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Want to make Rock Soup? Mix housing residents, property managers,
businesses and agencies together. Have each one add a necessary
ingredient to make a successful computer center.
![[Photo 1: Sharon Glenn leads the training session]](/local/ct/images/hgv-picw-ct-2005-04-04b.jpg)
Sharon Glenn leads the training session.
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Making Rock Soup was the topic of a training session held recently
at the Hartford Field Office. HUD's Neighborhood Networks Computer
Center contractor trained participants in creating business plans,
obtaining funding and maintaining a successful center. Networking
and community outreach were highlighted since, in most instances,
no one entity has all the resources necessary to create a center.
Participants were very diverse. A housing staff person wanted to
better organize training efforts to assist disabled clients leverage
computer skills to make an income, with an eye towards economic
self-sufficiency. Five members of a cooperative housing complex
showed up, each intent on creating a center in their community.
A rural housing project employee wanted to create a center despite
a lack of local resources. Management agents from senior housing
complexes, an activist resident of a property with an assisted living
program, and housing authority staff came to learn more about neighborhood
network centers.
![[Photo 2: Participants at neighborhood networks training session]](/local/ct/images/hgv-picw-ct-2005-04-04a.jpg)
Participants at the neighborhood networks training session held
in Hartford.
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HUD's fill-in-the-blank Business Plan program, START, was discussed.
START lets participants enter information online. The information
can be used to match potential partners with appropriate centers.
HUD supports the creation of computer center consortia groups, to
connect those who want to help computer centers with people who
operate them.
The creation of computer centers helps housing residents gain job
skills and bridge the "Digital Divide". Persons in Connecticut
interested in creating computer centers should call HUD's Michael
Patterson at (860) 240-4800, ext. 3041, or Suzanne Baran at ext.
3002. For additional information, visit www.neighborhoodnetworks.org.
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