group home or a foster home setting.
What are Zenith Services’ responsibilities?
Zenith Services is responsible for the monitoring
and implementation of vocational services for a consumer.
This includes hiring and training staff, scheduling, and program
implementation. We provide transportation to and from the
consumers’ residence to the Zenith Services center or
to their work sites. We provide job coaching for those employed
in the community.
Do the people in Zenith Services live in
a group home or with their families?
Zenith Services serves individuals who live
a variety of settings. Some live with their family members,
while others live in a group home or in a foster home setting.
What happens when a staff person calls in
sick?
Zenith Services is open from 7:00 AM to 7:00
PM, Monday through Friday. We are closed on major holidays
and weekends. If a staff person calls in sick they are to
find their own replacement or the Program Manager will find
a replacement or cover the shift if need be.
Do you provide transportation for the consumer?
Yes, this is one of the benefits of our program.
Zenith Services provides all of the transportation. Unlike
other day programs, we do not contract with another agency
to provide transportation. The staff members who work at the
Zenith Services center and do job coaching also provide the
transportation. This is one less transition that consumers
have to make. All staff members who drive are screened to
ensure that they possess proper insurance and have a current
driver’s license. Their personal vehicles must past
a Vehicle Safety Checklist.
What types of jobs to the consumer’s
at Zenith Services have?
Zenith Services staff members complete a job
assessment form with the individuals if they are interested
in community employment. This assessment tells us what their
interests are and areas of employment they would like to work
in. We have a job developer who contacts employers and sets
up interviews and helps the consumers’ complete job
applications. Currently, we have individuals employed doing
cleaning services, office support, and working in local stores
and businesses.
What is a job coach?
A job coach is a staff person which goes into
the individual’s place of employment with them and assists
them to ensure they understand what is expected of them to
do at their job. The job coach is not there to do the consumer’s
work for them, but they are to assist them if the consumer
has any questions and to be a support while they are working
in the community. An individual may need a job coach the entire
time they are at work or some may just need a job coach to
check in occasionally to monitor their work.
Can an individual attend Zenith Services
if there are not interested in seeking employment, but is
just looking for a recreational day program?
We provide recreational day services as well.
We have a number of individuals who are either retired or
not interested in working. We provide weekly crafts and community
outings to museums, restaurants, libraries, zoos and other
places. We also work in the Zenith Services center, doing
sensory activities, playing games, as well as developing reading
and math skills, money skills and communication skills. It
is up to the individual’s interdisciplinary team to
determine the focus on the program. We have many participants
that have a balanced day consisting of community activities,
activities in the center, and work.
What types of goals do people work on and
how are they determined?
The consumer has the primary role in determining
their own goals. Each consumer has a Team, which usually consists
of a county case manager, a family member or their guardian
and/or legal representative, a residential program representative,
and a Zenith Services representative. These individuals’
role is to assist the consumer in making choices about which
goals they will work on during the year. If needs change during
the year or the goals prove to be ineffective, revisions are
made. A consumer and/or their team can elect to participate
in Essential Lifestyle Planning (ELP) or Planning Alternative
Tomorrows with Hope (PATH) planning. These are team processes
that help determine outcomes areas for the consumer.
What kind of community integration does
Zenith Services do with the people it serves?
Zenith Services strives to ensure that the consumers
whom we serve are integrated into the community through support
of community job placement, recreational groups and outings,
community education, and participation in clubs and various
community organizations, according to each individual’s
interest. When we first establish services with an individual,
we ask them about their interests and decide together how
those interests can be made a part of that person’s
life. Our staff members are then available to assist as necessary
so that the individuals can do the activities of their choice.
Activities include regularly scheduled and one time events,
and may include going to the movies, bowling, dances, community
education classes, connection with peer groups, the Mall of
America, Valleyfair, Minnesota State Fair, and so on.
Can families and friends visit consumers
at Zenith Services and are there specific visiting times?
Yes, families and friends are welcomed to visit
the Zenith Services center at anytime. While there are no
established visiting times, we do encourage that a potential
visitor call ahead to determine if the person they would like
to visit will be there and not out in the community working
or on an activity.
What if a consumer wants to take a day off,
go on a vacation, or is ill?
Yes, a consumer may take a day off, go on a
vacation, or call in sick. We ask that the consumer or a family
member/provider contact us, or leave a message on our voice
mail, as soon as they know that consumer will not be attending.
We will adjust the transportation routes accordingly. A consumer
may be paid for this time if their individual employer offers
paid vacation or sick time.
If the family member gives an individual
a direction, can the staff members support and follow through
with it?
Yes, assuming that the family member is the
guardian and the direction would not violate any Minnesota
Vulnerable Adult / Maltreatment of a Minor or Rule 40 laws.
Guardians often ask staff members to support a direction given
to an individual and provide assistance to ensure the consumer
is able to comply with that direction.
What is the interview process for your
employees?
All of our employees complete an application
and interview with a Human Resources representative as well
as a second interview with the Program Manager and potential
consumers with whom the employee may work. Human Resources
also conducts a series of background checks including reviewing
an employees criminal and driving records, as well as references
from one’s former employers.
What training do Zenith Services employees
receive?
Zenith Services requires that employees receive
training in the Minnesota Vulnerable Adult / Maltreatment
of Minors Act, the Minnesota Data Practices Act, Universal
Precautions, Medication Administration, Basic First Aid and
CPR, Minnesota Rule 40, Boundaries, Community Integration,
Programming, Resident Rights, and any other information specific
to the people with whom they will be working, including training
on seizures, ADHD, autism, and sign language.
Why does Zenith Services have training requirements?
Our training requirements are established by
the State of Minnesota, under Minnesota Rule 245B. In addition,
Zenith Services strives to exceed the state’s requirements,
by providing our employees with training of an exceptional
quality covering a wide range of topics related to meeting
the needs of those we serve
Why are there so many
rules and regulations?
The rules and regulations were established by the State of
Minnesota and are in place to ensure quality services as well
as to ensure the health and safety of the vulnerable children
and adults that we serve.
What can a family do if they want Zenith’s
services but Zenith is not currently a provider in their county?
If Zenith Services is not currently contracted
to provide services in your county, you may contact your county
Social Worker to request this as well as contact us to notify
us of your interest. We often begin providing services in
a county as a result of a parent or consumer request or we
can request host county concurrence which will allow us to
provide the service on a case by case basis.
Are the participants of Zenith paid employees
of Zenith?
Zenith Services consumers who have employment
as a part of their plan are employed by community employers,
such as Target, Walmart, Perkins, and so on. We also offer
an enclave (group work situation) through Orion Associates,
a sister company to Zenith. The Zenith participants that work
in the enclave are employed directly by Orion Associates.
How does Zenith find jobs for their participants?
Zenith Services contracts with Pinnacle Services
who provides Job Development Services. The Job Developer meets
with the participant and completes a job assessment. Based
on that assessment, the job developer contacts community employers
for a job that will best fit the participant. The Job Developer
also does “job carving,” a concept in which one
or more pieces of a job are completed by the participant.
For example, the participant may be hired to deliver mail
delivery at an office or shred paper at a bank, but they are
not required to complete any other duties.
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