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Former Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor offers her free, civics curriculum program Justice O'Connor said she decided to develop the game after seeing a growing need for more civic engagement from students throughout the country.
Rules for civility and decent behavior ascribed to George Washington by the editors of Foundation Magazine.
CLINTON ANNOUNCES INITIATIVE TO CLOSE DIGITAL DIVIDE
Issue: Digital Divide
At a White House East Room ceremony yesterday, President Clinton
announced a "National Call to Action" to bridge the Digital Divide
in the United States. President Clinton proposed two major goals
during the event:
1) Giving students better access to "21st century learning tools"
by connecting every classroom to the Internet, improving access to
multimedia computers and expanding technology literacy
opportunities to teachers; and
2) Connecting every household to the Internet, expanding community
technology center programs and improving technology training
opportunities for adults. The President also announced the details
of his 3rd "New Markets Tour," which will commence April 17 and
18. During the tour he will examine digital divide issues by
visiting a computer center in East Palo Alto, Ca; a Navajo
reservation in Shiprock, NM; and the Comdex computer conference in
Chicago, IL. Ten days following the two-day tour, Clinton will
also examine broadband deployment issues in rural North Carolina.
See Also:
CONNECTING AMERICAN FAMILIES
[
SOURCE: NTIA
]
In his Fiscal Year 2001 budget request, President Clinton has
proposed the creation of a new $50 million program to increase the
number of low-income families that have access to the Internet in
their homes. NTIA has posted a Fact Sheet on the Home Internet
Access Program, which it is calling "Connecting American
Families," to help answer some of the most frequently asked
questions.
[
SOURCE: San Jose Mercury News, AUTHOR: Jim Puzzanghera
]
Related articles:
http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/nm/19991209/wr/internet_divide_2.html
http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/nm/19991209/ts/internet_clinton_1.html
http://www.cnn.com/1999/ALLPOLITICS/stories/12/09/digital.divide.ap/
December 9, 1999
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT ON BRIDGING THE DIGITAL DIVIDE
The Rose Garden
THE PRESIDENT: I just thought we ought to come out here in the
brisk morning sunshine and wake up together. (Laughter.) I want to
thank the representatives here from all parts of the communication
industry, from the foundation world, from various civil rights and
other civic groups for being here, and coming in and giving me a
chance to make this statement, because I had intended to go to
Secretary Daley's conference today on bridging the digital divide,
and because I'm going to Worcester, I couldn't do that. So they
came in this morning and we had a visit. I want to thank them for
being here and for their commitment, and for all those who aren't
here, but are at the conference.
This conference is about closing the digital divide. And we have
worked hard on that for the last several years in very specific
contexts. Under the Vice President's leadership, we have worked to
make sure that eventually a digital divide will not deprive
business of the technology-savvy workers they need, and will not
hurt our educational systems today.
We started with the first NetDay in California, back in 1994, when
only 3 percent of our classrooms were wired and only 14 percent of
our schools were. And we've been working ever since. Now we know
that, through the public-private partnership that have been
established all over America, through the Telecommunications Act
and the e-rate, which the FCC set to make sure our poorest schools
could afford to be connected, we're now up over 50 percent of the
schools, from 3 percent, and over 80 percent of the classrooms,
from 14 percent, since 1994. And I think that's pretty good.
I'm very pleased by that, and we're on our way to meeting our goal
sometime next year of having all of our schools wired, and soon
after that, all of our classrooms wired. I want to thank the Vice
President and all the people in various industries who have
supported us and helped us in this regard.
But as Secretary Daley's most recent Falling Through The Net
report shows, there is still a lot more to do. We must connect all
of our citizens to the Internet not just in schools and libraries,
but in homes, small businesses, and community centers. And we must
help all Americans gain the skills they need to make the most of
the connection. So this morning, as they go back to their meeting,
I want to announce a series of new plans and partnership that will
expand on both these efforts, to use the combined forces of
public, private, and non-profit sectors, finally to slam shut the
digital divide.
First, I have decided to lead a prominent delegation, including
top CEOs, on a New Markets tour this spring to focus specifically
on the digital divide out in America. As we've done on our
previous tours, we will visit communities that have not fully
participated in our nation's economic growth. And yet, in the
communities we'll also see how partnership between the public and
private sectors can unleash the power of the Internet to link
children and adults to a lifetime of learning, to provide access
to distant medical care, to empower parents, to assist job
seekers, to enhance safety and foster economic development.
Second, I am signing an executive memorandum to ensure that
closing the digital divide will be a vital goal not just for
Secretary Daley and for us here in the White House, but throughout
the federal government. For example, I'm directing Secretary Daley
to work with the private sector to develop a national strategy for
connecting all Americans to the Internet; and directing
Secretaries Daley, Riley, Herman, Cuomo and Shalala to expand our
growing network of community technology centers. I just ask you
all to think about this one thing: What do you believe the
economic impact would be if Internet access and usage were as
dense in America as
telephone access
and usage. I think it's clear that we need to keep working until
we achieve this goal.
Third, with the help of many other groups, the Leadership
Conference on Civil Rights is launching an initiative to empower
the entire civil rights community through an expanding civil
rights.org website, through leadership forums and even modern-day
freedom riders who will bring high-tech training to the door-steps
of non-profit organizations. As the Congress of National Black
Churches has said, the digital divide is a key civil rights issue
of the 21st century. That's why our,civil rights organizations
must be ready, wired, and able to lead the change.
Fourth, the Benton Foundation is bringing together companies from
across the computing, telecommunications, software and Internet
industries, as well as the Urban League and several other large
private foundations, to create the Digital Divide Network, an
enormous clearinghouse of information for information on public
and private efforts to bring technology to underserved
communities. For the first time, we'll have one-stop shop for
tracking our progress in every community, and for learning exactly
what's worked and what hasn't.
Now, these are the steps we'll take immediately. I want to thank
all the leaders who are here today who are making these
initiatives possible, and all of those who are going to announce
specific things that they and their companies and organizations
are doing at the conference. I thank them for the other major
commitments they will make, because there is no single big silver
bullet here, but we know we have to have a national commitment to
closing the digital divide.
I also want to send out an invitation to all of your counterparts
around the country who are not able to be with us today, but who
should join with us in this great national endeavor. Together we
have the power to determine exactly what we want the Internet to
become, and what we want it to do is to be an instrument of
empowerment, education, enlightenment, and economic advance and
community building all across America, regardless of the race, the
income, the geography of our citizens. And thanks to these people,
we're going to be closer to achieving that goal.