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Attorney
General Lockyer and Superintendent of Public Instruction O'Connell
Award School Community Policing Partnership Grants
$10.7 Million Awarded to Local Education Agencies to Prevent
School Violence
by Attorney General Lockyer
June 17, 2004
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
(916) 324-5500
SACRAMENTO – Attorney General Bill Lockyer and Superintendent
of Public Instruction Jack O'Connell today announced $10.7 million
in grants have been awarded to 34 school districts and county offices
of education for programs that partner schools with law enforcement,
health and community organizations to deal with school crime and
safety issues.
Established in 1998, the School Community Policing Partnership (SCPP)
allows the Attorney General, in conjunction with the California
Department of Education, to offer grants of up to $325,000 to be
spent over three years to combat school violence. This year, 34
school districts and county offices received the grants.
"These grants provide much-needed resources to school districts
and education offices to work with law enforcement and community
organizations to provide campus policing, mentoring and tutoring
services, extra-curricular activities, and drug and violence intervention
and prevention programs," Lockyer said. "Working together, law enforcement,
educators and the community can maintain safe schools and productive
environments for our children."
"Students need to feel safe in order to focus on learning," O'Connell
said. "These grants will help our school sites improve their learning
environments through partnerships with law enforcement agencies
in their communities."
This year, a total of 186 agencies applied for the grants, up from
the 144 applications received last year. Through a thorough review
and scoring process, 10 review teams composed of school safety professionals
from law enforcement, education and community organizations read
and scored the applications during a three-day period in April.
The applicants were evaluated on two basic criteria: the school
community's commitment to forming and sustaining a collaborative
partnership, and its demonstration of need, which was based on school
and community crime data and statistics measuring drug and alcohol
use and rates of discipline, attendance, truancy and expulsion.
The SCPP requires the grants to represent schools in rural, urban
and suburban areas throughout California. This year, the grants
were awarded to 16 suburban, 10 rural and 8 urban school districts
or education offices. Eight were in Northern California, five were
in Central California and 21 were in Southern California.
Of the 34 grantees, 12 had previously been awarded SCPP grants that
the review teams deemed worthy of refunding. Those programs are:
Butte
County Office of Education
Colusa County Office of Education
Irvine Unified School District
Los Angeles Unified School District (John Marshall High, Christopher
Dena Elementary, Berendo Middle and Murchison Elementary schools)
Lucia Mar Unified School District
Mojave Unified School District
Paradise Unified School District
San Diego County Office of Education (Sweetwater Union High
School District and San Marcos Unified High School District) |
A list of the successful grantees is available at:
http://www.safestate.org/documents/funded_programs.pdf
To view narratives of the program plans funded, go to:
http://www.safestate.org/index.cfm?navid=227
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For more info on the issues the Attorney General
is dealing with go to his website at:
Attorney
General - News & Alerts
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