Impact Stories

UMass Public Interest Technology Consortium Receives $200,000 Award at White House Event

The White House Office of Science and Technology Policy has announced that Public Interest Technology New England (PIT-NE), a consortium co-founded by UMass Amherst that consists of 80 members from 20 New England universities and non-profits, will receive $200,000 to help develop programs for and train a public interest technology workforce and strengthen PIT higher education programs in the region.

Public Interest Tech (PIT) New England logoThe White House Office of Science and Technology Policy(OSTP) announced the funding last month as it convened leaders across the technology ecosystem to highlight the importance of advancing technology that protects safety, security, democratic values and human rights. The PIT-NE award was part of a $7 million commitment from The Ford Foundation, Patrick J. McGovern Foundation, Pivotal and the Siegel Family Endowment to support organizations that develop public interest technologists, solutions and infrastructure.

Announced during the event and in the White House press release, the Ford Foundation, Patrick J. McGovern Foundation, Pivotal, and the Siegel Family Endowment have jointly committed $200,000 to support Public Interest Technology New England (PIT-NE), which has a goal to develop and train a public interest technology workforce and to strengthen PIT higher education programs in the region.

Among the programs offered by PIT-NE is the Impact Technology Fellowship, which included eight UMass undergraduate students this past summer. The fellowship is a full-time, six-week combined experiential learning, public interest technology skill building, mentoring and professional development program that empowers a new generation of public interest technologists.

PIT@UMass Amherst director Francine Berman, research professor in the Manning College of Information and Computer Sciences and Stuart Rice Honorary Chair, attended the invitation-only White House event, which featured speakers and panelists who highlighted the important role of government technologists, tech talent development in public service and efforts to build a robust, inclusive technology landscape that works for everyone in America. 

A video of the event can be viewed below via the White House YouTube channel.

 

This story was originally published by University Relations.

  • Magnify Impact
  • Manning College of Information & Computer Sciences

Read more about UMass magnifying its impact on the common good

The Ellsberg Initiative for Peace and Democracy
  • Magnify Impact
  • College of Humanities and Fine Arts

The Ellsberg Initiative for Peace and Democracy

In 2019, the university announced the acquisition of the papers of Daniel Ellsberg, one of the nation’s foremost political activists and whistleblowers. The collection includes materials related to his…

Filling Gaps in the Historical Record
  • Magnify Impact
  • College of Humanities and Fine Arts

Filling Gaps in the Historical Record

With a three-year, $2.65 million grant from the Mellon Foundation, the Slavery North initiative at UMass aims to expand research and understanding of slavery in Canada and the northern United States.