Hats off to Technical.lyย contributor Maggie Heffernan, who first reported on that $10,000 grant from Comcast to a disability and education nonprofit called SPIN (Special People in the Northeast). Last week, the nonprofit unveiled the results of the investment: the Comcast Digital Literacy Lab, housed inside SPINโs Norcom Community Center.
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The lab is focused on giving some high school students and adults with disabilities the digital skills they need to lead more independent, SPIN CEO Kathy Brown McHale saidย in a press release.
At the ceremony, teens and adults with disabilities showcased the use of assistive technology and apps, assisted speech devices and eye-controlled gear. The lab houses 20 computers and five tablets equipped with accessibility apps.
Comcast gave the nonprofit an extension of the original grant for a total investment of $20,000.ย There was also aย $3,000 donation through Gwynedd Mercy Universityโs Special Education Club 5K, in memory of Alex Valeno.

โThe digital divide can impact families in many ways and Comcast is committed to help closing it by offering Internet Essentials and partnering with organizations such as SPIN to help people get the skills they need to take advantage of all the resources the internet has to offer,”ย said Comcast Regional Vice President of Community Investment Robert Smith.

People interested in contacting the nonprofit’s digital literacy program for people with disabilities can contact theย Norcom Community Centerย through itsย website orย by callingย 215-613-1070.
Here’s what you’ll find at the Comcast Digital Literacy Lab in Northeast Philly