The Indiana Secured School Safety Board announced how they will distribute $27 million to school safety initiatives across the state, and increase of $3 million compared to last year.
The vast majority of the money will be going to school resource officers (SROs); twice as much will be going to firearms training for staff than the single bullying prevention program in the state which was awarded money. No funds were given to post-incident counseling services.
“School safety is a top priority for my administration. Every student deserves a good education, and that starts with feeling safe and secure,” Gov. Mike Braun wrote in a press release.
The Secured School Safety Grant Program (SSSG), run by the Indiana Department of Homeland Security, had more requests for funding than what was available in the budget this year. First-time applicant schools were given priority and charter school groups were capped at $100,000
In total, a group of 328 projects relating to SROs and law enforcement officers was given over $19.6 million. $5.5 million was split between 126 projects for new school safety equipment: such as devices that restrict access to classrooms, expand threat detection, and help emergency communication inside schools. Weapons training for staff, allocated to 7 projects, was given $32,000. Two projects for site vulnerability assessment got just under $6,500.
Indiana gave $13,700 to one program for bullying prevention. However, $1.3 million was given to student and parent support services.
Once an SSSG grant has been issued, schools can match the funds by either 25, 50, or 100%. The matching requirement is based on the average daily membership of the school district.

1 comment
Who will monitor these funds to see that they go for safety upgrades rather than espresso machines in the faculty lounge or leather furniture for the principal’s or superintendent’s office? There is a long and sordid history of schools spending safety funds on items other than safety upgrades.
WHO WILL WATCH?