Mon. Dec 23rd, 2024
Temple establishes a Digital Equity Center to provide computer access, education to surrounding neighborhoods

Final week, Temple College celebrated the opening of its new Digital Fairness Heart, a hub to supply entry to expertise, assist desk assist and digital literacy training to Philadelphians within the communities surrounding the college.

Jonathan Latko, the chief director for enterprise administration at Temple mentioned the middle has been up and operating for some time now, however they thought an occasion throughout Philly Tech Week might be a chance to mark its opening and announce a dedication from Dell Applied sciences that can assist digital navigation initiatives.

The middle’s house is contained in the Alternatives for Workforce Management (OWL) Hub at 1915 N. eleventh Road, close to Berks road simply off Temple’s Foremost Campus. The constructing, as soon as the previous Norris Properties Group Heart owned by Philadelphia Housing Authority (PHA), was repurposed final yr into a middle for workforce growth. Latko mentioned the org went with the area as a result of they wished a spot that individuals in the neighborhood already felt comfy.

The Digital Fairness Heart stems from Temple’s Pc Recycling Heart, the place for a few years, Latko and pupil interns would refurbish surplus electronics and provides them again to college students, college and employees. When the COVID-19 pandemic began, Latko mentioned he gathered and gave out about 300 laptops for college students and school to make use of when the college went on-line. It left a bunch of desktop computer systems sitting on the college with nobody to make use of them, he mentioned.

Because the pandemic stretched on, Latko reached out to Shirley Moy, the chief director of the North Philadelphia Workforce Initiative, about serving to residents within the space acquire entry to computer systems and the web. They’ve been capable of give out about 100 machines to group members, and commenced amassing funding from numerous tech and metropolis organizations, like Comcast, the Mayor’s Workplace, and native non-profits to be able to broaden that entry for group members.

“And so the last word aim was, if we might assist machines, get them into the group, give them slightly little bit of digital onboarding,” Latko mentioned. “Now, these nonprofits type of can plug into this digital fairness dialog. We type of provide a manner for nonprofits in North Philadelphia … to plug into our mannequin.”

The Heart retains normal enterprise hours from 9 a.m. to five p.m. Monday by way of Friday, and is an area to collaborate about totally different digital fairness initiatives, run courses and provide workspace for its group companions. Presently, the middle has a instructing lab, an workplace and a bigger flex/a number of goal area, wherein Temple Tech for Philly, a pc refurbishment area, operates. With the grant from Dell, the org can be growing a group assist desk and digital navigator workplace for group members.

The companies the org supplies and its plan has morphed over time based mostly on what assets can be found what wants the group could have, Latko mentioned. The Digital Fairness Heart is presently run by one full-time worker and a handful of interns from numerous group applications. Latko mentioned they’re slated to rent a second full-time worker with the grant from Dell that can run the group assist desk and digital navigator program.

In attendance final Wednesday throughout Temple’s Digital Fairness Day had been companions of the brand new Heart, together with Comcast, Dell, nonprofit group Philly Group Wi-fi (PCW), the Charles Library and PHLConnectEd. A number of the middle’s companions assist present funding, however others are non-profits who have already got connections and perception into the wants of the group. The Digital Fairness Hub helps them get tech assets into the fingers of people that want it, and final Wednesday’s occasion was the possibility to publicize it.

“So it was as a lot for them to community with tables and tents and music,” Latko mentioned. “Along with bulletins that, hey, ‘we’ve this middle. We need to companion, have strategic partnerships in the neighborhood to bridge this digital divide.’”

To this point the middle has given out 200 machines to members of the group and hopes to get 600 extra out over the course of this yr. For Latko, digital fairness doesn’t imply one particular factor — it appears to be like totally different for every individual and every nonprofit.

Latko gave native companion, Philly Group Wi-fi, for instance. He’s considered one of PCW’s advisors because the nonprofit works to construct out a free mesh web community out there to folks within the Norris Sq. neighborhood. When PCW comes throughout a family that doesn’t have a pc, they could refer them to the Digital Fairness Heart, for a tool, onboarding class and digital training.

“We’re constructing the aircraft as we’re flying it. We’re hacking away at it. And we’re gonna make errors. It’s not good,” Latko mentioned. “We’re gonna hold hacking away if folks’ve received good ideas and concepts. We’re attempting to determine that out. We’re gonna experiment. We’re gonna fail. We’re gonna study from that failure. We’re gonna continue to grow.”


Sarah Huffman is an upcoming 2022-2023 corps member for Report for America, an initiative of The Groundtruth Challenge that pairs younger journalists with native newsrooms. This place is supported by the Lenfest Institute for Journalism.”

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