Berks County’s Digital Equity Plan
View Plan In A PDF Format
Digital Divide Broadband Expansion Project Overview
- Expanding the infrastructure that delivers affordable and reliable high-speed broadband Internet access, including fiber, cable, and 5G.
- Increasing the number of individuals connected to providers of these services as well as having the appropriate devices and training to utilize them.
The Workgroup’s frame of reference for this effort was reinforced by a community forum organized by the Berks Alliance in which the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the Federal Communications Commission emphasized that access to reliable high speed Internet service is a significant social determinant of health. 100 MBPS (Mega Bits Per Second) for download and 10 MBPS upload speeds are considered fast and necessary for working and schooling from home. A slow 25 MBPS is considered the bare minimum speed.
The final Lit Communities report was submitted to the Berks County Commissioners on
November 29, 2022. Critical points from the report included:
- According to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) data, most of Berks County has access to Internet service of at least 25 MBPS download and 3 MBPS upload speed.
- Having access in this context means that at least one facility in the census block has access to the service.
- Most of the northern tier of Berks County has limited options for 100/10 MBPS service.
- There are areas in Berks County where the predominant Internet provider is a satellite service. This is true not only in rural areas but also in areas in and around the City of Reading, especially the Mount Penn area.
- Of the 2504 community respondents 64% had fixed service and 21% had wireless service. 14% did not know the type of Internet service they had.
- 2,050 respondents took the speed test which was a separate part of the community survey. Based on these results 68% had no service or service speeds less than 100/10 MBPS.
- The Berks County Intermediate Unit (BCIU) is overseeing the work of a Digital Navigation Specialist who is working with residents with assistance from the Hamburg School District and the Hamburg Public Library. The Digital Navigator is currently helping residents access Internet service, providing devices, and teaching users digital skills tied directly to their needs.
- The Berks Community Health Center (BCHC) has expanded its patient blood pressure monitoring and education effort.
- With remaining County digital literacy funds, Connections Work was approved in spring 2024 to hire a fulltime digital navigator to assist its formerly justice-involved clients gain the digital skills they need to gain employment and function effectively after incarceration.
Community Commitment
The Digital Divide
The Digital Divide is the gap between those who have affordable access, skills, and support to effectively engage online and those who do not. As technology constantly evolves, the digital divide prevents equal participation and opportunity in all parts of life.
Digital Equity
Digital Equity occurs when residents have equal opportunity for the information technology capacity needed for full participation in our society, democracy, and economy. Digital equity is necessary for civic and cultural participation, family- sustaining employment, lifelong learning, and access to essential services.
Digital Inclusion
Digital Inclusion results from intentional activities necessary to ensure that all individuals and communities, including the disadvantaged, have access to and use of Information and Communication Technologies (ICT’s).
Because of that belief there are three essential elements addressed in the County plan:
Access
Affordability
The ability to pay for access to the internet.
Adoption
Older Adults
Physical limitations and inexperience can make technology harder to use. People who do not grow up using technology, particularly those age 60 and above may devalue the benefits and usefulness or see the barriers as greater than the benefits. Fear of breaking a device and fear for their safety and security are just two of these barriers.
Justice Impacted Individuals
Incarcerated people are disadvantaged by a lack of access to digital skills training otherwise available to the public. They struggle to regain stability after re-entry without support for access and skill building.
Residents of Rural Communities
Rural areas are underserved for many reasons including fewer customers, decreased rural adoption rates, and difficult terrain compared to urban and suburban areas. Even when the Internet is available, less competition among limited providers can result in higher prices and limited speed options for residents. Long distances mean finding technology help and skill building classes can be an additional challenge. In addition, there are geographic barriers that can limit access as well.
Low-Income Household Residents
Poverty contributes to poor housing and health conditions, unemployment, high crime, and greatly reduces the opportunities for individuals to improve their circumstances. They struggle with the cost of Internet which can vary widely and can be a burden.
Residents with Language Barriers Including Low Literacy Individuals
English remains the dominant language use by Berks County businesses and services, and those with limited English proficiency face additional barriers. They struggle with understanding what choices are available and locating assistance in their preferred language.
Racial and Ethnic Minorities
These residents are historically impacted by underinvestment in their schools and neighborhoods, and often face unequal treatment and expectations.
Veterans
The FCC states that barriers to broadband adoption among veterans include insufficient digital literacy, perception of irrelevance, price, and lack of deployment where they live. At a Pennsylvania veterans focus group there was a lengthy discussion about health and mental health challenges faced by this population. Many residents shared challenges related to affordability and limited incomes. Residents shared they feel overlooked and left out.
Individuals with Disabilities
People living with a disability can find it harder to find a job limiting their income, access to technology, and opportunities to develop digital skills. Individuals with disabilities are a diverse population, and they experience many types of challenges based on the specifics of their condition. For these residents, access to services online can be a critical way to connect to resources and access services online can be a critical way to connect to resources and assistance, if the right tools and training are provided.
Residents of Rural Communities
Rural areas are underserved for many reasons including fewer customers, decreased rural adoption rates, and difficult terrain compared to urban and suburban areas. Even when the Internet is available, less competition among limited providers can result in higher prices and limited speed options for residents. Long distances mean finding technology help and skill building classes can be an additional challenge. In addition, there are geographic barriers that can limit access as well.
Individuals with Disabilities
People living with a disability can find it harder to find a job limiting their income, access to technology, and opportunities to develop digital skills. Individuals with disabilities are a diverse population, and they experience many types of challenges based on the specifics of their condition. For these residents, access to services online can be a critical way to connect to resources and access services online can be a critical way to connect to resources and assistance, if the right tools and training are provided.
Veterans
The FCC states that barriers to broadband adoption among veterans include insufficient digital literacy, perception of irrelevance, price, and lack of deployment where they live. At a Pennsylvania veterans focus group there was a lengthy discussion about health and mental health challenges faced by this population. Many residents shared challenges related to affordability and limited incomes. Residents shared they feel overlooked and left out.
Older Adults
Physical limitations and inexperience can make technology harder to use. People who do not grow up using technology, particularly those age 60 and above may devalue the benefits and usefulness or see the barriers as greater than the benefits. Fear of breaking a device and fear for their safety and security are just two of these barriers.
Low-Income Household Residents
Poverty contributes to poor housing and health conditions, unemployment, high crime, and greatly reduces the opportunities for individuals to improve their circumstances. They struggle with the cost of Internet which can vary widely and can be a burden.
Residents with Language Barriers Including Low Literacy Individuals
English remains the dominant language use by Berks County businesses and services, and those with limited English proficiency face additional barriers. They struggle with understanding what choices are available and locating assistance in their preferred language.
Justice Impacted Individuals
Incarcerated people are disadvantaged by a lack of access to digital skills training otherwise available to the public. They struggle to regain stability after re-entry without support for access and skill building.
Racial and Ethnic Minorities
These residents are historically impacted by underinvestment in their schools and neighborhoods, and often face unequal treatment and expectations.
Special interest in Berks County are:
Individuals with Chronic Illnesses
People living with chronic illnesses, such as diabetes, asthma, cancer and heart disease need access to technology to connect with their healthcare provider. Telemedicine is especially important for rural residents and those with transportation challenges and the governor recently signed legislation authorizing insurance payments for this form of healthcare access.
Individuals with Behavioral Health Challenges
According to the U. S. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) one in five adults have a clinically significant mental health or substance use disorder. And the prevalence and severity of mental health challenges among teens has increased sharply post COVID. Assisting these individuals to access virtual services can foster more immediate essential care.
Goals of the Berks County Digital Equity Plan
Goals 01: Connectivity
- Establish sustainable household-based models for internet subsidies.
- Facilitate sustainable community-based networks to increase public WiFi and free or low-cost broadband.
- Encourage the expansion of high-quality, reliable, low-cost broadband subscription options by commercial Internet Service Providers and wireless providers operating in Berks County.
- Expand access to Internet service to those residents and businesses that face geographic challenges.
Goals 02: Devices
- Prioritize grants and bulk purchasing for devices.
- Develop and support a network of Public Computer Centers in libraries and service organizations as digital inclusion hubs.
- Develop a system of computer recycling, refurbishing, and community tech support.
Goals 03: Online Safety and Security
- Provide information and training about the importance of privacy and security.
- Recognize scams and the importance of regularly updating security software.
- Setting strong passwords with multifactor authentication.
- The ability to discern real, safe, and secure websites from fraudulent ones.
- Protect users’ mental health and self-esteem.
Goals 04: Ecosystem
- Build the capacity of local governments to advance digital equity.
- Seed capacity of community partners and anchor institutions to advance digital equity.
- Establish consistent benchmarks and data collection to inform strategic planning.
- Establish and promote best practices around software applications and tools.
Goals 05: Training, Education and Workforce Development
- Provide community based Digital Navigation services across the county.
- Build a coordinated network of Digital Literacy Navigators with clear pathways into adult education and workforce programs.
- Standardize digital literacy assessments, curriculum, and training.
- Ensure multi-lingual outreach and programs are available to residents.
- Incorporate digital literacy course information into numerous web-based and community outlets that include mechanisms for community-based organization course referrals.
- Identify the resources that can provide hardware and software technical support assistance.
Emphasis on Increasing Digital Literacy
- Turn on their devices.
- Use the available controls on their devices.
- Make use of accessibility tools on their devices to make it easier to use.
- Interact with the home screen on their devices.
- Understand the Internet allows them to access information and content by connecting their devices through Wi-Fi.
- Connect their devices to a safe and secure Wi-Fi network.
- Recognize that their personal information has value to others requiring them to keep their passwords secure.
- Update and change their passwords when prompted to do so.
- Recognize and avoid scams and attempts to access personal information.
Role of the Berks County Digital Equity Coalition
In terms of Digital Literacy, a formal Coalition Letter of Consistency will also be dependent
on the applicant’s clearly stated intention to:
- Identify clear project outcomes and the means to measure them.
- Collect minimum data elements agreed upon by the Coalition Steering Committee.
- Specify the measures it will undertake to secure participants’ personal data.
- Share aggregate data on its participants and its planned activities’ ultimate effectiveness to assist the Coalition in tracking that projects are reaching all segments of Berks County.
- Deliver instruction that is consistent with the core digital navigation skills defined by the Coalition Steering Committee.
- Include a budget adequate to cover staffing, materials, travel, and devices with an indirect charge back to the organization of not more than 10% percent or whatever is allowed by the funding source of the total project cost.
- Identify project management that will consistently provide oversight to all project activities.
- Provide project quarterly reports, as well as a final report, in a timely manner to the Coalition in addition to other reports that may be required by the funding source.
Request for Formal Coalition Support of Funding Applications
Note: Though at least one month in advance is ideal – there are some funding sources that may not provide that lead time.
Conclusion
Coalition Members (as of July, 2024):
Alvernia University
Glynis Fitzgerald
Berks Alliance
Dave Myers
John Weidenhammer
Berks County Community Foundation
Cindy Milian
Berks County Intermediate Unit
Scott Major, Glen Espinal
Berks Encore
LuAnn Oatman
Connections Work
Peggy Kershner, Nikki Schnovel
County of Berks
Pam Menet, Brad Shirey
Literacy Council Reading/Berks
Ryan Breisch
Reading Public Library
Melissa Adams, Jennifer Bressler, Mike Najarian (retired), Cid Espinal
Reading School District
Camil Culbreath
Tec Centro Berks
Violet Emory, Sally Blondet
Threshold Rehabilitation Services
Justin Loose
United Way of Berks County
Ashley Chambers
Wyomissing Foundation
Pat Giles, Bronwen Gamble, Anna Weitz (volunteer)
Weidenhammer Systems
John Weidenhammer