North End Childrens Project

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North End Childrens Project

The North End Childrens Project is dedicated to providing XO laptops and support to the children in the Urban Village of the North End of Middletown, Connecticut.

We are accepting donations of unneeded G1G1 XO laptops for an arts and educational after-school program. These G1G1 XO laptops would be donated to the North End Action Team (NEAT), an IRS recognized 501(c)(3) non-profit in Middletown, and from there distributed to North End children. This may enable the entire G1G1 donation to be considered a charitable contribution -- as always, please check with your tax professional.

To date, we have Fifteen XO's pledged, with an initial goal of Twenty. Ultimatly, we would like to provide one to each student at the North End's own Macdonough Elementary school for structured classroom use and take-home time.

As a community, Middletown has been active in providing public wireless access through her library, local private business and schools. We envision our children playing, communicating and learning with the XO all through our Urban Village.

Middletown also is home to Wesleyan University, Green Street Arts Center, Buttonwood Theatre, KidCity and OddFellows Playhouse and many other organizations dedicated to the educational enrichment of urban children.

About the North End and the North End Action Team

The North End Action Team (NEAT) is a grassroots community organization dedicated to the revitalization and social capital development of the North End neighborhood of Middletown, CT. The organization serves the entire North End neighborhood (3,000+ residents) and has a democratically elected leadership group, committees, programs, and initiatives related to the improvement of the neighborhood. Average attendance at monthly meetings is 35 people with special community conversations attracting up to 80 participants. NEAT’s leadership group includes a majority of residents, representatives of North End stakeholder groups, and representatives of municipal departments, and community organizations.

NEAT ‘s grassroots activities began in 1997 in response to broad disinvestment, neighborhood violence, widespread poverty, and blight in the low-income North End section of the city. NEAT has served to provide an infrastructure through which residents and stakeholders have defined issues, developed a community agenda, and advocated for the neighborhood’s interests. A neighborhood plan, The Middletown Report, developed in l998 during a 2-day community conversation in collaboration with Wesleyan University and the Yale Urban Design Workshop has served as a guide to NEAT’s community agenda that has included the development of the partnership with Wesleyan U. to create the Green Street Arts Center, the expansive rental and homeownership housing development plan on Ferry, Green, and Rapallo, the Ten Point Community Policing Plan, and numerous youth development programs.

NEAT’s mission is to develop a constituent voice to identify neighborhood priorities, convene process, and develop solutions that lead to the development of the North End as a socially and economically vibrant neighborhood in which there is reciprocal benefit from stability to both families and neighborhood. The focus has been on sustainability, including economic and leadership development, and on prevention, including progressive public safety, code enforcement, housing development, property management, collaboration building, and youth and family programs. The OLPC project is intended to improve access to technology for children of the North End, to improve our neighborhood school, which has traditionally underperformed within the district, and to create programs which are unique to this neighborhood, making incentives for families to stay and decreasing transiency.


Contact

Please contact Izzi Greenberg at izzi.greenberg@neatmiddletown.org if you are interested in donating an XO, or helping to acquire more laptops, or volunteer with setup. NEAT's telephone contact info can be found on the NEAT web-site.