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[soc, newmedia] I Work Here: The Other Side of the Divide (fwd: Untitled) - Sibylla Bostoniensis — LiveJournal
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Tue, May. 28th, 2013, 12:14 am
[soc, newmedia] I Work Here: The Other Side of the Divide (fwd: Untitled)

From time to time, I post something about how the world I work in -- that is, the geocultural milieu the clinic I work at is in -- and its relationship to the Internet. I understand this blew a few minds.

I was pointed at this extraordinary comment on Metafilter by user codacorolla on Feb 12, 2012 at 7:52 AM. It's in the context of a discussion about the fate of public libraries in the US, by a student in a library studies program, but what it's about is the role that libraries have as portals to the Internet for people who are not merely poor, but non-internet users -- which codacorolla describes perfectly.

Guys, these are my patients. codacorolla's description could be someone I treat. This is what the world looks like from most of Eastie and Chelsea.

I reproduce that part of the epic comment here, for your edification and for posterity, to help keep it from falling off the internet. It's long, so I put part of it under a cut. The link at the very bottom will take you to the whole comment, if you want to keep reading what the author has to say about libraries.

[...]

If you can take yourself out of your first world techie social media smart-shoes for a second then imagine this: you're 53 years old, you've been in prison from 20 to 26, you didn't finish high school, and you have a grandson who you're now supporting because your daughter is in jail. You're lucky, you have a job at the local Wendy's. You have to fill out a renewal form for government assistance which has just been moved online as a cost saving measure (this isn't hypothetical, more and more municipalities are doing this now). You have a very limited idea of how to use a computer, you don't have Internet access, and your survival (and the survival of your grandson) is contingent upon this form being filled out correctly.

Do you go to the local social services office? No, you don't. The overworked staff there says that due to budget cuts they can no longer do walk-in advising, and that there's a 2 week waiting list to get assistance with filling out forms. You call them up on the by-the-minute phone you're borrowing from your cousin (wasting 15 of her minutes on hold) and they say that they can't help, but you can go to your public library. OK, so you go to your public library after work (you ask your other cousin to watch your grandson for the day since wasting those minutes has temporarily burned some bridges). Due to budget cuts the library no longer has evening hours, sorry, try again (and you also don't get back the bus-fare or money you spent on a hack to get across town to the nearest branch, since other budget cuts closed the one in your neighborhood). OK, so you come back on the weekend. You ask the overworked librarian at the desk to sign up for a computer. She testily tells you that you're at the wrong desk, and that sign-ups are at circulation. You feel foolish and go over to the circulation desk, who tells you that you need to sign up for a library card to use the computer. After filling out the forms the librarian starts to make your card for you, and informs you that she can't process a card, since you have fines from 2 years ago that total fifty dollars. It's an emergency, you say, you need to use the computer. She sighs heavily, informs you that it's against policy, and then prints a guest pass anyway. You get 30 minutes at a time for a total of 2 hours per day. Computers are on the second floor.

You go up to the second floor to find a total of 20 computers with a waiting list of 15 people. You do some quick math in your head, and realize you're probably going to be here for a while, so you walk over to the magazine section, and read People while you wait. Finally, it's your turn. You walk over to your terminal, and your time starts ticking. Your breath seizes in your chest, and you realize you have no idea what to do. You have the form that they gave you at the social services office, which has an address, which you sort of know what that does, but you can't quite remember – 17 minutes, by the way. You try typing X City Social Services in a box at the top, a page comes back and says “address not found” with a list of things below it. You're panicking, because there's a line forming (there always is) and the library will probably close before you can make it back on – 10 minutes, by the way. After a little more fumbling and clicking you have no luck, you're kicked off, and immediately someone is standing behind you to use your computer. You relinquish your seat, and head back down stairs. You're about to leave, already trying to think of who you know who has a computer who might let you use it, and might know about filling out these forms, but the only person you can think of is your friend in the county, and taking a bus out there would be awfully expensive.

Before leaving you decide to try one last thing. You go up to the desk, and explain your situation. The tired, overworked person at the desk nods along, and says, “well, we're not supposed to do this, but...” and tells you to walk around the desk. With a few clicks on the mouse they have the site up that you spent 30 minutes trying to find. They bring up the electronic form, politely turn their head aside as you fill in your social security number, and then ask you a series of questions to satisfy the demands of the form. It comes to your email address, and you have to admit that you don't have one, so the librarian walks you through setting up a free one and gives it to you on a slip of paper. “We have free computer classes,” he says (and you're lucky, because a great deal of public libraries don't), but you look at the times and realize that between your job and taking care of your grandson you'd never be able to attend, and it'd probably be too hard anyway. You thank him, and he smiles, and you leave. Congratulations, you've staved off disaster until the next time you need to use a computer for a life-essential task.

Now let's start that again, but this time you don't speak English. Just kidding, I don't want to give you too much culture shock in one day.

So that little melodrama right there is every minute of every day at the public library. Replace essential forms with applying for a job, or filling out hours on a time sheet, or trying to find legal assistance, or any number of the other high skill, high resource activities that you, as a privileged first world person who is constantly surrounded by computers and has used them for a majority of their life, find trivial. The digital divide isn't just access, but also ability, and quality of information, and the common dignity of having equity of participation in our increasingly digital culture.

Would you like numbers? Alright, for whatever it's worth, here are the numbers,

Start with the The Public Libraries and the Internet study. It's pretty great. Here's a piece from the conclusions section,

Analysis of the data from the 2007 survey pointed to an emerging trend that raised serious concerns for public libraries — patron and community needs for Internet access, training, and services were quickly outpacing the ability of libraries to meet those needs (Bertot, et al., 2008a, 2008b; McClure, et al., 2007). This situation was the result of a confluence of major factors such as public libraries being the only source of free public Internet access in three–quarters of communities;


It's slightly dated, but do you honestly think that in 5 years we've had a sudden amazing turn around in the economic situation of the very poor?

Pew Internet on Internet access. Your “80%” number is heavily influenced by ethnicity, socio-economic class, educational attainment. Also, there's a damn-sight difference between bringing up the Facebook APP on your Blackberry, and trying to use the same device to write a research paper.

EQUALITY (meaning, at any level, can they) may be approaching parity (although your eagerness to leave behind 20% of the population is a little sickening), but EQUITY (meaning, what can they do once they get there) isn't anywhere close. A decade of our miraculous crowd-sourced, app-tapping, Internet connected society (as seen on Boing-Boing) and the digital divide is pernicious as ever. [...]


The whole essay.

Tue, May. 28th, 2013 06:18 am (UTC)
houseboatonstyx

Saw a story around the time Ted Kennedy died, from a librarian. An immigrant woman had come in; her purse containing her Green Card had been stolen, and she needed to make an appointment with Immigration to request a replacement card. Appointments could only be made through the internet.

I have forgotten what all the problems were with the Immigration website, but it added up to more than one trip to the library, with her boyfriend also taking time off work to come and help.

Finally the librarian phoned Senator Ted Kennedy's office. He made Immigration change their policy so that appointments could again be made by phone.

Tue, May. 28th, 2013 11:55 am (UTC)
fabrisse

The offices where I work are busiest on Mondays. Unemployment claims have to be filed by Wednesday. They can only be filed by phone or by internet, and some people are required to file by internet so that they can fill in their "I looked for work here in the last two weeks" forms which can't be done by phone. Extended benefits also cannot be done by phone. So they come into the unemployment center and use our resource room (which is one of the things it's there for). There's an hour limit on computer usage that only needs to be enforced, really, on Mondays and Tuesdays. The center downstairs has 14 public computers and another 8 in a classroom that may be used when there are no workshops in there. It can get over 100 people waiting to file their claims on any given Monday. There are a total of four centers in the District; the other center have 30 available computers on average. Again, they can get four times that many on a given Monday, and heaven help us if the connection goes out (happened last week at Northeast Center) or there's more than one computer down (most weeks).

Tue, May. 28th, 2013 03:26 pm (UTC)
woodwindy

So much this. I interact with so many people who just can't (won't?) wrap their brains around how different other folks' experiences could be from their own, and it's frustrating. I may start just shooting people that link any time I get the "Why don't they just" line.

Tue, May. 28th, 2013 05:15 pm (UTC)
alexx_kay: Tangential: Cart Life

I commend to your attention Cart Life, a recent award-winning indie game that deals with similar sorts of issues. It looks, at first, like it's going to be a simple economic sim, but turns out to be much more about things like bureaucracy, travel time, "(and you also don't get back the bus-fare or money you spent on a hack to get across town to the nearest branch, since other budget cuts closed the one in your neighborhood)"
(Deleted comment)

Tue, May. 28th, 2013 06:03 pm (UTC)
fabrisse

I work for DOES in DC. We are not allowed to have anyone in the building who hasn't gone through a security inspection because we get threats. There are two security guards on duty at each door (one door in the One-Stop office, the main door with the screening machine, and, if there's a special event, a side door). The set-up is such that there is no way to make the lines go faster. There's no lobby area at the side door or the One-Stop office. There is space in the main area, but although the line is interior, it can snake around three times, blocking the people who work in the building from entering. (I'm referring to the Minnesota Avenue building in Ward 7, for reference sake.)

Do we stop requiring searches? Well, we've had knives show up even with the searches. I wish there were a better way to handle it -- including not having every person required to show up on the same day (TANF being around the first of the month could be divided by surname to four different blocs each one showing up in a different week, for instance.).