With only a few weeks remaining before students head back to school, Gov. Eric J. Holcomb today provided parents, educators and communities an update on Indiana’s school safety efforts and announced a new program that will make handheld metal detectors available at no cost to schools that want them.

 

“Controlling what comes into our school buildings is just one important part of keeping our schools safe, and our efforts to assist school corporations must be ongoing and evolving,” Gov. Holcomb said. “Local officials are best positioned to determine their school safety needs and the measures that make sense for their students and communities, and—for many—these handheld metal detectors could make a substantial difference.”

 

Beginning today, the Indiana State Police and Department of Administration (IDOA) will coordinate the handheld metal detector program. This new program will make one handheld metal detector device available for every 250 students in traditional public, charter and accredited non-public schools by request. Schools can submit requests at www.in.gov/idoa/3134.htm. IDOA will place the first orders for the metal detector devices on July 19 for delivery by mid-August. Orders placed after that date will be fulfilled later in the fall.

 

This program is just one of several actions the state has taken in the last year, building on the state’s existing policies and practices to improve school safety.

 

Among actions taken by lawmakers in 2018:

·         Made $35 million in low-interest loans available to schools to increase school safety through the Indiana Common School FundApplications may be found on the Indiana Department of Homeland Security website at www.in.gov/dhs/securedschoolsafety/commonschoolfund.htm.

·         Provided an additional $5 million to support school safety grants recently approved through IDHS

·         Dedicated $1 million to support a full audit of school safety plans around the state

 

In June, IDHS received 390 applications from school corporations for school safety grants. Because of the additional $5 million allocated by the General Assembly during this legislative session, all schools that met grant requirements were approved and will be funded. Those funds, more than $14 million in total, will be put to use for school resource officers, safety equipment and threat assessments. Learn more about the grants at www.in.gov/dhs/securedschoolsafety.htm.

 

Indiana already has many school safety policies in place. By law, every Indiana school is required to have a school safety plan and every school corporation must have a school safety specialist.