Jewish Week part I At Yeshivat Avir Yakov, an all-boys school in the chasidic enclave of New Square in New York’s Rockland County, students spend the vast majority of their long school days studying religious texts in spartan classrooms furnished only with battered wooden benches and desks. Unlike their counterparts in public or private schools outside the chasidic community, the boys at Avir Yakov do not have access to the Internet or computers in their school because chasidic leaders view the Internet as a corrupting force capable of undermining their way of life.
Indeed, recent graduates report never having seen — let alone used — a computer in their classrooms, and video of the inside of the Avir Yakov building shot within the past two weeks and obtained by The Jewish Week seems to support their accounts: not one of the yeshiva’s classrooms, public areas or designated resource rooms seen on the video contains a computer, or even a telephone.
So it comes as a surprise that the approximately 3,000-student school has, since 1998, been allotted more than $3.3 million in government funds earmarked for Internet and other telecommunications technology.
Indeed, recent graduates report never having seen — let alone used — a computer in their classrooms, and video of the inside of the Avir Yakov building shot within the past two weeks and obtained by The Jewish Week seems to support their accounts: not one of the yeshiva’s classrooms, public areas or designated resource rooms seen on the video contains a computer, or even a telephone.
So it comes as a surprise that the approximately 3,000-student school has, since 1998, been allotted more than $3.3 million in government funds earmarked for Internet and other telecommunications technology.
Nonetheless, the company recently sought $1.2 million from E-rate, a
federal program subsidizing technology costs for schools and libraries,
to equip its neighbor, Bais Ruchel D’Satmar, with “internal connections”
and provide “internal connections maintenance.”
Universal Service Administration Company (USAC),
the nonprofit that runs E-rate and other programs for the Federal
Communications Commission, appears to have denied that particular
request. However, it did pay Computer Corner more than $500,000 in 2011
for services provided to the Satmar girls’ school, a school that 12
years earlier was implicated for colluding with the local community
school district. The 1999 scheme involved placing dozens of chasidic
women on the public schools’ payroll in no-show teaching jobs in order
to funnel more than $6 million to the school and its parent
organization, United Talmudical Academy.
How did Computer Corner — along with numerous other little-known
companies, most of them located in fervently Orthodox neighborhoods of
Brooklyn and Rockland County — get to be among the largest service
providers in the E-rate program, earning millions of dollars providing
Internet and other tech services to yeshivas whose leaders publicly rail
against what they call the “evils” of the Internet?
Some of these companies, many of which, like Computer Corner, don’t
have a website, have even appeared on E-rate’s top 10 list of funding
approvals and funding denials nationwide.
How long do they think they can get away with this?
ReplyDeletethey got away with it for 15 years.
DeleteFinally,a kosher way to make money off internet
ReplyDeleteThis reminds me of farm subsidies in which the Feds pay farmers not to grow stuff. Only here the Feds are clueless about the result.
ReplyDeleteSquare was caught in a 40,000,000$ fraud some 20 years ago. They were cauht and sentanced to stiff terms.
ReplyDeletePres b clinton parsomed them in his last day in office