COMMUNITY

Help close the digital gap by donating your used technology equipment

Computers, cellphones, and tablets are needed for families unable to access the internet for crucial needs during and after the pandemic

Stylized image of a computer, tablet, and cellphone

Credit: GETTY IMAGES

This article has been been updated to include the new deadline of Aug. 31.

COVID-19 has highlighted the desperate lack of access to computers and internet access for many of our lower-income community members, including in Central Baltimore near the Johns Hopkins Homewood campus.

This digital void, coupled with the COVID-19 pandemic, compounds an existing lack of access to daily basics that many of us take for granted, such as health care, employment, and educational resources.

Where there are no computers, or perhaps a single outdated tablet, for a multiperson household, students are limited in participating in remote learning, the approach that Baltimore City Schools has adopted. Unemployed individuals with minimal options are limited in applying for employment or benefits. And senior citizens and new parents cannot mitigate their social isolation, connect with loved ones, or access health-related resources.

Digital access is essential today, whether it's for getting a refrigerator repaired, setting up a budget, connecting with history, exploring art, taking a journey with Google Earth Flyover—or winding down with puppy videos. Consider your daily life with no or limited internet connectivity over an extended period.

But you can help our neighbors. Johns Hopkins University is partnering with Central Baltimore Partnership and Code in the Schools, two strong Baltimore-based nonprofits, to help fill this critical need and is asking those who can to donate used technology equipment such as computers, Chromebooks, smartphones, and tablets to this initiative. The goal is to collect 1,000 devices by Aug. 31 to be distributed to households suffering from lack of digital access and to community centers serving these residents.

Your donation will not only provide game-changing internet and technology access, but Code in the Schools will train and employ youth to scrub the hard drives and refurbish the donated equipment, and recipients of the equipment will have access to technical assistance. A parallel program is enhancing Wi-Fi accessibility for very low–income persons. Equipment is tax-deductible, and an acknowledgment letter of your contribution can be provided.

To make a donation, complete this form, tape it securely to your device, and drop off the equipment at one of these locations:

  • JHU Homewood campus (3400 N. Charles St.), Wyman Park Building, front desk, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday to Friday.
  • Johns Hopkins at Eastern (3301 E. 33rd St.), front desk, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday to Friday.
  • Johns Hopkins Technology Hub (Rangos Building, 855 N. Wolfe St.), 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday to Friday.

Alternatively, donated equipment can be mailed to Johns Hopkins University, Attn: Benefits & Worklife, 1101 E. 33rd St., Suite D200, Baltimore, MD, 21218.

For more information, email Greg Burks, Community Programs manager in the Johns Hopkins Office of Benefits & Worklife, at greg@jhu.edu.

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