- November 22, 2024
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Vincent’s Clubhouse held its first Autism Awareness Festival and Resource Fair on Saturday, April 22.
The fair took place at Central Park at Town Center from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. featuring booths from autism resource vendors, community resources and businesses, food vendors and local shops.
“What’s special about our festival is that there are three of our retail vendors who are small business owners with autism,” Vincent’s Clubhouse co-founder Erica Flores said. Vincent’s Clubhouse, a local nonprofit, offers summer camps for kids with autism and other sensory disorders.
The Flagler County Sheriff’s Office’s Mobile Command Station, the Flagler County Fire Department and the Bunnell Police Department made special appearances.
There were performances by the Vincent’s Clubhouse Flagler Cheer Team — whose members are all cheerleaders from the Special Olympics — the FunCoast Down Syndrome Association’s DownRight Dancers, and Xenia’s Dance Along.
The organization held a ceremony at noon to thank Flagler County Schools Exceptional Student Education teachers for their work for special needs children.
Flores and her husband, Hector, had founded Vincent’s Clubhouse in 2016 after their own son, Vincent, was unable to attend summer camp because general summer camps wouldn’t provide the extra care and attention a person with autism needs, Erica Flores said.
By the summer of 2017, Vincent’s Clubhouse hosted its first summer camp for children with disabilities, Flores said.
“We started out with summer camps for children with autism and special needs, but from there we have grown exponentially because of all of the need in the county,” Erica Flores said. “So, we started with a small group of parents and educators who were invested in trying to provide more services here in the county and we grew from there.”
Since 2017, Vincent’s Clubhouse organization has hosted events for holidays and summer, programs for children and adults with special disabilities, programs for parents with children that have special disabilities, and support groups, Flores said.