By 1812Blockhouse; Governor DeWine Press Release
Ohio Governor Mike DeWine has announced that more than 1,000 K-12 schools across Ohio will receive state assistance to pay for security upgrades that enhance the safety of students and staff.
While speaking recently at the Ohio School Safety Summit in Columbus, Governor DeWine announced that 1,183 schools in 81 counties will receive nearly $47 million in grant funding as part of his Ohio K-12 School Safety Grant Program. Grants equal the amount requested by each school up to $50,000. Funds will be used to cover expenses associated with physical security enhancements such as security cameras, public address systems, automatic door locks, visitor badging systems, and exterior lighting.
Several of those schools are located in Richland County; a full list is included below.
“With the start of the new school year quickly approaching, we want students, staff, and parents to know that we care about school safety, and we’re working every day to make sure that rural, urban, and suburban schools alike have the safety and security resources they need,” said Governor DeWine. “Helping schools pay for important security improvements is just one component of our comprehensive school safety approach that also supports the mental wellbeing of our kids and the work of local law enforcement to prevent crime.”
Governor DeWine first launched the K-12 School Safety Grant Program in 2021 with an appropriation of $5 million in Senate Bill 310 of the 133rd General Assembly, which was awarded in May to 98 schools in 27 counties. This year, the Governor and legislature partnered to increase the grant program by an additional $100 million with support from the American Rescue Plan Act.
The 1,183 schools selected to receive funding each applied for but did not receive funds as part of the initial $5 million in grant awards. The Ohio School Safety Center (OSSC), in partnership with the Ohio Facilities Construction Commission, will begin accepting applications in the coming weeks for the $53 million in funds remaining in the K-12 School Safety Grant Program. Schools that have not yet applied for funding or whose applications were ineligible in previous rounds will be given first priority.
Local school districts received awards for the following buildings:
Clear Fork Valley Local SD – $ 88,457.88
- Butler Elem $ 12,993.00
- Clear Fork High $ 44,529.00
- Clear Fork Middle $ 30,935.88
Lexington Local SD – $ 47,992.94
- Lexington High $ 47,992.94
Lucas Local SD – $ 149,100.67
- Lucas Elem $ 50,000.00
- Lucas Heritage Middle $ 50,000.00
- Lucas High $ 49,100.67
Madison Local SD – $ 50,000.00
- Madison High $ 50,000.00
Mansfield City SD – $ 202,723.13
- Malabar Elem $ 45,465.13
- Mansfield Senior High $ 50,000.00
- Sherman Elem $ 50,000.00
- Springmill Elementary $ 7,258.00
- Woodland Elem $ 50,000.00
Pioneer Career & Technology JV – $ 50,000.00
- Pioneer Career & Technology $ 50,000.00
Plymouth-Shiloh Local SD – $ 117,073.44
- Plymouth High $ 39,024.48
- Shiloh Elem $ 39,024.48
- Shiloh Middle $ 39,024.48
Shelby City SD – $ 150,000.00
- Dowds Elem $ 50,000.00
- Shelby High $ 50,000.00
- Shelby Middle $ 50,000.00
Image by Peggy und Marco Lachmann-Anke from Pixabay