Chicago Sun-Times

BRIDGING THE DIGITAL DIVIDE

City, Microsoft teaming up to bring training to over 300,000 Chicagoans

- BY JASON BEEFERMAN, STAFF REPORTER jbeeferman@suntimes.com @JasonBeefe­rman

Mayor Lori Lightfoot met with community leaders and Microsoft President Brad Smith on Friday to launch Accelerate Chicago, a program that will help over 300,000 Chicagoans gain the digital skills necessary to succeed in an increasing­ly online world.

Community leaders from the city’s South and West sides said the program is an important step toward addressing systemic inequities and setting up underemplo­yed city residents for success.

“In order for us to thrive, we must eliminate the digital divide,” Lightfoot said at the North Lawndale launch event. “We have an important opportunit­y to use this moment to better the lives of those who are struggling long before this pandemic ever struck.”

The program, created by Microsoft, will provide free online courses, skill certificat­ions and career opportunit­ies to Chicagoans, with a hope of bridging a gap in digital skills that community leaders say prevents economic mobility.

Lightfoot said the program is crucial in addressing the skills gap preventing those in underserve­d communitie­s from succeeding in the job market.

“We need to make sure this initiative brings into the fold Black and Brown and underserve­d communitie­s all across our city,” Lightfoot said. “We cannot move forward, [and] our recovery will not be as robust as it should be, if we leave anyone behind in any neighborho­od.”

The mayor, along with Ald. Michael Scott (24th), various community leaders and Microsoft executives, gathered to celebrate the launch of the initiative.

The program provides job seekers and motivated workers with opportunit­ies to learn basic computer skills now essential for jobs in constructi­on trades, the service industry and office work. It will equip workers training on everything from data analytics to digital marketing.

“Talent is distribute­d more evenly than opportunit­y,” Smith said. “We have a special chance to bring these skills to people who will benefit from them the most, especially across the South and West sides of Chicago.“

Microsoft is using its profession­al networking platform LinkedIn to deliver the courses, and the program will feature virtual career fairs to help participan­ts land jobs.

“We see the high rate of violence and crime in communitie­s, and we think that if we just stop the shooting, that that’s the answer,” said Brenda Palms Barber, president of the North Lawndale Employment Network. “In fact, it’s what we’re talking about today: equipping people with the basic skills they need in order to have competitiv­e jobs.”

Jacky Wright, Microsoft’s chief digital officer, said businesses have an “accountabi­lity” to remove the “systemic and cultural barriers” preventing equitable entry into the business world.

“The question is: How do we assure that the community itself will thrive, and [how do] we remove those barriers?” Wright said. “Businesses, in partnershi­p with not-forprofits, academia [and] startups, need to look at what are those systemic barriers that we need to remove?”

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 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES PHOTOS ?? ABOVE: Microsoft President Brad Smith speaks Friday during the launch of Accelerate Chicago, a program that aims to help over 300,000 Chicagoans add digital skills. LEFT: Mayor Lori Lightfoot and Smith sign documents certifying the program.
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES PHOTOS ABOVE: Microsoft President Brad Smith speaks Friday during the launch of Accelerate Chicago, a program that aims to help over 300,000 Chicagoans add digital skills. LEFT: Mayor Lori Lightfoot and Smith sign documents certifying the program.
 ?? ?? Brenda Palms Barber, president of the North Lawndale Employment Network, says programs like Accelerate Chicago will give people “the basic skills they need in order to have competitiv­e jobs.”
Brenda Palms Barber, president of the North Lawndale Employment Network, says programs like Accelerate Chicago will give people “the basic skills they need in order to have competitiv­e jobs.”

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