Miami Herald

‘A brand new future’ for South Florida’s only HBCU after it gets a $1 million gift

- BY JIMENA TAVEL jtavel@miamiheral­d.com

Computer-science students at Florida Memorial University — South Florida’s only historical­ly Black college or university (HBCU) — use outdated and basic computers to learn about artificial intelligen­ce.

Meanwhile, students nearby at universiti­es such as Florida Internatio­nal University and the University of Miami dabble with cutting-edge servers with graphics-processing units (GPUs).

That inequality is exactly what JPMorgan Chase and Florida Memorial want to eliminate. On Thursday, the bank donated $1 million to the university to expand its technology programs.

“In a global world that relies on technologi­cal innovation­s to keep people connected and drive breakthrou­ghs in fields like healthcare and manufactur­ing, we must prioritize helping young people access opportunit­ies, and gain the right skills and experience­s. That’s why today I’m beyond thrilled to announce that JPMorgan Chase is making a $1 million commitment to FMU,” said Tim Berry, the bank’s global head of corporate responsibi­lity and mid-Atlantic region chairman, during a press conference at the university’s Miami Gardens campus.

Starting immediatel­y, Florida Memorial will use the funds to give students more scholarshi­ps, hire more staffers and train them better, modernize classrooms and other facilities, and purchase newer equipment, said FMU President Jaffus Hardrick, who thanked JPMorgan.

As Berry delivered the news, applause and cheers erupted from audience members. Among them sat Jabulani Mzee, a Florida Memorial student who later told the Herald the money “means a ton.”

“We do the most with the least. We don’t even have GPUs, which is what allows you to play with AI,” said Mzee, 30. “So this grant definitely represents a brand new future of us.”

JPMorgan donated the $1 million as part of a $10 million grant that it pledged in 2022 to Tech Equity Miami — a $100 million, five-year philanthro­pic initiative focused on growing the technology sector in the Miami area and creating opportunit­ies for underrepre­sented groups.

Leigh-Ann Buchanan, co-founder of Tech Equity Miami, emphasized at the event the effort to level the playing field.

One quarter of African

Americans who earn science, technology, engineerin­g and math (STEM) degrees do so at HBCUs, but these schools, she said, are “systemical­ly under-invested in.”

“They are overlooked. They’re often underestim­ated. And we need to invest more in our HBCUs,” she said.

She also added that computer-science students only represent about 8% of the student body at FMU — or about 76 students — but that she wants to raise that to at least 20%.

FMU will invest the donation in three programs — computer science, informatio­n systems and cyber security — but the university could also use it to improve other tech-related studies such as biology radiation, engineerin­g and aviation.

The Miami-Dade County Commission’s chair, Oliver Gilbert, repeated John F. Kennedy’s famous quote: “A rising tide lifts all boats.”

“STEM and tech? That’s the new tide,” Gilbert said. “And this is helping Florida Memorial build a boat factory. This influences a community, shapes a county and moves a country forward.”

Jimena Tavel: 786-442-8014, @taveljimen­a

 ?? JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com ?? JPMorgan Chase’s Tim Berry, left, shakes hands with Jaffus Hardrick, president of Florida Memorial University, after Berry announced a $1 million donation to FMU on Thursday during a ceremony at the campus in Miami Gardens.
JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com JPMorgan Chase’s Tim Berry, left, shakes hands with Jaffus Hardrick, president of Florida Memorial University, after Berry announced a $1 million donation to FMU on Thursday during a ceremony at the campus in Miami Gardens.

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