Local Schools Get Nearly $400K In State Safety Grants

September 10, 2020 at 1:00 a.m.


Area school districts received a total of $386,056.80 in matching state grant funds for school safety, it was announced Wednesday.

The Indiana Secured School Board approved more than $19 million funds statewide, marking a second consecutive year of record-breaking school safety investments, according to a news release from the Indiana Department of Homeland Security.

Local schools and school districts receiving funds include: Sacred Heart School, $18,876.80; Tippecanoe Valley School Corporation, $100,000; Warsaw Community Schools, $100,000; Wawasee Community School Corporation, $75,000; Triton School Corporation, $18,900; Manchester Community Schools, $23,280; and Whitko Community School Corporation, $50,000.

“Education is a Hoosier priority, and Indiana remains fully committed to ensuring the safety of our schools. I’m proud that continued funding through this grant program can meet the top safety needs of school districts and help parents, students and staff feel safe and secure each day,” Indiana Gov. Eric J. Holcomb said in the release.

The $19.4 million in awards allows the Board to fully fund all eligible, top-priority projects identified by 418 schools in their applications to the Secured School Safety Grant program (SSSG). In addition, the Board fully funded all school threat assessment projects, as well as eligible projects geared toward implementing health and wellness support services for parents and students.

Schools have received notification that their top priority requests were fully funded for all eligible items. The General Assembly allocated $19 million to the grant fund for each of the past two years. The $19 million annual investments are the largest single year investments ever dedicated to safety in Hoosier schools, according to the news release.

The SSSG fund is administered by the Indiana Department of Homeland Security. Including the funds committed this year, the SSSG program will have distributed more than $91 million in state matching grants to schools since the program became law in 2013. All of these funds focus specifically on school safety.

“Even with the changes brought by COVID-19, the Secured Schools Board continues to focus on school-safety initiatives in Indiana,” said Rusty Goodpaster, director of the Secured School Board. “The budgetary support provided by the state empowers schools to continue to build safe, supportive environments for their students.”

The SSSG issues matching grants for eligible items and then schools match those funds at a certain level, either 25%, 50% or 100%. The match requirement is based on average daily membership of the school district, the total amount of the project or what the request covers.

Eligible items in the grant include funding for school resource officers and law enforcement officers in schools; equipment and technology; active event warning systems (no matching requirement); firearms training for teachers and staff that choose to allow guns on school property; threat assessments and to implement a student and parent support services program.

The Indiana School Safety Hub also provides schools with resources, training opportunities and other information designed to give schools the tools they need to keep students and staff safe, the release states.

Area school districts received a total of $386,056.80 in matching state grant funds for school safety, it was announced Wednesday.

The Indiana Secured School Board approved more than $19 million funds statewide, marking a second consecutive year of record-breaking school safety investments, according to a news release from the Indiana Department of Homeland Security.

Local schools and school districts receiving funds include: Sacred Heart School, $18,876.80; Tippecanoe Valley School Corporation, $100,000; Warsaw Community Schools, $100,000; Wawasee Community School Corporation, $75,000; Triton School Corporation, $18,900; Manchester Community Schools, $23,280; and Whitko Community School Corporation, $50,000.

“Education is a Hoosier priority, and Indiana remains fully committed to ensuring the safety of our schools. I’m proud that continued funding through this grant program can meet the top safety needs of school districts and help parents, students and staff feel safe and secure each day,” Indiana Gov. Eric J. Holcomb said in the release.

The $19.4 million in awards allows the Board to fully fund all eligible, top-priority projects identified by 418 schools in their applications to the Secured School Safety Grant program (SSSG). In addition, the Board fully funded all school threat assessment projects, as well as eligible projects geared toward implementing health and wellness support services for parents and students.

Schools have received notification that their top priority requests were fully funded for all eligible items. The General Assembly allocated $19 million to the grant fund for each of the past two years. The $19 million annual investments are the largest single year investments ever dedicated to safety in Hoosier schools, according to the news release.

The SSSG fund is administered by the Indiana Department of Homeland Security. Including the funds committed this year, the SSSG program will have distributed more than $91 million in state matching grants to schools since the program became law in 2013. All of these funds focus specifically on school safety.

“Even with the changes brought by COVID-19, the Secured Schools Board continues to focus on school-safety initiatives in Indiana,” said Rusty Goodpaster, director of the Secured School Board. “The budgetary support provided by the state empowers schools to continue to build safe, supportive environments for their students.”

The SSSG issues matching grants for eligible items and then schools match those funds at a certain level, either 25%, 50% or 100%. The match requirement is based on average daily membership of the school district, the total amount of the project or what the request covers.

Eligible items in the grant include funding for school resource officers and law enforcement officers in schools; equipment and technology; active event warning systems (no matching requirement); firearms training for teachers and staff that choose to allow guns on school property; threat assessments and to implement a student and parent support services program.

The Indiana School Safety Hub also provides schools with resources, training opportunities and other information designed to give schools the tools they need to keep students and staff safe, the release states.
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