After graduating from high school, Gabi Angelini had a tough time finding a job because of Down syndrome. “They just kept denying her – even a smoothie bar at a fitness center,” said her mother, Mary. “They were like, ‘No, she’d be too slow.’ “She wasn’t understanding – what’s the deal here?” Mary Angelini planned to open a coffee shop where her daughter could work but then the pandemic hit. Already committed to some storage space at the Loading Dock in Raleigh, she thought, Now what? But Murphy’s Naturals was growing and needed help with packaging and labeling, and Gabi Angelini and others with disabilities were soon at work. Mary Angelini, who earlier spent 12 years as an accountant at IBM (NYSE: IBM) and has six children, left her job at a local Catholic school to devote her time to the effort. Now their company, Gabi’s – Powered By Special Abilities , has 45 employees and has added clients such as Peter Millar, the Duke University Divinity School and more. “Autistic people are perfectionists,” said Mary Angelini. The company had $500,000 in revenue and might hit $750,000 this year. Mary Angelini said her daughter “is excited” by the success […]
