-----Original Message----- From: TechInfo [mailto:[log in to unmask]]On Behalf Of Arthur Sheekey Sent: Thursday, April 13, 2000 11:08 AM To: TechInfo Subject: TechInfoEd/Telecom Reports FCC CHAIRMAN E-RATE TO RECEIVE FULL FUNDING This morning, a statement released by FCC Chair William E. Kennard and Commissioner Gloria Tristani said: "We are pleased to announce that funding commitments for the third year of the Schools and Libraries Universal Service Program known as the E-Rate will begin this week. This year's program will be funded at $2.25 billion the full amount allowed under the Commission's rules. The E-Rate is a cornerstone of the Commission's efforts to bridge the Digital Divide. From America's largest urban areas to its most rural and insular regions, the E-Rate is delivering telecommunications services to schools, libraries and communities nationwide. For example, over the first two funding years of the program, the Detroit Public School District where some of its students in learn in 19th Century, coal heated buildings received nearly $40 million in E-Rate discounts to allow its 175,000 students to gain access to the Internet. Also, the Kuspuk School District in Aniak, Alaska, which is only accessible by air, used the over $400,000 in discounted funding it received to wire all of its school buildings and connect its 425 mostly Eskimo students to the Internet. Through the E-Rate program, we have brought to life the promise of universal access to modern communications services at the nation's schools and libraries regardless of their wealth or geography. Recent statistics indicate that the E-Rate is making the grade: 63% of public school classrooms had Internet access in 1999, a 12% rise in Internet connectivity since 1998. Last year, 82% of the Nation's public schools and over half of the public libraries received discounted services under the program, with more than 53,000 urban schools and more than 25,000 rural schools receiving E-Rate support. This year's applications for discounts show high demand for the program: it received over 36,000 applications totaling $4.7 billion in discount requests. While we are unable to fulfill all applicant requests this year, we are certain that Year Three of the E-Rate will build on the program's extraordinarily successful legacy and continue toward our goal of connecting every classroom to the Internet in a way that meets the needs of the future. The first wave of funding commitment letters, which will be mailed this week, commits approximately $185.6 million in support to public and private schools and libraries nationwide. Other funding waves, committing the remaining funds, will follow each week." SLD NOTICES This week, the Schools and Libraries Division will send out its first wave of funding commitment letters for year 3. This will involve around 7,400 letters. Approximately 6,000 applicants requesting discounts for internal connections and who qualify for discounts below 81 percent will be notified that sufficient funds will not be available this year. Applicants qualifying for discounts from 81 percent to 89 percent will have to wait for subsequent funding notices. Notices are expected to go out on a weekly basis. CONGRESS AND ED/TECH BILLS More than twenty Senators and House Members, all of whom happen to be Democrats, are backing bills aimed at supporting technology in education. The Information Technology Act of 2000 (S. 2347), introduced by Sen. Kent Conrad (N.D.), would "provide grants to partnerships to establish and carry out information technology training programs and to provide incentives for educators to obtain information technology certification and for other purposes." The bill would authorize the U.S. Secretary of Education "to make grants to appropriate organizations, to assist the organizations in awarding bonuses to teachers who achieve information technology certification. A second initiative (H.R. 3897 and S. 2229) would significantly increase resources of two existing school technology programs through an amendment to the National Digital Empowerment Act (S. 2229). Introduced by Senator barbara Mikulski and other, the bill is designed to "enable every child in America to cross the digital divide by ensuring that all children have access to technology and technology education," and "ensure that every child is computer literate by the time the child finishes 8th grade, regardless of the child's race, ethnicity, gender, income, geography, or disability. The authorization would double the resources of the Preparing Tomorrow's Teacher to Use Technology program, which trains future K-12 teachers to use technology in the classroom, from $75 million to $150 million. If you wish to subscribe to this listserv, contact Tonja Moore at [log in to unmask]