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SCHUMER: NEW DOJ GRANTS WILL PAY FOR ADDITIONAL OFFICERS
IN LOCAL SCHOOLS
Schumer:"Cops in Schools" program will send $125,000
to Medina
Part of Schumer's 1994 Crime Bill, grants pay for "school resource
officers" to patrol schools
US Senator Charles Schumer, author of the 1994 Crime Bill, today
announced that several New York school districts will receive $125,000
federal grants under the bill’s Community Oriented Policing
Services (COPS) program. The money will be used to hire one community
police officer to be placed within the city’s school system.
Schumer said that one of the grants will go to Medina.
“Unfortunately we live in a different world now than we did
twenty, thirty, or even three years ago," Schumer said. "Keeping
our children safe has always been a concern, but as parents it's
something we are always thinking about now. Getting more police
officers on school grounds will go a long way towards making sure
our kids stay out of harm's way."
The COPS program makes awards to counties, cities or towns for
a three year period, and pays a total of $125,000 over three years.
The new police officers patrol school grounds and are referred to
as “school resource officers.” There is no matching
requirement under this COPS programs, Schumer said, meaning towns
must not pay any of the salaries. Towns can use the money to hire
a new police officer on the beat and have a senior officer move
to the “school resource” position, as long as the money
is used to provide an additional officer in the schools.
"School needs to be a safe place for children to escape all
the distractions of the outside world," Schumer said. "Localities
must have the resources to act quickly at the first report of a
violent situation, as well as foster cooperation and respect among
students to deal with problems before they violently surface. This
funding will help ensure that the county’s schools will be
that kind of safe place for learning.”
Schumer said community police officers within schools provide a
variety of function other than acting as a security presence and
link to local law enforcement. In-school officers also teach crime
prevention and substance-abuse classes, monitor troubled students
and serve to build respect for law enforcement among students.
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