FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

April 13, 2020                                          

CONTACT: Victoria Rosengarten

KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI – The Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City today launched the Employer Laptop Challenge, a new community development program that encourages companies and other organizations to donate used devices to nonprofits, schools and refurbishers.

“Closing the digital divide was serious work before COVID-19. Now, as Americans isolate themselves at home, those without computers and internet service are cut off from essential services, from learning, from family and friends,” said Jeremy Hegle, senior community development advisor at the Kansas City Fed. “The need for laptops is extreme.”

According to a recent report from the Kansas City Fed, large numbers of donated like equipment from corporations knocks down costs and makes supporting the community easier. Hegle adds more than 30 percent of low income households lack a computer.

Through the program, organizations are encouraged to donate at least 15 used, surplus laptops or desktops to local nonprofits in a continued effort to bridge the digital divide. Businesses can visit the Employer Laptop Challenge page to get instructions on the donation process.

Hegle cites that it would take at least 5,000 computers to meet the needs of the most at-risk families in the metro Kansas City area, and even more are needed to help nonprofits struggling to operate virtually. With the pandemic, nonprofit refurbishers that are usually a source of free or cheap computers for nonprofits and lower income families are unable to meet the current demand.

As part of the Bank’s commitment to narrowing the digital divide, the Kansas City Fed has donated more than 100 used computers to nonprofits across the seven-state District.
Visit kansascityfed.org/laptopchallenge for additional details. Read the Kansas City Fed report on broadband access, economic impact and solutions for communities to narrow the digital divide, Disconnected: Seven Lessons on Fixing the Digital Divide.

As the regional headquarters of the nation’s central bank, the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, along with its Branch offices in Denver, Oklahoma City and Omaha, participates in each of the Federal Reserve’s three mission areas of monetary policy, banking supervision and financial services. The Bank serves the Tenth Federal Reserve District, a region that includes western Missouri, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, Wyoming, Colorado and northern New Mexico.