> We have received information that GSA has issued a legal interpretation > that is pretty devastating to the SEEDS program. Because SEEDS operates > under the umbrella of a Community College and gives equipment to > non-profits that are not K12 public schools, it's their position that we > are inelligible to receive surplus from Government angencies.
thomas, i'm pretty sure your situation is covered by executive order 12999, issued by president clinton, which permits and encourages the donation of surplus federal computers to schools as well as nonprofit educational organizations. http://www.computers.fed.gov/Public/12999.asp here in the washington dc area, federal agencies have been good about distributing surplus computers to educational nonprofits in accordance with this executive order. see http://innercity.org/success/donation.html i'm hoping the good people from other countries on this email list might use this info to convince their governments that surplus computers belong back in communities, not in warehouses or landfills. i'm pretty sure there are still several hundred thousand surplus government computers sitting in warehouses around the washington dc area. some journalist needs to write a story about the successes -- and non-successes of executive order 12999. i'd be only too happy to share what i know about both the successes and non-successes. - phil shapiro arlington, virginia -- Phil Shapiro [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.his.com/pshapiro/ (personal) http://teachme.blogspot.com (weblog) http://guitarlessons.blogspot.com/ (guitar lessons) "Everything you can imagine is real." - Pablo Picasso _______________________________________________ DIGITALDIVIDE mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mailman.edc.org/mailman/listinfo/digitaldivide To unsubscribe, send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the word UNSUBSCRIBE in the body of the message.