Educational Technology: Ensuring Opportunity for All Children in the Next Century Documents
Educational Technology: Ensuring Opportunity for All Children in the Next Century



Federal Register, Volume 61 Issue 77 (Friday, April 19, 1996)

[Federal Register Volume 61, Number 77 (Friday, April 19, 1996)]
[Presidential Documents]
[Pages 17227-17229]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 96-9866]
                        Presidential Documents
Federal Register / Vol. 61, No. 77/ Friday, April 19, 1996 /
Presidential Documents
___________________________________________________________________
Title 3--
The President
[[Page 17227]]
                Executive Order 12999 of April 17, 1996
Educational Technology: Ensuring Opportunity for
                All
                Children in the Next Century
                In order to ensure that American children have the
                skills they need to succeed in the information-
                intensive 21st century, the Federal Government is
                committed to working with the private sector to promote
                four major developments in American education: making
                modern computer technology an integral part of every
                classroom; providing teachers with the professional
                development they need to use new technologies
                effectively; connecting classrooms to the National
                Information Infrastructure; and encouraging the
                creation of excellent educational software. This
                Executive order streamlines the transfer of excess and
                surplus Federal computer equipment to our Nation's
                classrooms and encourages Federal employees to
                volunteer their time and expertise to assist teachers
                and to connect classrooms.
                Accordingly, by the authority vested in me as President
                by the Constitution and the laws of the United States
                of America, including the provisions of the Stevenson-
                Wydler Technology Innovation Act of 1980, as amended
                (15 U.S.C. 3701 et seq.), the Federal Property and
                Administrative Services Act of 1949, ch. 288, 63 Stat.
                377, and the National Defense Authorization Act for
                Fiscal Year 1996, Public Law 104-106, it is hereby
                ordered as follows:
                Section 1. Protection of Educationally Useful Federal
                Equipment. (a) Educationally useful Federal equipment
                is a vital national resource. To the extent such
                equipment can be used as is, separated into parts for
                other computers, or upgraded--either by professional
                technicians, students, or other recycling efforts--
                educationally useful Federal equipment is a valuable
                tool for computer education. Therefore, to the extent
                possible, all executive departments and agencies
                (hereinafter referred to as ``agencies'') shall protect
                and safeguard such equipment, particularly when
                declared excess or surplus, so that it may be recycled
                and transferred, if appropriate, pursuant to this
                order.
                Sec. 2. Efficient Transfer of Educationally Useful
                Federal Equipment to Schools and Nonprofit
                Organizations. (a) To the extent permitted by law, all
                agencies shall give highest preference to schools and
                nonprofit organizations, including community-based
                educational organizations, (``schools and nonprofit
                organizations'') in the transfer, through gift or
                donation, of educationally useful Federal equipment.
                    (b) Agencies shall attempt to give particular
                preference to schools and nonprofit organizations
                located in the Federal enterprise communities and
                empowerment zones established in the Omnibus
                Reconciliation Act of 1993, Public Law 103-66.
                    (c) Each agency shall, to the extent permitted by
                law and where appropriate, identify educationally
                useful Federal equipment that it no longer needs and
                transfer it to a school or nonprofit organization by:
                      (1) conveying research equipment directly to the
                school or organization pursuant to 15 U.S.C. 3710(i);
                or
                      (2) reporting excess equipment to the General
                Services Administration (GSA) for donation when
                declared surplus in accordance with section 203(j) of
                the Federal Property and Administrative Services Act of
                1949, as amended, 40 U.S.C. 484(j). Agencies shall
                report such equipment as far as possible
[[Page 17228]]
                in advance of the date the equipment becomes excess, so
                that GSA may attempt to arrange direct transfers from
                the donating agency to recipients eligible under this
                order.
                    (d) In transfers made pursuant to paragraph (c)(1)
                of this section, title shall transfer directly from the
                agency to the schools or nonprofit organizations as
                required by 15 U.S.C. 3710(i). All such transfers shall
                be reported to the GSA. At the direction of the
                recipient institution or organization, and if
                appropriate, transferred equipment may be conveyed
                initially to a nonprofit reuse or recycling program
                that will upgrade it before transfer to the school or
                nonprofit organization holding title.
                    (e) All transfers to schools or nonprofit
                organizations, whether made directly or through GSA,
                shall be made at the lowest cost to the school or
                nonprofit organization permitted by law.
                    (f) The availability of educationally useful
                Federal equipment shall be made known to eligible
                recipients under this order by all practicable means,
                including newspaper, community announcements, and the
                Internet.
                    (g) The regional Federal Executive Boards shall
                help facilitate the transfer of educationally useful
                Federal equipment from the agencies they represent to
                recipients eligible under this order.
                Sec. 3. Assisting Teachers' Professional Development:
                Connecting Classrooms. (a) Each agency that has
                employees who have computer expertise shall, to the
                extent permitted by law and in accordance with the
                guidelines of the Office of Personnel Management,
                encourage those employees to:
                      (1) help connect America's classrooms to the
                National Information Infrastructure;
                      (2) assist teachers in learning to use computers
                to teach; and
                      (3) provide ongoing maintenance of and technical
                support for the educationally useful Federal equipment
                transferred pursuant to this order.
                    (b) Each agency described in subsection (a) shall
                submit to the Office of Science and Technology Policy,
                within 6 months of the date of this order, an
                implementation plan to advance the developments
                described in this order, particularly those required in
                this section. The plan shall be consistent with
                approved agency budget totals and shall be coordinated
                through the Office of Science and Technology Policy.
                    (c) Nothing in this order shall be interpreted to
                bar a recipient of educationally useful Federal
                equipment from lending that equipment, whether on a
                permanent or temporary basis, to a teacher,
                administrator, student, employee, or other designated
                person in furtherance of educational goals.
                Sec. 4. Definitions. For the purposes of this order:
                (a) ``Schools'' means individual public or private
                education institutions encompassing prekindergarten
                through twelfth grade, as well as public school
                districts.
                    (b) ``Community-based educational organizations''
                means nonprofit entities that are engaged in
                collaborative projects with schools or that have
                education as their primary focus. Such organizations
                shall qualify as nonprofit educational institutions or
                organizations for purposes of section 203(j) of the
                Federal Property and Administrative Services Act of
                1949, as amended.
                    (c) ``Educationally useful Federal equipment''
                means computers and related peripheral tools (e.g.,
                printers, modems, routers, and servers), including
                telecommunications and research equipment, that are
                appropriate for use in prekindergarten, elementary,
                middle, or secondary school education. It shall also
                include computer software, where the transfer of
                licenses is permitted.
                    (d) ``Nonprofit reuse or recycling program'' means
                a 501(c) organization able to upgrade computer
                equipment at no or low cost to the school or nonprofit
                organization taking title to it.
                    (e) ``Federal Executive Boards,'' as defined in 5
                C.F.R. Part 960, are regional organizations of each
                Federal agency's highest local officials.
[[Page 17229]]
                Sec. 5. This order shall supersede Executive Order No.
                12821 of November 16, 1992.
                Sec. 6. Judicial Review. This order is not intended,
                and should not be construed, to create any right or
                benefit, substantive or procedural, enforceable at law
                by a party against the United States, its agencies, its
                officers, or its employees.
                    (Presidential Sig.)
                THE WHITE HOUSE,
                    April 17, 1996.
[FR Doc. 96-9866
Filed 4-18-96; 8:45 am]
Billing code 3195-01-P