TALLADEGA — The Defense Logistics Agency has awarded Alabama Institute for the Deaf and Blind, doing business as Alabama Industries for the Blind, a $29.3 million contract for men’s neckties.
The institute is a longtime client for the Department of Defense in providing various apparel needs.
The five-year contract period runs until May 18, 2030, and will provide neckties for the Army, Air Force, Marine Corps, Space Force and Coast Guard.
The contracting agency is the Defense Logistics Agency Troop Support, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Serving since 1858
The Alabama Institute for Deaf and Blind (AIDB) is the world’s most comprehensive education, rehabilitation and service program serving individuals of all ages who are deaf, blind, deafblind and multi-disabled.
Founded in 1858 by a young medical doctor who wanted to educate his deaf brother, AIDB now serves more than 31,000 infants, toddlers, children, adults and seniors with hearing and vision loss throughout Alabama each year.
In Talladega, AIDB has six campuses:
• Alabama School for the Deaf
• Alabama School for the Blind
• Alabama Industries for the Blind
• Helen Keller School
• E.H. Gentry Facility
• Marianna Greene Henry Special Equestrian Arena
AIDB also has 10 regional centers located in Birmingham, Decatur, Dothan, Huntsville, Mobile, Montgomery, Opelika, Shoals, Talladega and Tuscaloosa that extend the program offerings throughout the state.
Humble beginnings
In 1932, Mattie Smith, a teacher for the Alabama School for the Blind (ASB), was the first to envision blind employment opportunities for Alabamians. Utilizing borrowed and used sewing machines, Smith, along with five ASB graduates, made potholders, pillowcases and sheets.
Smith and her former students then sold these products through the Federated Women’s Clubs of Alabama. Thus, the Alabama Industries for the Blind (AIB) began the journey that has lasted for more than 90 years.
In 1938, Congress passed the Wagner-O’Day Act. This law directed federal agencies to purchase products from non-profit industries that employ people who are blind or those with multiple disabilities.
Amended in 1971 as the Javits-Wagner-O’Day (JWOD) Act, now called the AbilityOne Program, it then provided for the purchase of both products and services and included federal purchasing from industries serving people with other severe disabilities.
Since 1932, AIB has steadily grown in products and personnel and is one of the top-five largest industries for the blind in the United States. Today, nearly 300 people are employed by AIB, including those at the main facility in Talladega and our Birmingham location.
AIB provides services and employment opportunities by operating Base Supply Centers located at Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville; Moody AFB at Valdosta, GA; Fort Novosel at Fort Novosel; Warner Robins AFB at Robins, GA; and Anniston Army Depot.

Source and photo credits: The Alabama Institute for Deaf and Blind website.
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