3 area agencies receive annual Smith Awards

Proposals of three local agencies, from among 25 applicants, have been chosen to receive the Robert S. Smith Award for community progress and innovation.

The three agencies receiving award funding for 1996 are:

·Literacy Volunteers of Tompkins County -- for the development of software for the tutoring/learning needs of low-level or non-readers.

·Southside Community Center -- for a summer project coordinator for the Cornell Student Sustainable Farm.

·Department of Design and Environmental Analysis in Cornell's College of Human Ecology -- to design and model public-use kitchen and bathing facilities for Ithacare.

Established at Cornell in 1994 through a grant of $100,000 by the Tompkins County Trust Co., the Robert S. Smith Award is named for the bank's former board of directors chairman, who is the W.I. Myers Professor Emeritus of Agricultural Finance at Cornell. The award is intended to generate program partnerships between the university and the citizens of Tompkins County.

The 1995 award recipients were the Women's Community Center, the Varna Volunteer Fire Company and Tompkins County 4-H, each of which completed a final project report as part of the program process.

The Women's Community Center reported it used its award to fund Cornell student Joanna Cohen's help in developing a Women's Economic Development Resource Center. Last summer, Cohen categorized and cataloged a list of resources possessed by the Women's Community Center; created two surveys to be completed by users of the proposed center to assess its effectiveness once it is operational; and created a flyer which outlines some basic economic resources available to women in the community.

Cornell graduate student Allan L. Berger reported that he and the Varna Volunteer Fire Company used the Smith Award to help develop a pre-emergency plan for each address in the Varna Fire Protection District. The plan, which is an ongoing project, would allow responding fire department officials to know how to set up a water supply for extinguishing fires at each location and to plan for special situations they would encounter at the scene (such as narrow driveways or nearby buildings).

The 4-H Urban Outreach Program of Tompkins County, which operates after-school programs at the West Village Apartment complex in Ithaca, used the Smith Award to help implement a biweekly program called Academic Excellence -- Enterprise Day. "The recipient of the award, Cornell student Laura Larson, is doing an outstanding job of implementing the project," reported her immediate supervisors, Emily Robin and Susie Criswell.

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