Grants encourage IT planning
Nebraska uses $2,500 mini grants to encourage IT development among communities and groups statewide
The University of Nebraska and the Nebraska Information Technology Commission
(NITC) have joined a program that uses "mini-grants" of $2,500 to prod regional
groups across the state into planning for the use of IT.
Communities or groups receiving the grants also will serve as pilot
communities for the Community IT Toolkit, which includes materials developed
by the NITC and Technologies Across Nebraska. The toolkit is designed to
provide communities with the background and informational resources they
will need to implement IT projects.
Nebraska overall is competitive with other states in the use of IT,
said Anne Byers, community IT manager for the NITC, and some communities
are fairly well-invested in technology. But more could be done to get communities
used to incorporating technology as a part of their planning and development
processes.
"The participants in our program will be required to develop a couple
of assessment instruments, and may also need to do others, such as community
surveys of the technology they already have, IT inventories and so on,"
said Byers. "They may also feel they need to bring in consultants. The grants
will help them with all of that."
NITC already has an extensive program of grants for fully realized technology
projects, she said, and the communities involved in the mini-grant pilot
program will be encouraged to apply for those after they've done the initial
assessments.
Applications for mini-grants have to be filed with the NITC by Aug.
1, and the final list of participants will be posted a month later. The
project is expected to run from September 2002 through May 2003. n
Robinson is a freelance journalist based in Portland, Ore. He can be reached
at hullite@mindspring.com.
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